That Lefty, Alberto Gonzalez
by TChris
Just as the moderately conservative Justice O'Connor is viewed as a lefty by some extremists, the more conservative Alberto Gonzales is viewed by many in the right wing as too liberal to sit on the Supreme Court.
Within hours after Justice Sandra Day O'Connor's announced retirement from the Supreme Court, members of conservative groups around the country convened in five national conference calls in which, participants said, they shared one big concern: heading off any effort by President Bush to nominate his attorney general, Alberto R. Gonzales to replace her.
The right wing base that kept Bush in office intends to call in its chips.
Paul M. Weyrich, a veteran conservative organizer and chairman of the Free Congress Foundation, said he had told administration officials that nominating Mr. Gonzales, whose views on abortion are considered suspect by religious conservatives, would fracture the president's conservative backers.
Mr. Weyrich, while declining to disclose the specifics of a recent conversation with Ken Mehlman, the Republican Party chairman, said: "We have let the administration know through whatever channels we have that Gonzales would be an unwise appointment because of the opposition of some of the groups," some of which he said would actively oppose Mr. Gonzales, while "others like the Southern Baptists and myself would simply not help."
Sen. Schumer: "The hard, hard right wants a true believer." Gonzalez believes that international agreements against torture are "quaint," which should solidy his conservative credentials, but that isn't enough for the extremists who believe they control the president's decision.
Bush is in a bind. The nomination of a vocal opponent of abortion would trigger a serious confirmation battle accompanied by renewed threats to invoke the nuclear option. Bush may be tempted to sell out his religious base rather than provoke a war that will cripple the Senate's ability to legislate the rest of his agenda.
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