From time to time, the Federalist Papers offer unique insight into our republican ideals. As of yesterday, they also offer insight into the kind of mistake Bush made in nominating Harriet Miers to the Supreme Court.
Randy Barnett, a law professor at Boston University, wrote an item for the Wall Street Journal today (brought to my attention by my friend Eugene) highlighting Alexander Hamilton’s thoughts on the presidential nominating process in Federalist No. 76:
“To what purpose then require the co-operation of the Senate? I answer, that the necessity of their concurrence would have a powerful, though, in general, a silent operation. It would be an excellent check upon a spirit of favoritism in the President, and would tend greatly to prevent the appointment of unfit characters from State prejudice, from family connection, from personal attachment, or from a view to popularity. … He would be both ashamed and afraid to bring forward, for the most distinguished or lucrative stations, candidates who had no other merit than that of coming from the same State to which he particularly belonged, or of being in some way or other personally allied to him, or of possessing the necessary insignificance and pliancy to render them the obsequious instruments of his pleasure.” [The italics are Barnett’s.]
How many ways does Bush’s nomination conflict with the principles of the man who helped design the nominating process? Let’s see, Miers is hardly a “check upon a spirit of favoritism”; she has a “personal attachment” to Bush; and she has very little merit outside her “personal alliance” to the president. As Barnett put, “Apart from nominating his brother or former business partner, it is hard to see how the president could have selected someone who fit Hamilton’s description any more closely.”
Given her lack of experience, does anyone doubt that Ms. Miers’s only qualification to be a Supreme Court justice is her close connection to the president? Would the president have ever picked her if she had not been his lawyer, his close confidante, and his adviser? Of course, Hamilton also thought that the existence of Senate confirmation would deter the nomination of cronies:
“The possibility of rejection would be a strong motive to care in proposing. The danger to his own reputation, and, in the case of an elective magistrate, to his political existence, from betraying a spirit of favoritism, or an unbecoming pursuit of popularity, to the observation of a body whose opinion would have great weight in forming that of the public, could not fail to operate as a barrier to the one and to the other.”
Hamilton probably assumed that presidents would be capable of feeling embarrassment and that lawmakers would take their role as a check on presidential power seriously.
What a silly idealist.