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- <text id=94TT0661>
- <title>
- May 23, 1994: Supreme Court:On Second Thought
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- May 23, 1994 Cosmic Crash
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SUPREME COURT, Page 24
- On Second Thought
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> By selecting Breyer as his nominee, Clinton bypassed his favorites
- and opted for a quick confirmation
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Lacayo--Reported by James Carney, Michael Duffy, Dan Goodgame and Julie
- Johnson/Washington and David Gross/Boston
- </p>
- <p> The call from the President came shortly before midnight on
- Wednesday. For nearly a month Bruce Babbitt had been heralded
- as the inside favorite to fill the coming vacancy on the Supreme
- Court, and now Bill Clinton wanted to talk to him. Could he
- come over to the White House? Minutes later, Babbitt, in chinos,
- and Clinton, wearing jeans and an open-collar shirt, were sitting
- in the upstairs kitchen, carving up the remains of a mangled
- apple pie, drinking decaf and watching the late, come-from-behind
- victory of the Phoenix Suns over the Houston Rockets.
- </p>
- <p> The two men meandered into the President's study, then spent
- more than two hours in one of Clinton's trademark, late-night
- rap sessions. Clinton questioned Babbitt on everything from
- the Interior Department, which the former Governor of Arizona
- heads, to the history of the Supreme Court. They talked about
- possible candidates for the court, previous nominees, the 20
- or so Senators who would oppose a Babbitt nomination out of
- pique over his Western-lands policy, the politicians appointed
- to the high court in the past. Finally, at about 2:30 a.m.,
- with Clinton unflagging, Babbitt departed. Friends say he left
- feeling that while he still had a good chance at the nomination,
- the President would lean a long way toward his old friend, Judge
- Richard Arnold of Arkansas. Not until Friday--at the tail
- end of the week in which he had promised a decision--would
- Clinton make up his mind.
- </p>
- <p> Even for most of Friday, the President was still undecided.
- Indeed, it seemed that no one was out of the running. Babbitt
- was in it; so was Arnold. And then at about 3:45 p.m., with
- the Oval Office still crowded with members of his selection
- team, the President asked to be alone. When he summoned them
- back half an hour later, he said, "I've decided to go with Breyer.
- I feel comfortable with that."
- </p>
- <p> With those words ended another tortuous episode of indecision
- in the Clinton White House. Though few who know Stephen Breyer
- doubt his brilliance as a jurist, the President seemed to lack
- any compelling reason to prefer him. A Babbitt nomination would
- have gone further to satisfy the President's stated desire to
- put someone on the court who had real-world experience as a
- consensus builder. Arnold, who was once Clinton's law professor,
- was the choice closest to the President's heart.
- </p>
- <p> If there was any single advantage that Breyer had in Clinton's
- eyes, it was that he would stir little controversy and consume
- little of Clinton's dwindling store of political capital in
- the Senate. Above all, the President doesn't want a messy confirmation
- fight. On that score Breyer, a onetime chief counsel to the
- Senate Judiciary Committee, which will vote on his nomination,
- can't be beat. In fact, he has the support of such ideological
- opposites as Orrin Hatch and Ted Kennedy.
- </p>
- <p> Still, the President hadn't been all that comfortable with Breyer
- when he considered and rejected him last year for the Supreme
- Court seat he eventually offered to Ruth Bader Ginsburg. In
- a face-to-face meeting at the time--which took place just
- days after Breyer had suffered two broken ribs from being struck
- by a car while riding his bicycle--Clinton found the judge
- to be "stiff and a little too eager," says a White House official
- involved in the selection process. "He also came across as very
- much of an intellectual who flits from issue to issue, whereas
- Ruth Bader Ginsburg was dispassionate, quiet and grounded. Clinton
- thought you would hire Steve Breyer to be a law professor. But
- he found Ruth more judgely." And so, last year, Clinton did
- not choose Breyer.
- </p>
- <p> In the 37 days between the time Justice Harry Blackmun announced
- his retirement and the Breyer choice last Friday, Clinton appears
- to have decided, and then changed his mind, over and over again.
- Each time, he or his top aides leaked his apparent preference
- with greater and greater certainty, only to pull back at the
- last minute. Soon after Clinton's first choice, Senate majority
- leader George Mitchell, announced that he didn't want the job,
- debates within the Administration turned on whether to seek
- an appointee who could forge coalitions on a divided court or
- to find a suitable black, Hispanic or female candidate.
- </p>
- <p> By early last week it was clear that Clinton had reduced the
- field to Arnold, Babbitt and Breyer. Each had drawbacks. For
- Arnold, it was his health. He is under treatment for lymphoma,
- a form of cancer. He had also raised the suspicions of some
- women's groups with two of his opinions on the bench, one that
- upheld a parental-consent statute regarding teen abortions and
- another that permitted the Jaycees to exclude women. With Whitewater
- still an unresolved issue, there were also rumblings in the
- Senate about the propriety of the President bringing to Washington
- another of his friends from Arkansas. For good measure, the
- Wall Street Journal reported that in the 1970s Arnold had made
- $500,000 in the commodities market, though the paper gave no
- reason to believe there was anything amiss about his earnings.
- </p>
- <p> But it was a Babbitt nomination that raised the most worrisome
- prospect, a real confirmation battle. Last year the Interior
- Secretary angered Senators from Western states by trying to
- raise fees for grazing, mining and water rights on federal lands.
