"I know Harriet well, I know how accomplished she is, I know
how many times she's broken the glass ceiling herself. She
is a role model for young women around our country,"
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/10/11/AR2005101100515_pf.html
Laura Bush says sexism possible in Miers criticism
COVINGTON, Louisiana (Reuters) - First lady Laura Bush
joined her husband in defending his nominee to the U.S.
Supreme Court on Tuesday and said it was possible some
critics were being sexist in their opposition to Harriet
Miers.
"That's possible, I think that's possible," Mrs. Bush said
when asked on NBC's "Today Show" whether criticism that
Miers lacked intellectual heft were sexist in nature. She
said Miers' accomplishments as a lawyer were a role model to
young women.
A week after President George W. Bush nominated Miers for a
lifetime appointment to the highest U.S. court, he remained
on the defensive against conservative critics within his own
Republican Party.
They say Bush missed a chance to pick an experienced judge
with clear-cut conservative credentials who would firmly
move the court to the right on such social issues as
abortion, gay rights and church-state separation.
"Just because she hasn't served on the bench, doesn't mean
that she can't be a great Supreme Court judge," said Bush,
whose job approval ratings have sagged below 40 percent for
the first time ever in recent polls.
Although some conservatives have supported the nomination,
others have suggested Bush withdraw it and submit a new
name, an appeal the president rejected last week.
Mrs. Bush, who had publicly supported the nomination of a
woman to the high court, noted that Miers had been president
of the Texas Bar Association.
"I know Harriet well, I know how accomplished she is, I know
how many times she's broken the glass ceiling herself. She
is a role model for young women around our country," she
said.
Some conservatives have also accused Bush of cronyism for
nominating a White House insider to the court. They have
expressed fears that since not much is known about Miers'
views, she could end up being a liberal along the lines of
David Souter, who was put on the court by the president's
father, former President George Bush.
Bush, who was in Louisiana on his eighth trip to check on
the recovery from Hurricane Katrina after coming under
criticism for the slow federal response to the disaster,
said he knows Miers shares his conservative philosophy.
"I'm convinced she won't change. The person I know is not
the kind of person who is going to change her philosophy,
and her philosophy is she is not going to legislate from the
bench," he said.
Miers has spent the last few days in her home town of Dallas
gathering her written material in order to have it ready for
her Senate confirmation hearings.
The suggestion Bush withdraw the nomination has not been
echoed on Capitol Hill in Washington, where many Senate
Republicans, even some who have expressed concerns about
Miers, said they expected her to be confirmed by the
Republican-led Senate.
In 1999 Laura Bush received the SMU Distinguished Alumni
Award for her ...
Harriet Miers was named assistant to the president and staff
secretary. ...
____________________________
"When law and morality contradict each other, the citizen
has the cruel
alternative of either losing his moral sense or losing his
respect for the law."
...Frederic Bastiat