GOP on Mukasey nomination: ‘We’re in an alternate universe’

As expected, the president officially nominated former New York district judge Michael Mukasey to replace Alberto Gonzales as Attorney General. Also as expected, large contingents of the conservative movement just aren’t sure how upset they should be right now.

Schumer and Fielding went so far as to discuss names, and Mukasey’s came up. “We’re in an alternate universe,” says one Senate aide. “Charles Schumer saying something nice about a guy used to be the kiss of death.”

The Administration also adopted the Clinton-like process of trial ballooning: leaking names through allies to see how much of a storm would ensue…. But in dropping Olson and going with Mukasey, Bush has opened himself up to attack from the right. Conservatives are worried about Mukasey’s 1994 denial of asylum for a Chinese man who said his wife had been forced to have an abortion under that country’s one-child law, which they say indicates he’s weak on pro-life issues. And though he has consistently ruled with the Administration on a number of important and high-profile terrorism cases, Mukasey broke with them in an early, crucial ruling, saying that American citizen Jose Padilla had a right to a lawyer, no matter what his status in the war on terror. […]

Senate Republicans were cautiously optimistic, but still worried. “Conservatives will respond well to Mukasey if conservative leaders point in that direction,” one Senate Republican aide said Sunday. But he worried that any uncertainty among conservatives could be deadly. “Hesitation kills,” he said, “It will be perceived as weakness.”

Have you ever noticed how navigating through the conservative muck is a bit like working through a jungle filled with dangerous animals?

In any case, within a couple of hours of the Mukasey announcement at the White House, a statement from far-right direct-mail pioneer Richard Viguerie landed in my inbox: “When liberals like Chuck Schumer and Ralph Nees are pleased with a nominee, conservative alarm bells should ring…. This nomination is an invitation to liberal Democrats to run rough-shod over the remainder of Bush’s politically weakened presidency. Bush is now the lamest of lame ducks.”

It’s not just Viguerie.

TP collected a few other related reactions.

* “Michael B. Mukasey: The Second Coming of Harriet Miers?,” said a headline on the Jawa Report today.

* “It also isn’t obvious that he has the management or political skills to run an institution as big and unwieldy as DoJ – the same shortcoming that arguably led to Judge Gonzales’ difficulties,” a conservative lawyer told the National Review’s Kathryn Jean Lopez.

* Kathy at HangRightPolitics wrote “I feel somewhat deflated over the choice. Why is it that every time I see the word consensus used by a liberal I read ‘surrender?'”

* “I am not prepared to delude myself into believing that Mukasey was the best choice,” wrote the Corner’s Mark Levin today.

* A right-wing Catholic group, Fidelis, “voiced serious concerns” about Mukasey, citing his “1994 denial of asylum for a Chinese man who said his wife had been forced to have an abortion under that country’s one-child law, which they say indicates he’s weak on pro-life issues.”

* The AP reports that “some legal conservatives and Republicans have expressed reservations about Mukasey’s legal record and past endorsements and said some groups have been drafting a strategy to oppose him.”

I understand the source of the grumbling — the GOP base wants a partisan ideologue, along the lines of Alberto Gonzales, only competent — but I still don’t see what all the complaining is going to produce. Can anyone imagine a scenario in which a) Senate Republicans defeat a Mukasey nomination on the Senate floor; or b) far-right discontent leads Bush to pull Mukasey from consideration?

Unless something startling comes out during the confirmation process — which hardly ever happens — I think the right is setting itself up for some disappointment here.

“We’re in an alternate universe,” says one Senate aide. “Charles Schumer saying something nice about a guy used to be the kiss of death.”

Um, newsflash. This is not an “alternate” universe. This is the real world. What you all have been living in for the past 6 years was the anomaly, created when 9/11 briefly suspended reality. In the real world, unless one party has the Presidency and veto-proof majorities in both House and Senate, they actually have to do this thing called “compromise.” Work together. Respect the checks and balances built into the system.

Sad that the Bubble Effect has so thoroughly corrupted the minds of so many in the Beltway. I’m not sure there is any cure but retirement, voluntary or otherwise.

  • “We’re in an alternate universe,”

    very very true. and you have been for almost seven years now.

  • I think the right-wing frothbots would settle for a steaming dish of ideologue and skip the competent part. They don’t want competent, they want obedient and stupid. (“Hello, Mr. Gonzales!”)

  • I love watching the fRight implode but this is interesting because it confirms the fact that they really are that stupid. I hope Democrats are taking note: If Bush proposes something, all they have to do is agree with it and the fRighties will hate it.

    tAiO

    p.s. Lopez of TR gets the dishonest hack award of the hour. Fidelis gets extra points for being dumbshits. There are rules for asylum in the US. Mukaskey followed them. The fact that a fetus was involved is not relevant.

  • Let the far right fuckheads blather on, demonstrating what bone-headed nitwits they are as they prove the existence of two species of human on the planet: homo sapiens (us) and homo sap (them). Watching them try to figure out how they got snookered (again) is amusing.

  • “a jungle filled with dangerous animals”

    Lots of snakes and weasels.

    It’s a stretch to say that Schumer was “pleased” with Mukasey’s nomination, only that Mukasey would be someone Schumer could live with. Of course that’s not good enough for the snakes and weasels who would prefer to add a fire-breathing dragon to the menagerie.

    The only alternate universe I see here is the one that the loyal Bushies inhabit.

  • It’s too soon to know the WH game. Have they selected someone who is weak, and easily led? WDo they want him to not get confirmed because they have a fire eating ideologue waiting in the wings? Is this a genuine attempt at moderation in the face of a different congressional environment? In this post-Rove WH there may be some attempts at actually governing, but it seems just so unlikely.

