Wednesday, October 19, 2005

Harriet Miers and Abortion

Who knows?

The fact that Harriet Miers indicated that she would support a ban on abortions in all cases except where a mother's life was in danger means. . .

NOTHING.

Some conservatives are finding a nugget of comfort in the revelation that years ago Ms. Miers responded to a pre-election questionnaire with a response indicating her opposition to abortion in almost all cases.

Some liberals are, as a result of the same revelation, cooking up questions designed to put an end to the entire Miers fiasco.

But, as Ms. Miers no doubt knows, she will have to put aside her personal views on abortion should she ever in fact find herself seated on that bench from which she will have an opportunity to rule on an abortion case.

Roe v. Wade could be with us for a long time.  Lawyers are taught, from the first moment of law school, to value precedent -- to give incalculable weight to prior decisions of the court.  The importance of legal precedent cannot be underestimated in our system of justice.  Lawyers are paid to advise clients of the probable outcome of various courses of action -- advice which they render on the basis of precedent.  Why do we teach our young people about Hammurabi's Code in high school?  Because the establishment of precedent is followed by a certain degree of order (which, given that we are human, is always relative to one degree or another) -- and Hammurabi's utilization of that concept was a watershed event in human history. 

Harriet Miers as Madame Justice Miers might find it well nigh impossible, despite the sincerity and unshakeability of her personal convictions, to do anything in the context of an abortion case other than to apply the Constitution as it has been interpreted thus far and, for instance, to determine that the parental notification rule in the case presently pending before the Court is outside the limits established by prior cases.

Of course, Hammurabli viewed precedent within the context of specificity -- as do our courts today.  We insist that a court ruling be founded upon the specific facts of a specific case.  There is plenty of leeway within Roe v. Wade itself for a complete upending of abortion law as we know it.  If nothing else, that case is over 30 years old and depends to at least some extent on a trimester-by-trimester assessment of pregnancy which, given today's technology, is on fairly shaky ground.  And each case that comes before the court raises a set of facts which, presumably, differs from those in decisions the court has already handed down. 

Any justice, despite his or her personal views and committments, might find, given the right set of fact and argument, that she or he is compelled to vote to overturn Roe.

The most disturbing aspect of the whole Miers scenario is that the President of the United States, James Dobson of Focuis on the Family, and several other poorly informed individuals seem to think that the President is entitled to the support of his opinions from any of his nominees to the Court who eventually make it to the bench. One of Miers' supporters has said that if she is on the Court when the parental notification case comes up, she will not "disappoint the President."

In fact, she may well disappoint the President.  Once she takes the oath of office as  a Justice of the United States Supreme Court, her allegiance is to the Constitution, not to either of the other branches of government nor their leaders. 

That being the case, we should be asking how she views the Constitution and the role of a judge with respect to interpreting it.  That she devoutly and sincerely practices and draws strength from a profound faith is laudable, and will no doubt affect her approach to her work.  But it will not determine the keenness or depth of her skill set in legal processes and reasoning, nor the predilections and preferences that she as a lawyer will bring to the Court.

8 comments:

Anonymous said...

Honestly, I just don't see it being overturned. I think you're right. She's probably going to interpret the Constitution much in the way that previous justices have done.

I don't like the phrase "dissapoint the President". That's not what she's there for. I guess we'll just have to watch and listen.

Ari

Anonymous said...

I'm more worried about her apparent deference to the executive branch. The past few years have seen a growth of the attitude of if the president wants it and he's a member of our party he should get it. Charles I, where ever he is could only have hoped for a parliament so deferential.

Jackie

Anonymous said...

LOL!

Anonymous said...

I wish I believed that.
V

Anonymous said...

Your last paragraph lays out the terms under which a judge, at any level, should base his/her rulings and decisions.  Sadly, Ms. Miers has no judicial experience.  This, coupled with her statement about not "disappointing" the President, are the reasons that I'm scared, very very scared.

Anonymous said...

I tend to go in the direction that Jackie is taking.  Meiers has apparently been selected because she follows the belief that the President and his party seem to be adopting--that the judicial branch of the government, being as how its members are not elected by the people, should be completely subservient to the Executive and the Legislative.  They don't seem to get that the framers of the Constitution intended for the three branches to be separate but equal in power, and to exist to create a "balance of power" between them.  All this talk about "activist judges" (who, presumably, are the judges that don't accept this second class role, and therefore, don't decide as the ruling party would have them decide...) is probably one of the most frightening things going on in Washington these days...  Lisa  :-]

Anonymous said...

Views on abortion are all well and good, but it is scarcely the only issue to come before the Supreme Court.  That it is viewed as a litmus test is a worry, because it should be viewed for itself, not as a guide to how an individual will vote on the Supreme Bench (if there is such a term).  As for the odd (and self-serving) view that abortion is wrong except when the mother's life is in danger - I can never understand that.  The whole argument surely turns on absolutes.  Either you believe that abortion is killing a human being and that is wrong OR you believe that it is not killing a human being and it is ok.  Period.  There can be no shades of grey here.

Vicky
http://www.livejournal.com/users/vxv789/

Anonymous said...

"we should be asking how she views the Constitution and the role of a judge with respect to interpreting it. "  Now this makes sense in a sea of confusing/conflicting opinions.