The
coming resignation of Justice John Paul Stevens from the Supreme
Court sets up a new fight for his successor and a question that
I � and others � have, is will President Obama appoint someone as
liberal as Stevens has become?� An indication of where the President
might be coming from is the comment that he made when the Citizens
United case was decided last year.� Then, he said it was a victory
for powerful interests like banks, oil companies and etc. that,
�marshal their power every day in Washington to drown out the voices
of everyday Americans.�� He repeated this sentiment at his State
of the Union address and after the recent announcement by Justice
Stevens that he would resign, saying Stevens� replacement would
be �someone who knows that in a democracy, powerful interests must
not be allowed to drown out the voices of ordinary citizens.�� This
theme assumes that the President will appoint someone who is clearly
allied with the politics of the people rather than powerful interests.�
But
the pressures on the President are inexorable.� The most important
is the system of appointments which represented the sentiments of
the white majority that are right-of-center.� Conservative politics
would not be as powerful without their support since most whites
vote Republican.�� Justice Stevens, a Republican appointed by a
Republican president, said that the Court had moved beyond him in
becoming more conservative.� So, when the advice by pundits and
Republicans is for the President to pick a �centrist� or a �moderate�
they mean someone within the ideological orbit of the dominant white
majority.
I
point to the dominant white majority as the arena where this decision
will be made because Blacks and other peoples of color are largely
excluded from the legislative debate and the decision power that
determines who will sit on a court that ostensibly represents all
Americans.� Blacks are largely missing in the Senate which confirms
the Justices and the public debate routinely excludes their opinions.��The
last time I was interviewed on CSPAN I said that Justice Clarence
Thomas was a product of the Conservative movement and an embarrassment
to the African American community and I have not been invited back
since.
Another
pressure is to what extent the coming debate over Stevens� replacement
will effect the fall elections. �I agree that the nominee will signal
how much of a political problem Obama can take because I can hear
his colleagues who are up for election cautioning him not to make
it harder with a choice that would inflame their voting constituents.��
With the Tea Party phenomenon having emboldened the Republicans
to begin thinking they will take back the House and Senate, Democrats
are already running scared.� The contradiction however, is that
the White House has to think about putting a vote on the Supreme
Court that will protect the Health Care package just passed and
signed into law,� part of which may surely be challenged and some
of it may reach the Supreme Court.�
I
think that the Black community should support Eric Holder.� Now
I know that some view this as a silly suggestion and that Obama
can�t make such an� unsophisticated political choice.�� However,
my mood is bolder and my political intelligence tells me that we
didn�t make strides in American politics through sophistication
alone.�� At this moment, my sense of Black politics says that we
have to use our leverage to engage the essential debate on the character
of the next Supreme Court nominee that takes place outside of our
community and doesn�t take our views into consideration.� Thus,
our support for Holder becomes a vehicle for intervening in that
decision to bring some balance to a right-of-center debate and to
represent the interests of the people that Obama says must be reflected
on the Supreme Court.� In other words, we have to help make him
put as progressive a person on the Court as possible.� Intervention
is very important because the absence of Stevens will ironically
weaken the liberal or progressive stance on the Court because a
junior person will not have the status to negotiate a vote away
from the conservative bloc to create a winning majority for progressive
causes.
Since
we live at a time when Conservative activists are tolerated and
liberal activists are not, it will require a genuine mobilization
on the Left to make sure that a liberal is nominate to the Court
because �centrists� and �moderates� are untrustworthy in the current
context.� Also, since the current cast of prospects emerged from
the last nomination fight, if not Holder this time, maybe next.
BlackCommentator.com
Editorial Board member,
Dr. Ron Walters,PhD is a Political Analyst, Author and Professor
Emeritus of the University of Maryland,
College Park. His latest book is: The Price of Racial Reconciliation (The Politics of Race and Ethnicity) (University
of Michigan Press). Click here
to contact Dr. Walters. |