Roberts says he'll recuse
himself from abortion etc.
LA Times
Jonathan Turley
July 25, 2005
Judge John G. Roberts Jr. has been called the stealth nominee
for the Supreme Court — a nominee specifically selected
because he has few public positions on controversial issues such
as abortion. However, in a meeting last week, Roberts briefly
lifted the carefully maintained curtain over his personal views.
In so doing, he raised a question that could not only undermine
the White House strategy for confirmation but could raise a
question of his fitness to serve as the 109th Supreme Court
justice.
The exchange occurred during one of Roberts' informal
discussions with senators last week. According to two people who
attended the meeting, Roberts was asked by Sen. Richard Durbin
(D-Ill.) what he would do if the law required a ruling that his
church considers immoral. Roberts is a devout Catholic and is
married to an ardent pro-life activist. The Catholic Church
considers abortion to be a sin, and various church leaders have
stated that government officials supporting abortion should be
denied religious rites such as communion. (Pope Benedict XVI is
often cited as holding this strict view of the merging of a
person's faith and public duties).
Renowned for his unflappable style in oral argument, Roberts
appeared nonplused and, according to sources in the meeting,
answered after a long pause that he would probably have to recuse
himself.
It was the first unscripted answer in the most carefully
scripted nomination in history. It was also the wrong answer. In
taking office, a justice takes an oath to uphold the Constitution
and the laws of the United States. A judge's personal religious
views should have no role in the interpretation of the laws. (To
his credit, Roberts did not say that his faith would control in
such a case).
Roberts may insist that he was merely discussing the subject
theoretically in an informal setting, and that he doesn't
anticipate recusing himself on a regular basis. But it's not a
subject that can be ignored; if he were to recuse himself on such
issues as abortion and the death penalty, it would raise the
specter of an evenly split Supreme Court on some of the nation's
most important cases.
Roberts could now face difficult questions of fitness raised
not only by the Senate but by his possible colleague, Justice
Antonin Scalia, one of the most conservative members of the court
(and a devout Catholic). Last year, Scalia chastised Catholic
judges who balk at imposing the death penalty — another
immoral act according to the church: "The choice for a judge who
believes the death penalty to be immoral is resignation, rather
than simply ignoring duly enacted constitutional laws and
sabotaging the death penalty."
Roberts is known to be an honest and straightforward person.
His answer seems to be a frank effort to deal with a deep-seated
conflict of faith and public duties. As a government attorney, he
was a coauthor of a brief that argued that Roe vs. Wade should be
overturned. Yet later, in his appellate court confirmation
hearings, Roberts was asked specifically whether he could apply
Roe vs. Wade and he stated that he could. Now, as he moves toward
a job in which he could ultimately be the deciding vote to
narrow, preserve or overturn the doctrine, it could be a
materially different moral choice for a devout jurist.
Unless Roberts denies the statement or somehow neutralizes it,
it could seriously undermine the strategy of the White House for
the confirmation hearings. For years, Roberts has been carefully
groomed for greater things, one of a new generation of post-Bork
nominees, young conservatives who have been virtually raised on a
hydroponic farm for flawless conservative fruit. They learned to
confine their advocacy to legal briefs so that their true views
are only known to the White House and to God.
Now, however, Roberts may have opened the door to the very
questions that the White House sought to avoid with his
nomination. If he would have to recuse himself before ruling
contrary to his faith, the Senate is entitled to ask specifically
how he would handle obvious conflicts on issues such as abortion
and the death penalty.
With the Roberts statement, the masterful "un-hearings" that
the Bush administration hoped to have, in which nominees are not
required to answer specific questions about their judicial views,
would become particularly awkward.
This is not a question driven by ideology. I favor some of the
conservative changes that Roberts is expected to bring in
doctrine, and I believe that he has excellent qualifications for
the position. I also believe that the president is entitled to
such a conservative nominee.
The question of recusal raised with Durbin reflects a serious
and important debate occurring within the Catholic community, in
which I also was raised. It is the classic Sir Thomas More
conflict of trying to serve both God and king. However, these are
questions not just for a nominee to ponder but for senators.
None of this means that Roberts is unfit due to his faith. But
in the end, the Senate is left a question that seems to grow each
day: Who is John Roberts? The burden may now have shifted to the
White House to fully answer this question.
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