September 13, 2005

Roberts affirms a belief in a constitutional right of privacy.

I just caught a few minutes of the Roberts hearings, with Arlen Specter questioning Roberts about the right of privacy. Roberts is giving really short, crisp answers, and Specter seems really nervous as he struggles to get out his questions. Perhaps he's surprised by the brevity of the answers and is worrying about running out of material. Asked about his reference to "the so-called right of privacy," Roberts clearly explains, with references to the First, Third, Fourth, and Fifth Amendments, that there is a constitutional right of privacy. He doesn't hedge at all, and Specter seems to be at something of a loss for follow-up questions.

I don't have time to keep watching, but I'll be back this afternoon with more.

15 comments:

Ron said...

That makes me wonder if the anti-abortion conservatives will take this stated belief alone as cause for concern. I can easily see both sides doing a bit too much tea leaf reading...

Bruce Hayden said...

I would seem to agree. Ann, you are the Con Law expert here, but it sounds from what you said like he is accepting Griswold. This could be either good or bad (depending of course on your position in these matters).

On the one hand, he could be stating that he accepts this all as settled precedent - i.e. that he won't be an activist Justice. A second is that he likes the right of privacy, but may not be overly excited about expanding the right of abortion. And thirdly, that he is a true stealth candidate.

My guess is the first. The second seems a stretch, and I think he was too well vetted for the third.

Freeman Hunt said...

Good question. However, I do think that there are a lot of anti-abortion conservatives out there who believe the Constitution contains a right to privacy--one that does not include the right to kill a fetus.

Robert Holmgren said...

Robert's use of 'privacy' might also imply that he'd like some too.

Simon said...

As I read Roberts' answer, almost until the very end, he very carefully avoided saying there was a GENERAL right to privacy - he listed the SPECIFIC privacy rights guaranteed by the constitution. And I was thinking "maybe this guy isn't a blunder after all!"

After all, he had very neatly answered questions about the precedential weight of Roe by mentioning Lochner and Plessy, and noting that they were overruled, on no better grounds than because they were wrongly decided,

But then he talked about the 14th amendment, and if I heard right, Judge Roberts bought into substantive due process on live television. A few minutes later he seemed to buy into the living constitution doctrine. Not happy, so far.

goesh said...

The way he moves his right hand clearly shows he has never handled many guns. I'm afraid he will want to weaken the traditional understanding of the 2cd amendment. Just watch that right hand of his and you'll see what I mean.

Anna said...

I give Roberts a lot of credit for keeping his cool. It seemed as though Kennedy was trying to make him lose it by interrupting him, not allowing him to answer, and then not listening to his answers. I enjoyed Kennedy getting reprimanded for talking over Roberts.

So far, it seems that Roberts has kept from answering any questions that may come before the Supreme Court in the future. He has spoken about cases that have already been before the court without seeming to stand on one side or the other but discussing the case as it was decided. And, as Simon points out, mentioning cases that have been overturned because they were wrongly decided.

I don't get the feeling that he is a staunch pro-life and that even if he is in his private life, he would decide a case based on the facts presented and not on his personal views. Of course, he could just be a very convincing lawyer.

Michael said...

Joe Biden is running for president?

I suppose on some level his questioning is effective... unless you don't expect someone to take footage of you being a total bully and make a 30 second spot out of it.

Unfortunately, Biden already has a record of doing this in public to voters, too ("I think I have a higher IQ than you" has to be the second most self-destructive thing you could say to a voter, after "Hey, could I borrow your eight-year-old boy for the weekend?") Prediction: Biden will come in a humiliating seventh in Iowa, after Hillary Clinton, Mark Warner, Evan Bayh, John Edwards, John Kerry, and Al Sharpton.

Simon said...

Re Michael's questioon about Biden. Joe Biden wants it, and certainly wants to run. I will give real money to any person who runs against Joe Biden in any capacity. From time to time, he is mentioned as a Democratic contender. Let me say something to my democratic friends: if this man were a genuine contender for the Democratic nomination, you guys would be far, far closer to the end of your rope than anyone has suggested. From where I sit, you are NOT so desparate for candidates that this guy is a contender.

