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The Specter Spectacle
By Ellen Goodman, Globe Columnist
SOURCE: Boston Globe, MA
http://tinyurl.com/45vff

November 18, 2004

DOES THIS mean that I have to rise to the defense of Arlen Specter?
If the enemy of my enemy is my friend, is the target of my enemy my
hero? Do I have to rally whole paragraphs around the senior senator
from Pennsylvania? Puh-leeze.

In the aftermath of the election, the ayatollah wing of the
Republican Party has insisted that their opposition to issues like
same-sex marriage and abortion put the president back in office.
That's their story, and they're sticking to it.

Now it's payback time, and the folks who already own the White House
and Congress are itching for the last piece of property on the
Monopoly board: the Supreme Court. The real fight won't come until
and unless ailing Chief Justice Rehnquist resigns his post. But the
wrangling over the next chair of the Senate Judiciary Committee is a
pretty good warm-up.

Just days after Specter won a bruising reelection campaign in a state
that the president lost, he was asked about court appointments.
Specter offered his opinion that any candidate overtly ready to
overturn Roe v. Wade wouldn't make it through the Senate. This rather
ordinary analysis was interpreted as a threat to winning over the
Supremes.

In short order, James Dobson, the patriarch of Focus on the Family,
called him a "big-time problem" and said he must be "derailed."
Conservative petitions were launched with the stern warning: "Do not
allow this chameleon of a charlatan to become chairman."

Next, a less-than-supportive Senate leader, Bill Frist, called
Specter's comments "disheartening." And on Tuesday, conservative
Christian groups held a pray-in outside the Senate Office Building.

So, if prolifers are praying for his ouster, does that mean he's a
prochoice savior? Not exactly.

"Arlen Specter is prochoice the way Louisiana is French," says
Elizabeth Cavendish of NARAL Pro-Choice America, which gave him a 21
on its 100-point scorecard. In her view, his lingering prochoice
label has become little more than a tourist attraction.

If the right wing bitterly remembers when Specter opposed Robert
Bork's nomination to the Supreme Court in 1987, the left remembers
when he defended Clarence Thomas in 1991. In leading the charge
against Anita Hill, the prosecutorial Specter said her testimony was
"flat-out perjury." It was a phrase that launched a million buttons
reading: "I Believe Anita."

Since then, as Cavendish says, he's been for family planning and stem
cell research and against the impossibly misnomered partial-birth
abortion. He's opposed to overturning Roe but apparently not opposed
to confirming justices who would do it.

In his campaign for reelection, Specter said, "The forces of
moderation really need me in the Judiciary Committee in the
chairman's position." But consider the defense he's mustered over the
past week as he hustled from one camera to another.

He's busily reassured the folks who want a litmus test for committee
chairs that he won't have a litmus test for judges. At stop after
stop he's not only bragged that he risked his Senate seat for
Clarence Thomas -- profile in courage -- he's defended himself by
boasting how he's supported all the Bush prolife nominees to lower
courts.

In a particularly craven op-ed in The Wall Street Journal, Specter
reminded people of Pat Robertson's endorsement: "I think he'll be
fine." And, just for the resume, he listed 17 statements he'd made
against the Democratic filibuster of such nominees as Charles
Pickering, a man the president had to sneak onto the bench during a
congressional recess.

Specter's reputation as a moderate is a bit like Colin Powell's. Why,
if Powell hadn't been secretary of state during the first term, who
knows what would have happened? We might have gone into Iraq on false
premises.

The whole debacle says less about Specter's moderation than the
party's rightward plunge -- or purge. Specter is a flaming lefty
compared to the newest Republicans on the block like Tom Coburn, the
Oklahoma senator-elect who said that doctors who perform abortions
deserve the death penalty. (Why stop at doctors; how about women?)

And he's moderate compared with the next in line for the
chairmanship, Arizona's Jon Kyl. That may make him the lesser of you-
know-whats, but it doesn't make him my new best friend.

President Bush defended Specter in the Pennsylvania primary, saying
he is "a little bit independent-minded sometimes" but "a firm ally
when it matters most." I fear that's exactly right.

Now Pat Mahoney, head of the Christian Defense Coalition, announces,
"We are in a full court press" to see that Specter doesn't get the
chair. We all know what court he's pressing. "However," adds Mahoney,
"if we can't succeed, we can neuter him."

Not to worry. Arlen Specter is doing that all by himself.

Ellen Goodman's e-mail address is [log in to unmask]

SOURCE: Boston Globe, MA
http://tinyurl.com/45vff

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