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Letter to the Editor on the Pryor Nomination

Modified: 09/08/2003

NARAL Pro-Choice North Carolina Regional Organizer Sarah Karges had a letter to the editor published in the News and Observer.

Sarah's letter is in response to sydicated columnist Charles Krauthhammer's recent column espousing the virtues of federal court nominee William Pryor.

Below you will find Sarah's letter to the editor, followed by the Krauthammer column.

Judicial activist


News Observer (Raleigh, NC)
September 6, 2003

In his Aug. 29 column "Pryor proves his mettle," Charlesm Krauthammer attempted to draw the conclusion that Alabama Attorney General Bill Pryor's recent action (overseeing the removal of the Ten Commandments from a courthouse) proves his ability to serve on the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals in an impartial way. Krauthammer claimed that Senate Democrats unfairly blocked Pryor's appointment to this lifetime post because of his personal views on abortion.

Pryor isn't objectionable because of his religious beliefs or his personal views on abortion; he's unacceptable because of his
views on the Constitution. Pryor's opinion that the Constitution does not protect a woman's reproductive freedom makes it highly
unlikely that he would be capable of fairly hearing cases involving reproductive rights.

He is a committed legal activist whose record demonstrates extreme hostility to a wide range of rights and freedoms important to all Americans. Pryor is a prolific speaker and
writer, whose record is littered with examples of his extreme anti-choice ideology, and he clearly holds a politicized view of the role of the courts. The removal of the Ten Commandments from a government building doesn't change the fact that he would be
dangerous to women's reproductive freedom if appointed.

Sarah D. Karges
N.C. Regional Organizer
NARAL Pro-Choice North Carolina


Pryor Proves His Mettle

August 29, 2003
By CHARLES KRAUTHAMMER, Washington Post Writers Group

WASHINGTON--On Wednesday, Alabama Attorney General Bill Pryor oversaw the removal of the Ten Commandments monument from the rotunda of the state Supreme Court building. Pryor believes that the court ruling ordering the removal was incorrect. After all, the U.S. Supreme Court building itself has depictions of the Ten Commandments. The court opens its sessions with an invocation of God. And we know the other familiar elements of state-sponsored religion in America, from the chaplains in both houses of Congress to "In God We Trust" on the coinage.

Despite his personal views, Pryor was unequivocal in ordering the removal. He was equally unequivocal in his reason for doing so: The rule of law supersedes everything. And when a federal court issues an order, there is no standing in the schoolhouse door. For his pains, Pryor was picketed by 150 religious protesters calling for his resignation.

Pryor has more recently been attacked from a different quarter. Senate Democrats have blocked his nomination to the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on the grounds of his personal beliefs. "His beliefs are so well known, so deeply held," charged his chief antagonist, Sen. Charles Schumer, "that it's very hard to believe -- very hard to believe -- that they're not going to deeply influence the way he comes about saying, 'I will follow the law."'

An amazing litmus test: deeply held beliefs are a disqualification for high judicial office. Only people of shallow beliefs (like Schumer?) need apply.

Of course, Schumer's real concern is with the content of Pryor's beliefs. Schumer says that he would object to "anybody who had very, very deeply held views." Anybody? If someone had deeply held views in favor of abortion rights, you can be sure that Schumer would not be blocking his nomination. Pryor is being pilloried because he openly states (1) that Roe vs. Wade was a constitutional abomination, and (2) that abortion itself is a moral abomination.

These views may not be majority views, but they are not eccentric. Roe vs. Wade has been widely criticized by liberals, from legal scholar Jeffrey Rosen ("Justice Harry Blackmun's famously artless opinion") to Michael Kinsley ("a terrible decision") to Ruth Bader Ginsberg, who noted that it short-circuited the political process and prevented a "stable settlement" of the issue.

As for the morality of abortion itself, Pryor's view is identical to that of the Roman Catholic Church, a not insignificant religious sect. Pryor's view is also shared by hundreds of millions of orthodox Jews, Christians and Muslims worldwide.

Pryor's position may not be the majority view at Schumer's Upper West Side fund-raising parties. But it is neither extreme nor eccentric.

There are two grounds on which one's views on personal moral issues such as abortion should disqualify a candidate for judicial office: if they are indeed extreme or eccentric, or if these personal beliefs distort the candidate's judicial actions and compromise his fidelity to the Constitution and the rule of law.

Pryor's views on abortion meet neither of these criteria. In fact, one of Pryor's former law partners, Larry Childs, points out that when Alabama passed a law banning partial-birth abortion in 1997, Pryor, as attorney general, instructed local district attorneys to narrowly interpret the law in order to conform with Supreme Court rulings -- a position that drew the ire of pro-life groups.

Senate Democrats are opposing Pryor for the content of his beliefs about abortion, a political sin made doubly abominable in the view of Schumer because they are so sincerely and deeply held.

Is Schumer therefore anti-Christian or anti-Catholic? No. But the net effect of Schumer's "deeply held views" litmus test, now slavishly followed by his fellow Senate Democrats, is to disqualify from the bench anyone whose personal views of abortion coincide with those of traditional Christianity, Judaism and Islam.

This test is not a religious test. It's an ideological test -- that has the obvious effect of excluding from the bench tens of millions of believers who suffer from "very, very deeply held views."

The Schumer test is thus not a violation of the Article Six prohibition against religious tests for office. It is simply a clever way to get to the same result.

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