Rove’s Smoke and Mirrors and the Radical Right Hypocrisy

Part I: Rove’s Smoke and Mirrors

It has been a good week, in fact month for Democracts with BushCo on the run, Harriet Miers withdrawing her nomination, and the BushCo machine falling apart as Rove and Libby start to get nervous about impending indictments. However, the master of illusion is working his dastardly deeds. And I am not talking about David Cooperfield.

Truth be told, the Miers withdrawal is part of an elaborate Rovian play.

Part I: Rove’s Smoke and Mirrors

It has been a good week, in fact month for Democracts with BushCo on the run, Harriet Miers withdrawing her nomination, and the BushCo machine falling apart as Rove and Libby start to get nervous about impending indictments. However, the master of illusion is working his dastardly deeds. And I am not talking about David Cooperfield.

Truth be told, the Miers withdrawal is part of an elaborate Rovian play.
It is strange for Miers, who happens to be a very close friend with Dudya, to suddenly withdraw her nomination before the hearings. Hmmm… something is not right here.

Oh something stinks alright, but it isn’t in Demark! This morning, October, 28, 2005, on Democracy Now, John Nichols, Washington correspondent for The Nation Magazine, told Amy Goodman:

The timing of the withdrawal is incredibly significant and… what undermined Harriet Miers was the attack from the right. The withdrawal was a complete political act. It was done not by Harriet Miers. She did not reluctantly withdraw. The President did not reluctantly accept the withdrawal.
[emphasis mine]

This sure is a Rovian trademark. It is known among Texas Democrats that when times get tough, Rove reaches into his bag of dirty tricks and congers up some smoke and mirrors to distract people. Nichols also said that the BushCo “Smoke and Mirrors” machine started planning early this week. Since the today White House indictments are to be announced, the Rove and his goon squad quickly began laying the ground work well before it occurred. The master plan was to do it day before, October 27, the indictments would come down in the Patrick Fitzgerald investigation of Libby and Rove.

Once the nomination has been withdrawn constant attention – most likely a day or a day and half – would be focused on “Why did Meirs withdrawal?” This in fact, did and is occurring now. With the all the focus on Miers, there is less attention on the speculation about who is going to be indicted and how Dudya and Cheney are involved. Once the indictments come, people will forget all about Harriet Miers.

A Senate staffer for a member on the Senate Judiciary Committee confirmed this ploy to Political Wire yesterday. The staffer said:

“This withdrawal and renomination is the ace in the whole for Republicans to combat the CIA leak scandal. President Bush met with Republican leaders last week to test the waters for withdrawal, and then laid the groundwork with the ‘red line‘ for disclosing documents. The President is going back to his base, and next week (likely the beginning), most Senators on the Judiciary Committee, including Schumer, Graham, Specter, Kennedy, Durbin, and Brownback, expect him to nominate a proven conservative justice… Democrats are scrambling to come up with a strategy to keep the focus on the indictments, while also stopping a far-right nominee. Word is that Karl Rove is in fact behind this well-timed stunt to overcome the indictment story.”

The American Constitution Society for Law and Policy (ACS) and Hotline also reports that the White House can send up the next nominee as soon as this afternoon and mid-next week at the latest. A list of the leading candidates can be found here.

Whether this will play out is still anyone’s guess. Due to the make up of the Supreme Court, fights are rare, since they only occur when a new Supreme Court Justice is nominated, but indictments of senior advisors are even rarer. Rove’s ploy make not work.

(crossposted at ePluribus Media)

The Miers Nomination and the Constitution: Bush’s Pandora’s box

Bush’s decision to name Harriet Miers, his White House counsel and longtime Texas pal, to the Supreme Court seat now held by retiring Justice Sandra Day O’Connor should raise Constitutional concerns.

Miers, who nobody really knows her stance on certain issues, has left very few clues in her previous public posts, which include service on the Dallas city council and as Bush’s lottery commissioner when he was governor of Texas.

But her nomination to the Supreme Court comes as no surprised to many of us Texans who are Bush watchers since Bush had already established this type of precedents when – as governor in 1998 – he appointed Alberto Gonzales to the Texas Supreme Court.

However, two weeks ago, GW Bush did open Pandora’s Box when he told reporters his reasoning for nominating Harriet Miers to the Supreme Court. Which, now, the White House is actively playing down.

Bush’s decision to name Harriet Miers, his White House counsel and longtime Texas pal, to the Supreme Court seat now held by retiring Justice Sandra Day O’Connor should raise Constitutional concerns.

Miers, who nobody really knows her stance on certain issues, has left very few clues in her previous public posts, which include service on the Dallas city council and as Bush’s lottery commissioner when he was governor of Texas.

But her nomination to the Supreme Court comes as no surprised to many of us Texans who are Bush watchers since Bush had already established this type of precedents when – as governor in 1998 – he appointed Alberto Gonzales to the Texas Supreme Court.

