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culture war
Federal Judge Nominees: Pawns
in the Culture War
By David Brody
Capitol Hill Correspondent
CBN.com
HATTIESBURG, Mississippi - In John Roberts' Supreme Court nomination
hearing, Democrats will grill him on a number of topics.
There is another judge who knows all about tough questions from
the Democrats: former federal judge Charles Pickering.
For Pickering, this is the life - at home with his wife Margaret
Ann, enjoying life in rural Mississippi. It beats hanging out
for the day with Chuck Schumer (D-NY), Patrick Leahy (D-VT), and
other liberal Democrats.
But that is where Pickering found himself several years ago.
"I did not choose to be a player in the cultural war,"
he commented.
But he was. Nominated by President Bush to be a federal judge,
Democrats labeled him often and early, calling him “out
of the mainstream” and hostile to civil rights.
Pickering remarked, "I thought I was uncontroversial, and
I thought I would just slide through. I naively told people that
I was a non-controversial nominee."
But Sen. Ted Kennedy (D-MA) and other liberal Democrats saw it
differently. "Surely there are well-qualified nominees who
won't use their judicial power to roll back civil rights or vent
their scorn for Supreme Court precedents," Kennedy said.
For four years, Pickering dealt with the accusations - accusations
that he was somehow unsympathetic to African-Americans. His critics
pointed to a case where he reduced the sentence of a convicted
cross burner.
But his defenders say, take a closer look at the facts, that
Pickering gave the lesser sentence because a lengthier punishment
was unfair, based on what the other two defendants in the case
received. But Democrats, ultimately, blocked his nomination.
"People would ask me sometimes, doesn't it bother you that
they are saying things that are not true about you?” Pickering
said, “and my response was, well, it would bother me a lot
more if they were true."
Bush ended up putting Pickering on the federal appeals court
using a recess appointment to do it. But to stay on permanently
as a federal judge, he would have had to be renominated by the
President. Instead, he decided to retire, to avoid going through
the tiresome fight against the Democrats once again.
"I had fought the fight for four years,” Pickering
said. “I concluded that it was better for the President
to be able to nominate somebody younger who could serve longer,
and someone who could be confirmed; and for my wife and I, it
was time to get on with life and do other things. We have 21 grandchildren,
so it was just time for this to happen."
But clearly the scars of that bruising confirmation process linger.
And for Pickering, it is important to let it all go and not hold
any grudges against the Democrats who opposed him so fiercely.
CBN News asked the judge if he had any anger towards them, to
which Pickering responded, “No. You know, bitterness is
too big a burden to carry through life, and the person it affects
the most is the person who carries it.”
Pickering has been through a lot. His reputation has taken a
hit by liberal Democrats. So sometimes to get clarity, you need
to get away from it all. For the judge, his home here in rural
Mississippi has done just that. He has had time to reflect on
the bruising confirmation process and it has led him to write
a book.
"You don't go through a process like that,” Pickering
stated, “unless you feel like, hopefully, at somewhere at
the end of the day you can make a positive contribution."
He hopes his book will make a difference. Now that he is no longer
a sitting judge, he can speak out. And he is taking dead-aim at
the liberal special interest groups.
Pickering declared, "They accuse the Bush nominees of being
out of the mainstream of American thought, but polls indicate
clearly that the positions they (liberal special interest groups)
hold are the ones that are way, way out of the mainstream of American
thought."
He says they are the ones driving the liberal democratic agenda
in the party. He says his story is living proof.
"Senator Chuck Schumer (D-NY) told Trent Lott (R-MS), and
told my son this voluntarily, ‘We're going to confirm your
dad by December.’ The groups said, ‘No, not so fast’;
so they were calling the shots, they were calling the tempo,"
Pickering said.
When CBN News mentioned to Pickering that the Democrats said
they are not taking their cues from special interest groups, Pickering
replied, “Oh, I know better. I was there. We would have
contact with the office of the Democratic senators. They would
indicate one thing was going to be done, but the groups would
say, ‘No, wait a minute - that's not what we want to do,’
and guess who won? The groups won every time."
But his upcoming book is not all about trashing liberals. It
is about something much larger- a culture war that liberal interest
groups are determined to win.
"What drove this battle are the issues that are involved
in the culture war,” Pickering explained, “and they
have to do with references to God in the public square, the definition
of marriage, and pornography, but the issue that drives the fight,
the issue that drives the engines of opposition is the abortion
issue…that's primarily what this battle is about."
When Judge John Roberts was nominated as a Supreme Court justice,
Pickering says it is no wonder that he was opposed. His views
on the right-to-life issue worry liberals.
Pickering stated, "I knew in advance what they were going
to say about John Roberts. They were going to say that he was
a threat to these rights. That he was out of the mainstream, and
they said that before they had ever researched his record. Doesn't
matter."
But for all his talk about liberals, the Democrats and their
agenda, the judge says this is not about payback. Not at all.
The book he is writing is one he hopes will do some good.
It troubles him that judges are left in limbo for so long, just
hanging out there - pawns in a political game. His nomination
languished four years. The same occurred with Priscilla Owen,
and others before them.
He says that no matter what your political affiliation, that
should not happen. He wants the Congress to pass a law that would
set a timetable for hearings and votes. No more delays.
Pickering remarked, "A judge would then know that, after
a reasonable period of time, he would either be confirmed, or
he will go on with his life."
Pickering has gone on with his life. "What happened to me
is not that important in the scheme of things,” he said.
“But what is happening to the judiciary is tremendously
important to all Americans. So, I'm not bitter - my spirits are
good. My faith has not been weakened. God's grace indeed is sufficient."
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