Contributors
Chris Field- Contributor
Chris
Field is Editor of Human
Events Online [go
to Field index]
Warnings
About Paez and the Rest of the 9th Circuit
Liberal judicial activism out front and center...
[Chris Field] 9/20/03
Much has been made of the recent 9th Circuit Court of Appeals
ruling postponing the October 7 California recall election (Southwest
Voter Registration v. Shelley). And rightfully so: the decision
was a political power grab by a federal court known for its partisan,
liberal activism.
Conservatives
have long lamented the Leftist nature of the 9th Circuit and
frequently
offered evidence of
its need for balance,
such as its ruling the Pledge of Allegiance unconstitutional
(Newdow
v. U.S. Congress) and declaring there to be no constitutional "right
of the people to keep and bear arms" (Silveira
v. Lockyer).
Not
only have critics' complaints about the 9th Circuit once again
been validated, but also opponents of one of President
Clinton's nominees to that bench have also been given the opportunity
to say, "See, I told you so." One of the three jurists
who decided to postpone the California recall was Judge Richard
Paez. When President Clinton nominated Paez to the 9th Circuit,
red flags were raised by many conservatives. GOP Senators were
quick to point out Paez's liberalism and the likelihood that
he would be a judicial activist once he was confirmed to the
court, and they led a campaign to defeat his nomination.
Republican
lawmakers were not the only voices offering some warnings about
Paez's worthiness of a position on the already liberal
bench. Some newspaper editorial boards also offered some critiques.
On
March 8, 2000, a Washington Times editorial ("Judiciary
at the Crossroads") noted:
Today, the Senate will vote on
two of President Clinton's most intensely contested nominees,
U.S. District Judge Richard Paez,
and labor lawyer Marsha Berzon, both of whom Mr. Clinton has
tapped for the overextended and aggressively activist 9th U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals. The vote promises to be close. Republican
senators would do well to consider carefully the importance
of the crossroads they face, and the direction in which they
alone
are empowered to steer the federal courts with their votes
today. [. . .]
In a perverse
way, both Judge Paez and Ms. Berzon would fit right into the
Ninth's
groove. . . . As for Judge Paez, he
is not only
a self-described liberal, he is also a self-described
judicial activist. He once explained his legal outlook this way: "I
appreciate . . . the need of the courts to act when they must,
when the issue results from the failure of the political process
to resolve a certain political question. There's no choice but
for the courts to resolve the question that perhaps ideally and
preferably should be resolved through the legislative process."
No
choice, indeed. It would seem that Judge Paez believes
that simply donning a long, black robe confers upon him the
powers
of a kind of "superlegislator" with an ever-expanding
mandate. Clearly, it is the urgent duty of the Republican Senate
to moderate, not intensify, such strains of judicial activism
that, more and more, are foiling the will of the legislative
branch, and, by extension, the American electorate itself. [.
. .]
If a Republican majority in the Senate is unable to take
a stand on basic conservative philosophy and defeat two genuinely
activist
nominees, one must wonder what a Republican majority is for,
and how long it can last. [emphasis added]
Roll
Call, in a March 12, 1998, editorial ("Slap on the
Wrist"), pointed out Paez's ruling in a case that indicated
a possible softness on crime that ought to raise questions about
his nomination to an appellate court:
The Senate
Judiciary Committee faces an interesting dilemma in considering
whether
to approve
the nomination of federal district
court Judge Richard Paez to the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals
in California. Republicans have held up the nomination on the
grounds that Paez is "too liberal." But what will they
do now that Paez has handed down a shockingly light sentence
in the case of Republican Rep. Jay Kim (Calif)?
In spite of an
abundance of evidence that Kim tried to collect millions of dollars
in illegal campaign contributions from foreigners
and corporations, Paez sentenced Kim to two months of home detention,
one year of probation, and a $5,000 fine after he pleaded guilty
to misdemeanors in connection with accepting $250,000 in unlawful
contributions. Prosecutors had asked that Kim be given six months'
jail time because the violations involve the largest acknowledged
receipt of illegal campaign contributions in Congressional history.
[. . .]
All the evidence - and the fact that Kim received a lighter sentence
than his former campaign treasurer - makes Judge Paez's sentences
a mere slap on the wrist and makes us think that the
Senate Judiciary Committee ought to question whether Paez
isn't too soft on criminals
to be an appellate judge. [emphasis added]
The Daily
Oklahoman (Oklahoma City) also made a point of noting Paez's
liberalism
and likely judicial activism ("Problems
for Life: Here Come Two More Liberal Judges," March 15,
2000):
The federal judiciary got decidedly more liberal last
week with Senate confirmation of two of President Clinton's nominees
to
the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals. [. . .]
Paez, a
federal district court judge, used a 1995 speech to attack
California's
Proposition 187 as anti-Latino and Proposition 209
as anti-civil rights at a time when both voter-approved initiatives
were the subject of pending litigation. The speech may have
violated the Judicial Code of Ethics, which bans judges from
making statements
that cast doubt on their impartiality.
In addition,
Paez has said he believes the courts must act on issues when "that
perhaps ideally and preferably should be resolved through
the legislative process." In other words,
Judge Paez won't be shy about legislating from
the bench. [emphasis added]
Even the
Washington Post, which supported the Paez nomination, conceded
that conservatives
had a point ("Judge Paez Nomination," October
29, 1999):
Judge Paez should, in our judgment, be confirmed, but
the Republican opposition to him is not entirely frivolous.
Back
in 1995, Judge Paez made a speech before a group of students
at his old law school that dealt with the diversity of the bench
in California. In this speech, he made the following remarks: "The
Latino community has, for some time now, faced heightened discrimination
and hostility, which came to a head with the passage of Proposition
187. The proposed anti-civil rights initiative will inflame the
issues all over again, without contributing to any serious discussion
of our differences and similarities or ways to ensure equal opportunity
for all."
For
a sitting judge to disparage ballot initiatives that were
likely subjects
of
litigation was inappropriate. Moreover,
the
initiative that Judge Paez termed "anti-civil rights" --
which later became Proposition 209 and, after passing, ended
affirmative action in California state programs -- is a hot-button
issue for many Republicans. A federal court, in a move that for
some Republicans has become a kind of emblem of liberal activism,
initially held Proposition 209 unconstitutional and prevented
it from taking effect. A principled conservative
could suspect, based on Judge Paez's comments, that he might
be sympathetic
to such thinking and would be more generally a liberal activist
on the bench. [emphasis added]
If there is a silver lining to
the recall ruling by the 9th Circuit (other than the entertainment
value it provides for non-Californians),
perhaps it will serve to further remind people that it is important
to have a President who will nominate judges who understand
the true principles of the Constitution, including the separation
of powers, and refuse to legislate from the bench.
[This article can
also be found at Human
Events Online]
copyright
2003 Human Events
|