Difference between revisions of "Response to National Review"
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(reply to Whelan's Friday post) |
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+ | '''UPDATE''': Ed Whelan [http://www.nationalreview.com/bench-memos posted a response late Friday], and I welcome the further dialog. Trump pledged to appoint pro-life justices, and I support the pledge. Ed Whelan apparently does not. That's unfortunate, and logical inconsistencies in his analysis flow from there. | ||
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+ | ''First'', there is nothing flawed about the pledge, any more than the first President Bush's "no new taxes" pledge was somehow defective. If voters want a president who appoints pro-life justices -- and enough swing voters did -- then the pledge should be honored. Yet Ed Whelan hasn't admitted that. | ||
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+ | ''Second'', it is silly for Ed Whelan to imply that all the candidates on the list of 21 are equal, or that all would satisfy the pledge. Of course they are not equal with respect to their views of ''Roe v. Wade'', and of course some would not fulfill the pledge. It's absurd for anyone to pretend otherwise, particularly in light of how three out of the five justices placed on the Supreme Court by President Reagan and the first President Bush violated similar intentions. | ||
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+ | ''Third'', there is nothing wrong about evaluating candidates for such an important position. Much of Whelan's overheated rhetoric seems designed to silence criticism of anyone on the candidates' list. Whelan should reread the First Amendment and welcome the criticism, and not react so harshly against it. | ||
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+ | ''Fourth'', Whelan criticizes my supposed lack of specific rebuttal on the six candidates mentioned in the coalition letter. But I have posted specifics at [[Nominees Supreme Court]], [[Steve Colloton]], and [[Joan Larsen]], and will be posting more. Whelan's defense of the six candidates is filled with irrelevant cases to which I was not even referring, and fails substantively to address many of my primary criticisms. | ||
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+ | ''Fifth'', Whelan continues to defend a director of his organization, Leonard Leo, but Leo said what he said and apparently continues to push candidates who would not overturn ''Roe v. Wade''. Moreover, Leonard Leo apparently takes the mistaken approach of promoting less-qualified, younger candidates, which is contrary to norms embodied in the law against age discrimination, although this particular position is exempt. Mr. Leo's approach also runs afoul of conservative principles, which recognize that the longer someone is in D.C. the more liberal they generally get. That's apparently true for some think tank executives as well, by the way. | ||
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+ | ''Finally'', Whelan falsely pretends that the 80 or so signatories on the [[coalition letter Supreme Court|coalition letter]] is a "small handful of folks," but then he asserts that a mere seven inside-the-Beltway groups somehow have much greater significance. Perhaps that same D.C.-mindset led Whelan to sign the misguided letter denouncing Trump and even urging Catholics not to vote for him. Has Whelan ever admitted that letter was wrong? | ||
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+ | Andy Schlafly | ||
'''''National Review''''', through Ed Whelan, has posted a series of articles criticizing [[coalition letter Supreme Court|the effort by Andy Schlafly and 70 pro-life leaders]] for fulfilling Trump's pledge to nominate pro-life justices to the Supreme Court. By way of background, Whelan's criticisms disparage the very concept of appointing a "really pro-life" justice to the Supreme Court, so he is a weak candidate to talk about satisfying the pledge. Indeed, Whelan himself may not even support Trump's pledge, and earlier Whelan stridently opposed Trump and [http://www.nationalreview.com/article/432437/donald-trump-catholic-opposition-statement even insisted that Catholics should not back him at all.] | '''''National Review''''', through Ed Whelan, has posted a series of articles criticizing [[coalition letter Supreme Court|the effort by Andy Schlafly and 70 pro-life leaders]] for fulfilling Trump's pledge to nominate pro-life justices to the Supreme Court. By way of background, Whelan's criticisms disparage the very concept of appointing a "really pro-life" justice to the Supreme Court, so he is a weak candidate to talk about satisfying the pledge. Indeed, Whelan himself may not even support Trump's pledge, and earlier Whelan stridently opposed Trump and [http://www.nationalreview.com/article/432437/donald-trump-catholic-opposition-statement even insisted that Catholics should not back him at all.] |
Revision as of 23:12, 17 December 2016
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