Hirono aggressively question Mrs. Vitter on her pro-life
views and whether she could be fair. She
said (beginning at 1:53:00):
As Justice Rehnquist said and I can paraphrase him, none of you comes to this process as blank slates. There are many times, that I am sure you will acknowledge, that all of you would acknowledge, when the facts of a particular case before you do not ah are not four square with a particular precedent that would be applicable. So would you acknowledge there are times when the your role as a judge would require you to resort to whatever your other life experiences, your views. Can you sit here and say those will never come into play because you will always find a precedent that is four square with a case that is before you? . . .
Justice Rehnquist was not off base when he said you do not all come here tabula rasa.
The problem, of course, is Senator Hirono completely
butchers Chief
Justice Rehnquist's statement.
Rehnquist was not talking about a potential judge's personal views but
that they would should have an interpretive philosophy. No one should become a judge if they don’t
have a view on how to judge (emphasis mine):
Since most Justices come to this bench no earlier than their middle years, it would be unusual if they had not by that time formulated at least some tentative notions which would influence them in their interpretation of the sweeping clauses of the Constitution and their interaction with one another. It would be not merely unusual, but extraordinary, if they had not at least given opinions as to constitutional issues in their previous legal careers. Proof that a Justice's mind at the time he joined the Court was a complete tabula rasa in the area of constitutional adjudication would be evidence of lack of qualification, not lack of bias.
Wendy Vitter has indeed been a hero to the pro-life
community. Rehnquist was not saying that
excludes her from being a judge. As she
testified:
I won Louisiana Right to Life Award. Chairing Priests for Life. And wrote several articles about the role faith has played in my life. . . .
But those views I take seriously to set aside. . . . I am going to look at every matter, every case based on the facts brought before me and the law.
The second paragraph is key. To be a good judge, her personal philosophy is
irrelevant. She could have won an award
from Planned Parenthood and still be a good judge.
That said, for Senator Hirono that is seemingly all that matters. She wants judges to agree with her personal
views in favor of abortion. That is not
a judge, Senator. That is what you can look
for in a politician. Senator Honoro
needs to read what Chief Justices Roberts and Rehnquist say and, hopefully in
a few years, the decisions of Judge Vitter, to know what a judge should do.
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