- As Babbitt pulled out in front of the other choices last week,
- Utah's Hatch, the ranking Republican on the Senate Judiciary
- Committee, predicted a fight. Though minority leader Robert
- Dole told the President privately that Babbitt could still be
- confirmed, probably by a vote of 80 to 20, the White House remained
- concerned about the possibility of a revolt spreading among
- Senate Democrats from Western states. The battle over land-use
- fees last year had grown so fractious that at one point a Senate
- Democrat told the White House it could never count on his vote
- again. Asked why, the Senator replied, "I'll give you three
- reasons: Babbitt, Babbitt and Babbitt."
- </p>
- <p> It didn't seem to occur to the disgruntled Senators that they
- should have been pleased by the prospect of getting Babbitt
- onto the court and away from land-use policy. "This isn't about
- logic," said a White House aide. "This is about personalities
- and personal relationships." By Thursday night it was looking
- like no for the Secretary. "They trial-ballooned the Babbitt
- thing," said an aide to a Western Senator. "It definitely popped."
- </p>
- <p> In contrast, Breyer looked more and more attractive. His chief
- problem, the nanny factor, was the least troublesome. When he
- was under consideration for Byron White's seat last year, Breyer
- had been snagged for unpaid Social Security taxes for a cleaning
- lady. He subsequently paid the taxes, only to have the IRS later
- determine that he had not in fact owed the money; the IRS refunded
- it.
- </p>
- <p> As Friday morning arrived with no clear front runner, a mood
- of frustration set in at the White House. One official called
- the previous 72 hours "three days of torture." Finally, after
- deciding that the questions hanging over Arnold's health were
- serious enough to disqualify him, Clinton was ready at last
- to give Breyer his O.K. He called the judge, their first contact
- since their uncomfortable meeting last year, then got on the
- phone to the two losing candidates. Babbitt was able soon after
- to joke with friends about his experience. "I knew I had been
- cut," he told them, "when George Stephanopoulos referred to
- me as `Secretary Bobbitt.'"
- </p>
- <p> Breyer, 55, has come back from nowhere before. At the time of
- the 1980 elections, he was one of a group of Jimmy Carter's
- federal court appointees who were still awaiting confirmation
- when the Democrats lost the Senate and the White House. The
- other nominees were left in limbo. Largely with the help of
- Ted Kennedy, Breyer alone was approved by the Senate, where
- both Democrats and Republicans knew him from his days with the
- Senate Judiciary Committee, of which Kennedy was then the chairman.
- </p>
- <p> A man who has read Proust in French and can hold forth knowledgeably
- on the merits of a bottle of Chateau Latour, Breyer is the son
- of a San Francisco lawyer. With his mother's encouragement,
- he attended Stanford University instead of Harvard, where she
- was afraid he would lose himself in books. Before going on to
- Harvard Law School, he spent two years at Oxford. His enduring
- affection for things British is evident in everything from his
- tailoring to the trace of a British accent that sometimes inflects
- his speech to his wife Joanna, a clinical psychologist at the
- Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston; her father, Lord Blakenham,
- was once leader of Britain's Conservative Party.
- </p>
- <p> After a period as clerk for then Supreme Court Justice Arthur
- Goldberg, Breyer moved on to congressional staff work. It was
- his proudest achievement there to be architect of the plan by
- which Congress deregulated the airline industry in 1978. He
- has got more mixed grades for his work as a member of the U.S.
- Sentencing Commission, which established the federal guidelines
- that require judges in all parts of the country to hand down
- roughly equivalent sentences for comparable crimes. Many judges
- are furious over the guidelines, which they complain force them
- to issue sentences that do not take into account the differing
- circumstances of individual defendants. Because they mandate
- lengthy sentences for first-time drug offenders, the guidelines
- are also blamed for contributing to the huge growth of the American
- prison population.
- </p>
- <p> Breyer's critics consider him brilliant but passionless, given
- to formulas and fine distinctions but lacking an overall vision
- of the Constitution. "It was no coincidence," says a colleague
- on the Harvard Law faculty, "that he only taught antitrust and
- administrative law." (Breyer also carved out a course area for
- himself in economic regulation.) As a judge he has shown little
- interest in such issues as civil rights, privacy or the First
- Amendment, which have provided most of the fireworks on the
- high court for the past four decades. The First Circuit of Appeals
- in Boston, where he sits, is also one that receives few high-profile
- cases. For instance, since none of the states in his circuit
- has the death penalty, Breyer has never ruled on the issue.
- On almost every question of consequence on which he has pronounced
- himself, he has rulings that place him on both sides, which
- might be evidence of either intellectual scrupulousness or a
- lack of all conviction.
- </p>
- <p> Though he is presumed to support abortion rights, for instance,
- Breyer seems unlikely to defend them as vigorously as Blackmun,
- who wrote Roe v. Wade. In 1990 Breyer rejected a Bush Administration
- "gag rule" that would have prevented the staff at federally
- supported family-planning clinics from even mentioning abortion.
- But a year earlier he dissented from a ruling that granted a
- new hearing on the burdens imposed by a law requiring that minors
- notify both parents before undergoing an abortion. Accordingly,
- abortion-rights groups are viewing him with some trepidation.
- </p>
- <p> On a court where power is already settling into the hands of
- an expanding group of moderates, Breyer's carefully parsed jurisprudence
- might prove more persuasive than an impassioned style in easing
- the moderates in the liberal direction many Clinton supporters
- are hoping for. That could be the President's hope. After the
- long, bumpy and very public selection process last year that
- ended with the appointment of Ruth Bader Ginsburg, he told a
- roomful of his aides, "That just goes to show that if you give
- me enough time to make me feel great down here,"--holding
- his gut--"it will work out." Breyer, who probably didn't feel
- too great the last time the President chose a court nominee
- his way, surely feels much better this time.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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