However, two weeks ago, GW Bush did open Pandora’s Box when he told reporters his reasoning for nominating Harriet Miers to the Supreme Court. Which, now, the White House is actively playing down.
On October 12, Bush told reporters that it was Miers’ evangelical Christian beliefs that are his reasons for nominating her to the Supreme Court.

“People are interested to know why I picked Harriet Miers,” Bush told reporters at the White House. “Part of Harriet Miers’ life is her religion.”

Then, after Bush concluded a meeting with visiting Polish President Aleksander Kwasniewski in the Oval Office, Bush told reporters:

…that his advisers were reaching out to conservatives who oppose her nomination “just to explain the facts.” He spoke on a day in which conservative James Dobson, founder of Focus on Family, said he had discussed the nominee’s religious views with presidential aide Karl Rove.

And therein lies the slippery slope, on which Bush just ventured, which leads toward an unconstitutional – and un-American – religious test for the high judicial office.

James “The Family Man Fundi” Dobson was very eagar to tell his listeners on his radio program that Karl Rove made a call to him to discuss Miers’ religious beliefs before Bush announced her nomination October 3.

Dobson also told his listeners Rove assured him Mier’s is “an evangelical Christian…[and] that she is from a very conservative church, which is almost universally pro-life; that she had taken on the American Bar Association on the issue of abortion and fought for a policy that would not be supportive of abortion.”

The problem with Bush’s nomination is not that she lacks merit. The issue at hand is that Bush is constitutionally obliged not to apply a religious litmus test. Article VI clause 3 of the U.S. Constitution clearly prohibits the use of any religious test for any public office:

The Senators and Representatives before mentioned, and the Members of the several State Legislatures, and all executive and judicial Officers, both of the United States and of the several States, shall be bound by Oath or Affirmation, to support this Constitution; but no religious Test shall ever be required as a Qualification to any Office or public Trust under the United States.

Therefore, it is illegitimate for Bush to make a Supreme Court appointment based on a single issue – her religious faith, which clearly is unConstitutional. And if, the Senate Judiciary Committee were to approve Bush’s nominee solely based on her religion, as the President seems to be suggesting, they too would be in violation of the Constitution.

As of now, Bush currently has the support of conservative Christians in the private sector, such as James Dobson, because Bush has assured the religious right that she will vote to overturn Roe v. Wade because of her evangelical faith. (Another embarrassing wink-nudge from the President.)

By trodding down this dangerous path, both Bush and Rove have just created a political quagmire – they are forcing the Judiciary Committee to refrain from any line of questioning that suggests a religious litmus-test for the Supreme Court.

This is the very reason Clause 3 of Article VI was written into the Constitution by the Founding Fathers. The purpose for Article VI was not only to remove the basis for any preferential treatment of one religion over another for holding public office, but it also denied the right of any preferential status of religion over nonreligion in appointment matters. The prohibiting of applying any type of religious litmus test was created not only because of the religious pluralism that was rampant at the time of the nation’s founding, but also of the concept of the new Republic as a secular state. The very exclusion of any religious test for office was itself a profound acknowledgment of the secular character of the new Republic.

Former Presidential Speech Writer William Lee Miller noted in his historical review of religion and the Constitution, The First Liberty: Religion and the American Republic, that “in the framing of Article VI …the new nation was electing to be nonreligious in its civil life.” Regarding the issue of religion, Miller found that “more striking than what the Federal Constitution did include is what it did not.”

Currently there are those in Congress and in the White House who succumb to the belief that the only law to be in existance is the the Law of God, and therefore there can be no distinction between a judicial decision based on American law and one based on God’s law. These are the folks vigorously pushing for the power of government to post the Ten Commandments in schools and courthouses.

But there is a radical difference between the law on the books and in past opinions, and Biblical Law. This principle is a basic and fundamental feature of the Constitution – the very Constitution Congress, the President, and the Supreme Court Justices took an oath to uphold. The same Constitution that Bush, took an oath to uphold in January of this 2004.

America is a nation in which neither religious faith enjoys any official status and where no church or religion is to enjoy any advantages or to suffer any disadvantages because of an establishment of religion. Religious identity is made irrelevant to one’s rights of citizenship, e.g., the right to vote and to hold public office. One’s religion or non-religion may not be made the basis of political privilege or discrimination. At a time when there is a resurgence of the notion of a “Christian America”, the nomination of Miers is an especially appropriate time to reflect on the meaning and significance of the seperation of church and state in American public life. In the past few years, there is a growing tendency for candidates to stress their religious credentials, to use religion to serve their own political purposes, and to use political means for the advancement of religious fundamentalists. We need to remind our Senators the importance of Article VI before Mier’s confirmation hearing. If this is allowed to continue, Bush has once again set precedent – appointments can be based on a person’s religious beliefs and the Constitution is worthless in the eyes of BushCo political machine.