I agree with Manuel Miranda's assesment. Biden "graduated near the bottom of his law school class", and he will spend the duration of these hearings proving it on national television.

I don't mind if Chief Justice Roberts is pro life or pro choice; I'm less worried about his politics. As I've mentioned before, I don't want liberal nominees, I don't want conservative nominees, I want originalist nominees, and Roberts has yet to prove that he has, despite being specifically given the chance to do so by Sen. Grassley (good answer as far as it went, which wasn't far enough). Abortion is categorically a matter for the states; there is no federal constitutional right to an abortion, there is no federal constitutional power to prohibit abortion, and I think Justice Scalia is exactly right (not that I make much of a habit of disagreeing with Nino) to say that he would vote against a Federal law barring abortion just as readily as he would vote to overturn Roe and Casey. It's not a question of whether anyone is pro life or pro choice; both are perfectly reasonable arguments within their own premises and presumptions, but their arguments are political arguments which have no place in the Court. Abortion is not the only thing corrupting this process, but it is emblematic of the wider problem, as is Sen. Kennedy's absurd speach at Roberts earlier, in which he seems to think that Judge Roberts has been nominated for the position of Superman.

Freeman Hunt said...

Biden made an ass of himself. He came off as though he wasn't listening and didn't care about Roberts' answers. If that's the case, why does Biden bother asking questions at all?

Finn Alexander Kristiansen said...

It was interesting watching the hearing on PBS this morning (I don't have cable), and observing Joe Biden looking a bit foolish trying to ask questions that would force Roberts into a state of sudden verbal and analytical paralysis.

Biden largely spent his time shuffling papers, taking Roberts' responses to absurd extremes, and complaining that he was running out of minutes (minutes he used to largely talk over Roberts' careful answers).

At one point they got on the topic of federal laws that protect women from violence, with Biden taking the low road by suggesting that Roberts was in favor of women being smashed about. At that point Roberts calmly brought up the issue of federalism being the issue, and that it was not accurate to suggest that he was against laws advocating equality or the protection of women. But the manner in which Roberts responded had the effect of making Biden look just really tawdry.

Roberts remained unruffled, keeping his answers short and his face pleasant and relaxed. I would suspect that if he can continue on in this manner, a lot of senators will be intimidated into capitulation, if only to avoid coming off looking stupid.

In his words to Biden, Roberts reiterated the point that some of his quoted opinions were the result of working as a staff lawyer, and not necessarily his personal legal leanings.

As for privacy, I think one can affirm a belief in a right to privacy, while still affording that right to every perceived living thing (fetuses included).

If one extends a privacy right that far, it actually negates any application to abortion. So I don't think his comments necessarily give any indication of where he might come down on the abortion issue as a whole.

bill said...

I'm just reading the transcripts, but Roberts is sounding like a reasonable and thoughtful person. Here are my favorite quotes so far:

Roberts responding to Biden: "The Supreme Court concluded that it was a correct reading of the law."

And I think it was Leahy who asked, "Are you sending us a message?"

Bruce Hayden said...

Jonathan suggested that Judge Roberts more accurately agreed with the outcome of Griswold, but not the reasoning. And, indeed, this would seem much more in character. He comes across much too cautious to ever be comfortable with this free wheeling decision, based on the notorious eminations and pnumbras.

Simon said...

Jim,
I think what Jonathan is saying is that Roberts employed a clever bit of rhetorical gymnastics, answering Specter's question as to whether there is A right to privacy, generally, by listing examples of specific rights of privacy guaranteed by the constitution. There ARE certain privacy rights in the constitution, but what there is not is a general, amorphous right to privacy. I hope that Roberts was merely being a skillful rhetorician and intended to dodge the question.

Bruce Hayden said...

Maybe the problem is that lawyers are by their nature "too clever by half", and Judge Robers is, by all indications, an excellent attorney.

I frankly don't think that there is anyone on the Judiciary Committee who can seriously lay a glove on him. They aren't in the Senate because they were superb lawyers, but he is where he is because he is.