Partisan Patterns Detected in Civil Rights, Environment Decisions
by Guest Blogger, 10/18/2004
Federal judges appointed by Republican administrations -- and the Bush administration in particular -- are expressing, through decisions and dissents, a marked bias against civil rights, environmental, and other public interest litigation, according to two new reports.
A recent report and new update by the People for the American Way Foundation contrasts the rhetoric and reality of President Bush's claim he would appoint to the federal bench only judges who would interpret the law rather than "make it." According to the PFAWF analysis of split decisions by the federal appeals courts, Bush appointees regularly express hostility to civil rights and other public interest litigation as well as to Congress's power to legislate broadly in the public interest.
Through their votes and opinions, primarily dissenting opinions, Bush appointees have advocated changing the law in ways that make it more difficult for aggrieved parties to vindicate their rights and for Congress to legislate in areas such as environmental protection. Bush appointees to the circuit courts have sought to do the following:
- Question the constitutionality of the Endangered Species Act;
- Overturn National Labor Relations Board rulings against anti-union discrimination and unfair labor practices;
- Allow the Bush administration to refuse to disclose its secret contacts with industry in Vice President Cheney's energy task force;
- Make it more difficult to prevent possibly irreparable harm to the environment pending the resolution of legal issues in environmental litigation;
- Toss the legal claims of a woman downstream from a sewage treatment plant that frequently overflowed and discharged raw sewage into a nearby creek, thus contaminating the downstream property owner's private well drinking water; and
- Reject challenges to a panel under the Federal Advisory Committee Act and the Federal Land Policy and Management Act.