Former Attorney General of the United States speaks out on left wing politics
Edwin Meese III, who served as Attorney General of the United States during the
Reagan Administration, called the recent confirmation hearings of U.S. Supreme
Court Justice Samuel Alito and Chief Justice John Roberts “trial by ordeal.”
Meese spoke at Campbell University’s Norman Adrian Wiggins School of Law
Thursday, Sept. 28.
Referring to the media hype surrounding the
confirmation process of Supreme Court nominees since the hearings of Robert Bork
and Clarence Thomas, Meese said he was appalled at the negative advertising and
false accusations directed toward them by left-wing organizations, “Even to the
point of dredging up details surrounding the particular eating club Alito
belonged to at Yale,” he said. “This confirmation process defies historic norms
and menaces the position of the independent judiciary.”
Meese addressed Campbell law students and faculty at a
lecture sponsored by the Federalist Society, a student organization.
Calling the attacks sustained, prolonged and systematic, Meese said judicial
confirmation is more of a political contest than ever before.
“It is the rule, rather than the exception,” he said.
“Left wing radicals are trying to change the political system through litigation
rather than legislation and to establish their own political agenda.”
This type of change undermines the judicial process, is
very trying on the candidate and discourages potential nominees from becoming
involved in the process, Meese added.
“This isn’t the way the founders intended it to be,” he
said. “The genius of our Constitution is in the separation of powers. The whole
idea is to separate judges from the political and cultural hot buttons of the
moment so that they can interpret the law, not amend it without the vote of the
people.”
Edwin Meese III graduated from Yale University and
earned a Juris Doctor from the University of California at Berkeley. He served
as a local prosecutor in Alameda County, Ca., before joining then-Governor
Ronald Reagan’s staff in 1967, where he served in several capacities including
Chief of Staff. After Reagan’s election in 1980, Meese became counselor to the
president, a member of the President’s Cabinet and of the National Security
Council. In 1985, Meese was appointed the 75th Attorney General of the United
States. He continues to serve as a Distinguished Visiting Fellow at the Hoover
Institution, a think-tank out of Stanford University dedicated to research in
domestic policy and international affairs. He is also a Distinguished Fellow in
Public Policy and chairman of the Center for Legal and Judicial Studies at the
Heritage Foundation, a renowned think tank whose mission is to formulate and
promote conservative public policies based on the principles of free enterprise,
limited government, individual freedom, traditional American values and a strong
national defense. He is a retired colonel in the U.S. Army and is active in
numerous civic and educational organizations.
Photo copy: Edwin Meese III, former Attorney General of the United States during
the Reagan Administration, chats with Melissa Essary, dean of Campbell’s Norman
Adrian Wiggins School of Law. (Photo by Shannon Ryals)
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