October 05, 2005

Harriet Miers and the real world

Texas senator John Cornyn makes his case for Harriet Miers and her nomination to the Supreme Court. Among her virtues:

Harriet Miers's background as a legal practitioner is an asset, not a detriment. She has spent her career representing real people in courtrooms across America. This is precisely the type of experience that the Supreme Court needs. The court is full of justices who served as academics and court of appeals judges before they were nominated to the bench. What the court is missing is someone who understands the consequences of its decisions on the American people.

This experience gap is a real one. With the exception of the newly confirmed chief justice, John Roberts, no justice on the court has been an advocate in a court of law in the past 25 years, and Chief Justice Roberts was involved only at the appellate level.

Harriet Miers, by contrast, has a long and successful career as a lawyer representing corporate and individual clients in a variety of state and federal courts. I am confident that this background provides her with an understanding of the burdens of modern litigation, a recognition of the problems with frivolous lawsuits and an appreciation for tort reform.

Cornyn is also a member of the Senate Judiciary Committee and served previously as attorney general of Texas, as well as a justice on the Texas Supreme Court.

Posted by Alan at October 5, 2005 06:07 AM