Bush Gives Recess Appointment to Pickering
BOXNEWS, January 16, 2004
WASHINGTON - President Bush used his executive authority Friday to bypass Senate
Democrats and install District Judge Charles Pickering (search) on the 5th Circuit
Court of Appeals.
The recess appointment, allows Pickering to skip confirmation by the Senate and
hold the seat until the next Congress takes office, which will be in January 2005.
"Today I was proud to exercise my constitutional authority to appoint Judge
Charles W. Pickering to serve on the United States Court of Appeals for the 5th
Circuit," Bush said in a statement late Friday. "Judge Pickering has
served with distinction as a United States District Judge since he was unanimously
confirmed by the Senate in 1990. He is highly qualified to serve on the Court
of Appeals and has widespread bipartisan support from those who know him best."
"I'm grateful to the president for his continued confidence and support,"
Pickering said from his home in Mississippi. "I look forward to serving on
the 5th Circuit."
The 5th Circuit Court, based in New Orleans, handles cases from Mississippi, Texas
and Louisiana, and is known for pioneering rulings on desegregation and voting
rights appeals.
Democratic senators had filibustered Pickering's nomination, accusing him of racism,
and saying he supported segregation while a young man and held anti-voting rights
and anti-abortion positions while a state lawmaker.
They also were angered by his decision to reduce the sentence of a man who had
been convicted of helping burn a cross on the front lawn of an interracial couple
in Mississippi and accused him of bias in an employment discrimination case he
adjudicated.
"A man who defended cross-burning does not deserve elevation to the bench,"
said Sen. Charles Schumer D-N.Y., who led the opposition to Pickering in the Senate
Judiciary Committee.
"As the New Year began, many of us had hoped the president would adopt a
more bipartisan approach in his selection of judges. Instead, this recess appointment
is a finger in the eye to all those seeking fairness and bipartisanship in the
judicial nominations process," Schumer said in a written statement.
"It is quite unfortunate that the president has chosen to seat Judge Pickering
only days before the nation celebrates the life and legacy of Dr. Martin Luther
King Jr.," added Rep. Bennie Thompson, a Mississippi Democrat and member
of the Congressional Black Caucus.
But Pickering's supporters, including the former Democratic governor of the state,
Ronnie Musgrove, the head of Mississippi's legislative black caucus and James
Charles Evers, brother of slain civil rights leader Medgar Evers (search), say
the judge is well known for being scrupulously fair on the bench.
They add that as a state prosecutor in 1968, Pickering testified against a grand
wizard of the Ku Klux Klan (search), a decision that cost him his re-election,
and as chairman of the state GOP, hired the first black political staffer.
"For 25 years, I have strongly advocated that African-Americans and whites
should sit down and talk in a positive and constructive manner to try to promote
better understanding. This I've done," Pickering said after a meeting with
the Mississippi Black Caucus.
The American Life League (search), which opposes abortion rights, said it was
pleased with the president's decision.
"Clearly the White House has realized that the militant, pro-abortion zealots
in the Senate will neither listen to reason nor recognize the limit to their own
power in this matter," said Joseph R. Giganti, ALL's director of media and
government relations. "Back in October, we insisted that President Bush must
take clear and bold steps. With today's appointment, he appears to have taken
American Life League's message to heart.
Pickering is among several judicial nominees who have been hamstrung by the filibuster
(search) process. Alabama Attorney General William Pryor, Texas judge Priscilla
Owen and Hispanic lawyer Miguel Estrada (search), who has since withdrawn his
nomination, all have been stopped from receiving a majority vote in the Senate
as a result of the maneuver. Others, including California judges Carolyn Kuhl
and Janice Rogers Brown, are expected to be blocked by Democrats as well.
Pickering was first nominated by Bush in May 2001. He was blocked from a Senate
Judiciary Committee referral in March 2002 when Democrats held the majority. His
nomination was returned to the panel in January 2003 after Republicans won back
the Senate. Though he passed committee confirmation on a party-line vote last
October, Democrats blocked a Senate floor vote.
"Judge Pickering is a federal judge. He was confirmed by the Senate to the
judgeship he already holds. He's a fine upstanding man. He's been through two
Senate confirmation hearings and one Senate floor vote," said Judge Andrew
Napolitano, a Fox News judicial analyst.
Napolitano said the decision to appoint Pickering probably came from the president's
political advisers who saw it as an opportunity to win points with conservative
voters.
"This has Karl Rove (search) written all over it," Napolitano speculated.
However, the recess appointment is not a new tool to the president. Bush made
a recess appointment to the U.S. Institute of Peace in August. In 2002, he also
gave a recess appointment to Eugene Scalia to be Labor Department solicitor and
Otto Reich as assistant secretary of state for Latin America, the top diplomatic
post for the region.
President Clinton also used his executive power for recess appointments, giving
Roger Gregory a seat on the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals in December 2000. He
also used it for another controversial position.
"Democrats absolutely will be furious and when they get furious, they should
look at President Cinton, who also did this, not with a federal judge but with
Bill Lann Lee (search), assistant attorney general," said Napolitano. "Lee
could not get confirmed by a Republican Senate to run the civil rights division
of the Justice Department. President Clinton appointed him as a recess appointee,
appointed him twice, he did it twice to bypass the Republican-controlled Senate
and Mr. Lee ran the civil rights division of the Justice Department and the Republican
Senate couldn't do anything about it."
Fox News' Wendell Goler and Sharon Kehnemui and The Associated Press contributed
to this report.
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