    The NY Southern District is a very busy court, and definitely not a right-wing hotbed. This nominee may be just a place holder to get through the next sixteen months. He may not have enough fingers to plug all the holes in the dike.

  • “When liberals like Chuck Schumer and Ralph Nees are pleased with a nominee, conservative alarm bells should ring….

    That’s not fair.

    I don’t reject conservatives’ ideas because they come from conservatives – I reject them because they’re usually delusional pieces of crap.

  • “It also isn’t obvious that he has the management or political skills to run an institution as big and unwieldy as DoJ – the same shortcoming that arguably led to Judge Gonzales’ difficulties,” a conservative lawyer told the National Review’s Kathryn Jean Lopez.

    I will make no value judgement on the new nominee’s management/political skills, but pretty much no one in the Bush administration has been up to the job they were nominated for.

  • As if we needed any more proof that the entire modus operandi of the right wing is doing whatever will piss off the rest of the world. The Republican Party’s sole purpose is to annoy Democrats, even if that means they do the stupidest, most destructive things in the world to do it.

  • Very, very close, petorado (though I like the way you think). The GOP’s sole purpose is to assert, obtain, exercise, and retain political power, and doing the stupidest, most destructive things in the world just happens to be the best way for them to prove to themselves that they’re protecting their political power. “Look, I can do whatever I want, and nobody can stop me! Ha-ha!”

    The fact that this often annoys Democrats, however, constitutes *proof* to them that they’re doing the right thing, because when Republicans *don’t* have as much political power as they want, that’s how *they* feel, so if Democrats are annoyed at them, Republicans *must* be doing something right.

  • god forbid republican senators should have to think for themselves without the wingnuts telling them what to do!

  • I am afraid I have to take issue with your citified, pardon the pun, tastes and aspirations, The Carpetbagger Report. If the country wants this, why can’t the country get it?

    Always from a liberal.

  • “I am not prepared to delude myself into believing…”

    At least Mark Levin admits what he and other wingnuts do on a regular basis: They deliberately delude themselves into believing things.

  • “Alberto Gonzales, only competent”

    I’m pretty sure that a competent lawyer would understand that to be anything like Alberto Gonzales would be illegal and therefore inadvisable.

  • Contented Conservative Holding Four Aces: I am afraid I have to take issue with your citified, pardon the pun, tastes and aspirations, The Carpetbagger Report. If the country wants this, why can’t the country get it?

    Always from a liberal.

    Now my head really hurts. 🙁

  • From all reports, Mukasey is a pretty straight-ahead conservative Republican. That the right wing hates him already hates him already serves to illustrate how far off-center our political discussion has gotten.

  • I think the person to keep a watchful eye on is Peter Keisler, whom Bush elevated to be acting AG in place of Paul Clement, because Clement needs to get ready for the Supreme Court’s upcoming term (did Bush forget about that when he named Clement to be acting AG?).

    Keisler is a co-founder of the Federalist Society, led the fight against giving habeas rights to Gitmo detainees, and was allegedly involved in pressuring a career prosecutor in the tobacco case, and has fought to prevent whistleblowers from having protections because it would undermine national security…his name has been submitted 3 times for a federal judgeship, and twice been rejected. His current nomination is still pending. He recently resigned from DOJ to “spend more time with his family,” but has agreed to come out of retirement to serve as acting AG.

    Now, doesn’t he sound like exactly the kind of person we need to remove from every nook and cranny of the DOJ? It may be an incentive for Mukasey to be confirmed quickly, but I would like to know whether Keisler will step down once Mukasey is confirmed. If he stays on, I think it will be a clear sign that Mukasey will be nothing but a figurehead, and Keisler will be in place to keep the good work of Gonzales going.

    And we will have been punk’d once again.

  • I like Anne’s theory (#19), that Keisler is Bush’s insurance policy for a quick confirmation of Mukasey (or whoever gets the nod, should the right torpedo Mukasey for insufficient fire-breathing). Dems are welcome to stall Mukasey, but they’ll get Keisler, Keisler, and more Keisler until they confirm *someone*…

  • Preemptive confession: Yes, I *know* “What Digby said.” is generally the easy way to get credit for writing concisely about an issue, but it’s not very, well, creative. On the other hand, as is quite often the case, it’s pretty damn apt here.

    “Pat Leahy says that he’s going to hold up the confirmation hearings until the administration releases all the documents its been refusing to release. In response, Bush has appointed a terrible wingnut as acting AG, probably to try to force Leahy’s hand.” (Digby, earlier this evening)

    I suppose the next question is, will Leahy & Co. issue contempt citations? This *ain’t* just horsetrading; this is the definition or erasure of Congress’s status as a co-equal branch of government.

  • “Why is it that every time I see the word consensus used by a liberal I read ’surrender?’”

    This has been the unofficial motto of the Bush Administration for the last 7 years and it’s sent our country to HELL in a handbasket.

    When I read things like this from conservatives, I wonder who the hell they are and what country they grew up in. Was I the only one paying attention to my High School government class when the whole concepts of “democracy” and “representative government” and “checks and balances” were discussed?

    Statements like that make it clear that they aren’t “conservatives” in the manner that political scientists like to classify liberals and conservatives. At best they’re people who think of politics as some kind of spectator sport where they get to cheer when their “side” scores points. At worst they’re jackboot authoritarians who want to see the opposition crushed under the heel of a strong leader.

    I swear, people like that make it hard for me maintain my beliefs in “one person, one vote” forms of government. Sometimes I wonder if there aren’t some people who really are just too stupid to vote.

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