The Rocky Mountain News ran a widely-cited article recently suggesting that James Dobson’s support for Harriet Miers is less than solid. I’m not so sure. Here’s the newspaper account:
“Lord, you know I don’t have the wisdom to make this decision,” Dobson said. “You know that what I feel now and what I think is right may be dead wrong.”
He added that he worried that his position “could do something to hurt the cause of Christ, and I’d rather sacrifice my life than do that.”
The problem is Dobson probably meant the opposite message of what the Rocky Mountain News inferred. The very same day, Dobson told Focus on the Family members that he recognized the implications of the decision, which is why his support was not offered casually.
“If I have made a mistake here,” Dobson said, “I will never forget the blood of those babies that will die that will be on my hands to some degree. That’s why I don’t take this lightly.”
He acknowledged the Miers nomination had “angered and disillusioned many Christian conservatives, many of my friends, many whom I love and have worked with for years.”
But asking if it makes any sense that President George W. Bush would sabotage the base of conservatives who worked and gave and supported him, Dobson answered his own question with a resounding — “I don’t believe it!”
“I don’t believe he’s done that,” Dobson said. “I don’t believe he would have nominated Harriet Miers if he knew that she was going to assassinate what he believed in and that the court would not be reformed the way he wants it to be.”
Dobson, in other words, acknowledged that he could be “dead wrong,” but he’s convinced he’s not. At least for now.