Block Ashcroft--II
by Bruce Shapiro, January 22, 2001
http://www.thenation.com/doc.mhtml?i=20010122&s=shapiro
Just how bad an Attorney General would John Ashcroft be? And is
his nomination worth fighting? To answer the first question, talk to those who
have experienced Ashcroft up close and personal. Like Harriet Woods, Missouri's
lieutenant governor during the first of Ashcroft's two terms as that state's
chief executive: She calls him "a disaster for minorities and for
women." Or like retired Missouri Supreme Court Judge Charles Blackmar.
Blackmar--a Republican appointee--accused Senator Ashcroft of "tampering
with the judiciary" by blocking the federal court nomination of the amply
qualified Missouri judge Ronnie White. Ashcroft opposed Judge White, an
African-American, on the ostensible grounds that he voted against too many death
sentences, leading Blackmar to this pungent assessment of the philosophy guiding
Bush's chief law officer in the the crucial job of appointing federal judges:
"The senator seems to take the attitude that any deviation is suspect,
liberal, activist."
Ashcroft's sense of what constitutes "deviation" is broad even by the
standards of the right, and his hard-line opposition to abortion isn't the half
of it. The list of things Ashcroft is on record opposing is a catalogue of
American social progress: contraception, school desegregation, solar energy,
government assistance for woman- and minority-owned businesses, fuel efficiency
standards for cars, workplace-discrimination protection for homosexuals,
campaign finance reform and the nuclear test ban treaty. As governor, he even
prohibited over-the-candy-counter sale of bonbons with liqueur centers.
It is African-Americans who will first take it on the chin from an Ashcroft
Justice Department. As Missouri attorney general in the 1970s, Ashcroft
initially honored the moderate, integrationist legacy of his mentor and
predecessor, John Danforth. But he soon learned the value of playing hard-line
race politics, fighting tooth and nail against desegregation of the massively
unequal schools in Kansas City and St. Louis all the way to the US Supreme Court
and spurning every attempt at an out-of-court settlement. Ashcroft won a tough
GOP primary for governor in 1984 with attack ads accusing his opponent of being
soft on desegregation. In the words of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch editorial
page, he has "built a career out of opposing school desegregation...and
opposing African-Americans for public office."
Reports have it that Bush's first favorite for AG was the more moderate Governor
Marc Racicot of Montana--who, the story goes, was shot down by the far right.
That creative spin control allows the administration-elect to play to both its
flanks--deferring to the right with the nomination while assuaging moderates
with the fiction that this nomination doesn't reflect Bush's deepest
convictions. In fact, Ashcroft's nomination embodies one of the fundamental
lessons of the first George Bush Administration: that the justice system is the
arena that counts for right-wing patronage. The permanent elite of Republican
technocrats like Donald Rumsfeld can have the run of the store as long as
Justice turns out a steady stream of antiabortion briefs and far-right judge
nominees.
Watch for a confirmation strategy that echoes fellow Danforth protégé
Clarence Thomas in 1991, beginning with Ashcroft lobbying individual senators,
followed by a confirmation narrative emphasizing Ashcroft's childhood--how his
minister father befriended black missionaries--over the substance of Ashcroft's
record as segregationist and antichoice absolutist. Once again, leading the
Senate Judiciary Committee Democrats will be Joe Biden, whose vanity and
strategic incompetence contributed mightily to Thomas's narrow confirmation.
Biden, reprising his fatal 1991 indecision, has declared he is
"inclined" to support Ashcroft.
So is this a nomination worth fighting? Other Bush Cabinet nominees also pose
direct threats to specific constituencies, but there is real urgency to laying
down a marker on Ashcroft. The threat his nomination poses cuts across
constituencies and issues, and the stakes are every bit as high as in the
Clarence Thomas and Robert Bork Supreme Court nomination fights. The Justice
Department has expanded its authority as has no other agency in recent years.
Through appointments to the federal bench, Supreme Court arguments and
priorities, the appointment of US Attorneys and the enforcement of civil rights
and antitrust law, any Attorney General can change the country in profound ways.
All the more so with Ashcroft: not just because of his regressive constitutional
views but because Bush appears likely to vest more power in his advisers than
any President in memory.
And this is a fight that is winnable, despite Biden's early bumbling and the
irrelevant conventional wisdom that the Senate will defer to one of its own.
(Remember John Tower, whose Senate record could not rescue his nomination as
Bush Senior's Defense Secretary?) The Clinton impeachment hearings and trial
showed repeatedly that most Americans have little patience with moral extremists
like Ashcroft, and it shouldn't take much to convince a broad segment of the
public that he is out of touch. Civil liberties and corporate regulation have a
currency and a constituency they lacked when public-interest groups beat Bork in
1986. With public support for the death penalty falling, with even GOP governors
questioning the wisdom of the drug war, with Republican Supreme Court Justices
reaffirming Roe v. Wade and a Republican Congress softening the Cuba embargo,
Ashcroft looks like a dinosaur, the anachronistic spawn of Strom Thurmond and
Jesse Helms.
Besides, whatever the outcome, a fight against Ashcroft will generate rather
than expend political capital for civil rights and civil liberties advocates.
Democrats gained from the Bork and Thomas confirmation fights as the public
became educated about the real agenda of conservatives and as Beltway-bound
liberal lobbies reconnected to grassroots constituencies. There is every reason
to think Ashcroft could be defeated--and even if he is not, fighting his
confirmation could lay the foundation for a new coalition, a shadow Justice
Department that will dog the Bush Administration's every judicial nomination and
every reversal of civil rights. This is no time to roll over.