[Mb-civic] Re: Roberts is just a nice mainstream conservative

ean at sbcglobal.net ean at sbcglobal.net
Sun Jul 31 15:30:28 PDT 2005


The New York Times - July 28, 2005
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/07/28/politics/28assess.html

An Advocate for the Right 

By DAVID E. ROSENBAUM

WASHINGTON, July 27 - The early 1980's were a heady time for 
conservatives
in Washington.

Ronald Reagan was president, and after years on the outside, some of the
strongest voices in the conservative movement - men like Edwin Meese III,
James G. Watt, William Bradford Reynolds and Theodore B. Olson - were in
high positions in the government and were determined to reverse what they
believed to be years of liberal policies in areas like civil rights,
environmental protection, criminal law and immigration.

John G. Roberts, a young lawyer in the Justice Department in 1981 and 1982
and on the White House counsel's staff from 1982 to 1986, held positions
too junior for him to set policy in those days.

But his internal memorandums, some of which have become public in recent
days, reveal a philosophy every bit as conservative as that of the policy
makers on the front lines of the Reagan revolution and give more
definition to his image than was apparent in the first days after
President Bush picked him to be an associate justice of the Supreme Court.

On almost every issue he dealt with where there were basically two sides,
one more conservative than the other, the documents from the National
Archives and the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library show that Judge
Roberts, now of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of
Columbia Circuit, advocated the more conservative course. Sometimes, he
took positions even more conservative than those of his prominent
superiors.

He favored less government enforcement of civil rights laws rather than
more. He criticized court decisions that required a thick wall between
church and state. He took the side of prosecutors over criminal
defendants. He maintained that the role of the courts should be limited
and the president's powers enhanced.

Mr. Roberts was only 26 when he joined the Reagan administration and 31
when he left. But the ideology he expressed as a young man helps explain
why conservative activists seem pleased with him, even though others Mr.
Bush might have picked have a more detailed public record of conservative
advocacy.

Consider Mr. Roberts's stands on some of the hottest political issues of
the 1980's as revealed in the newly public documents:

Busing In 1985, when he was an assistant White House counsel, Mr. Roberts
took issue with Mr. Olson, an assistant attorney general at the time, on
whether Congress could enact a law that outlawed busing to achieve school
desegregation.

Mr. Olson, who was one of the nation's most widely known conservative
lawyers on constitutional matters, was arguing that Congress's hands were
tied because the Supreme Court had ruled that busing was constitutionally
required in some circumstances.

Mr. Roberts wrote in a memorandum to the White House counsel, Fred F.
Fielding, that Mr. Olson had misinterpreted the law. He said evidence
showed that by producing white flight, busing promoted segregation. "It
strikes me as more than passing strange for us to tell Congress it cannot
pass a law preventing courts from ordering busing when our own Justice
Department invariably urges this policy on the courts," he wrote.

Sex discrimination Mr. Roberts also challenged Mr. Reynolds, who was
assistant attorney general for civil rights and another prominent
conservative who outranked him.

In 1981, he urged Attorney General William French Smith to reject Mr.
Reynolds's position that the department should intervene on behalf of
female prisoners who were discriminated against in a job-training program.
If male and female prisoners had to be treated equally, Mr. Roberts
argued, "the end result in this time of state prison budgets may be no
programs for anyone."

Judicial restraint Mr. Roberts consistently argued that courts should be
stripped of authority over busing, school prayer and other matters. In a
letter in November 1981 to Judge Henry J. Friendly of the United States
Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, in New York, for whom he had
clerked and whom he considered a mentor, Mr. Roberts wrote that he and his
colleagues in the administration were determined to "halt unwarranted
interference" by the courts in the activities of Congress and the
executive branch.

A month later, he wrote to Rex Lee, who was the solicitor general, that
courts were "ill-suited to policy making because they are limited to the
facts presented to them."

Court-stripping is still an issue in American politics. Last year, the
House approved legislation that would prevent federal courts from ordering
states to recognize same-sex marriages in other states. The measure never
became law.

Presidential war powers In 1983, Arthur J. Goldberg, the former Supreme
Court justice, wrote a letter to the White House questioning President
Reagan's constitutional authority to send troops to Grenada without a
declaration of war.

Mr. Roberts replied with a ringing endorsement of the president's power.
"This has been recognized at least since the time President Jefferson sent
the Marines to the shores of Tripoli," he wrote. "While there is no clear
line separating what the president may do on his own and what requires a
formal declaration of war, the Grenada mission seems to be clearly
acceptable as an exercise of executive authority, particularly when it is
recalled that neither the Korean nor Vietnamese conflicts were declared
wars."

Affirmative action Mr. Roberts held that affirmative action programs were
bound to fail because they required "the recruiting of inadequately
prepared candidates."

"Under our view of the law," he wrote in 1981, "it is not enough to say
that blacks and women have been historically discriminated against as
groups and are therefore entitled to special preferences."

Immigration Mr. Roberts took strong issue with a Supreme Court decision
striking down a Texas law that had allowed school districts to deny
enrollment to children who were in the country illegally. The court had
overreached its authority, he wrote, and the Justice Department had made a
mistake by not entering the case on the state's side.

Church-state Mr. Roberts was sharply critical of the Supreme Court
decision outlawing prayer in public schools, and he said the court had
exceeded its authority when it allowed any citizens to challenge the
transfer of public property to a parochial school.

[John M. Broder contributed reporting from Simi Valley, Calif., for this
article, and Jonathan D. Glater from Washington.]


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