Bush's court appointments emphasized ideology over diversity

June 26, 2009

The judicial appointments of former president George W. Bush suggests that his motivation for appointing nontraditional judges was driven more by ideology and strategy than concerns for diversity, a new analysis shows.

The examination of all the federal judicial appointments over the two terms of the Bush presidency show that while he did make a number of diverse appointments, especially with Hispanics, overall the federal courts did not gain in the number of minority judges during Bush's tenure.

The analysis appears in an article in the current issue of Judicature and was written by Jennifer Segal Diascro, an assistant professor in the Department of Government at American University, and Rorie Spill Solberg, an associate professor in the Department of Political Science at Oregon State University.

"The key is to look at the replacement patterns," said Spill Solberg. "Bush did appoint many minorities, but in order to have a gain in diversity, you have to replace more seats with diverse judges than you started with or else it doesn't equate with a diverse bench."

Diascro and Solberg relied on statements from President Bush and members of his administration to determine that ideology played a role in his appointments, and relied on statistical analyses by Carp et al. (published in the same issue of Judicature) that reveal that his appointees to the lower courts were indeed conservative. To assess the relative ideology of Judge Sonia Sotomayor and other women on Obama's short list, Diascro and Solberg utilized the Judicial Common Space scores developed by Lee Epstein and colleagues. The empirical measurements used to assess ideology are all reliable and valid measures employed by political scientists.

According to the article, when compared with all presidents since Jimmy Carter, Bush maintained the status quo in appointing nontraditional judges to the bench. He appointed more men (78 percent overall) then women (22 percent) and more whites (82 percent) than minorities (18 percent), but as Spill Solberg points out, that pattern was true for Bush's predecessors.

When comparing total appointments, Bush appointed more white females (50) than Carter (32), Ronald Reagan (27) or George H.W. Bush (31), but less than Bill Clinton (83). He appointed more Hispanic females (12) than Clinton (5), but fewer African American females (8 compared to 15) than Clinton, so the overall diversity representation is about the same, or in some cases less than during Clinton's presidency.

In particular, Spill Solberg said, African-American judges did not see a significant increase under the Bush administration. "At the end of eight years in office, African Americans held 8.5 percent of the seats on the court of appeals, an increase of only half a percent from the end of the Clinton administration," the study points out.

Spill Solberg said that like Carter, Reagan and George H.W. Bush, George W. Bush often appointed minorities to seats for political gain or for ideological purposes.

"There is a tendency, and we see this across the political spectrum, to use bench appointments to gain clout with certain voters," she said. "The Bush administration was actively courting the Hispanic vote, so it isn't surprising that he made more appointments of Hispanic judges than African Americans, but it was often also based on judicial philosophy."

In contrast, the study shows that Clinton often stressed diversity and representation over ideology. He often picked moderate and conservative minority and female judges even though they did not necessarily reflect his own political philosophies. Diascro said Democrats have had an easier time appointing a diverse bench that also serves their political and ideological goals as nontraditional candidates tend to come from groups that vote Democratic.

"We suspect that Bush had many Hispanic conservatives from which to choose when filling vacancies on the bench, and he chose to appoint traditional candidates instead," Diascro said. "He cared about diversity, but it was not his first priority."

The study's authors stress that diversity in the federal court system remains important as a way of representing the broad range of experiences of the public that the system is supposed to serve. This is true from a symbolic perspective, lending legitimacy to an otherwise non-democratic branch of government; but it may also be true substantively, said Diascro.

"Personal experiences matter and impact how you view the law," Spill Solberg said. "The experiences of woman may differ from those of a man in the same way that the experiences of a prosecutor may differ from the experiences of other lawyers. It is more complicated as we see with Justice Thomas who brings the experiences of an African American filtered through the lens of a conservative ideology."

Looking ahead, Diascro and Spill Solberg thoughtfully analyze what the judicial legacy of Barack Obama's presidency will be compared to his predecessors. Their conclusion so far is that Obama will emphasize diversity over ideology like Clinton and that his nomination of Judge Sotomayor to the Supreme Court is a demonstration of this.

"His nominations thus far demonstrate his reluctance to appoint ideologues," the authors write. "This is especially true for Judge Sotomayor, who is not the most liberal choice among the female candidates reportedly on the President's short list."

Source: Oregon State University (news : web)


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  • Rick69 - Jun 26, 2009
    • Rank: 2.8 / 5 (9)
    A real BS story that doesn't prove anything about Bush. Just another witch hunt to run him down. Obama lovers need to divert attention away from the lousy job he is doing so they have to keep bashing Bush. I wonder how many more years this strategy will work?
  • defunctdiety - Jun 26, 2009
    • Rank: 3.7 / 5 (6)
    It is a BS story, but there is no witch hunt. Bush waged a war based on premises that were known to be false, and don't lie to yourself, they knew. What north korea is presently doing is far and away worse. Bush was a warmonger and probably certifiable war criminal. Not to mention the war against science and progress Bush waged. History (and god if you believe in that sort of thing) will be his judge, and I don't think either will be kind.
  • mtulloch - Jun 26, 2009
    • Rank: 2.3 / 5 (6)
    Exactly what were the false premises? I'll bet you're thinking of the premises that the socialists SAID he based the war on. Where did you learn about his premises? The news paper? CNN? NBC? GE? Or, were you part of the inner Bush circle? Perhaps you channeled his thinking. Careful, your Kool-Aid is getting warm.
  • Rick69 - Jun 26, 2009
    • Rank: 2.8 / 5 (5)
    In any case, diversity should NOT be the overarching goal in picking judges as this story appears to promote. Any president, Democrat or Republican, should use ideology as a primary reason for picking judges, over diversity. What's the use of winning the presidency if you don't take advantage of promoting your ideology? After all the electorate knew your ideology when they elected you so if you won then it shows that the majority must therefore support your ideology which means that the majority would be in favor of the ideology of the judges you pick.
  • defunctdiety - Jun 26, 2009
    • Rank: 4 / 5 (4)
    Exactly what were the false premises? ... Where did you learn about his premises? ...


    Well that would be from his Secretary of Defense (didn't know Rummy was a socialist...) who held multiple press conferences stating the administrations reasons.

    ... you won then it shows that the majority must therefore support your ideology...


    Except when the majority of the people didn't elect you.
  • mtulloch - Jun 26, 2009
    • Rank: 2.6 / 5 (5)
    Oh and Bush's "war on science"? How about Obama's? "The free market-based Competitive Enterprise Institute in Washington has obtained a set of internal e-mails exposing Team Obama's willful and reckless disregard for data that undermine the illusion of "consensus." In March, Alan Carlin, a senior research analyst at the Environmental Protection Agency, asked agency officials to distribute his analysis on the health effects of greenhouse gases. EPA has proposed a public health "endangerment finding" covering CO2 and five other gases that would trigger costly, extensive new regulations of motor vehicles. The open comment period on the ruling ended this week. But Carlin's study didn't fit the blame-human-activity narrative, so it didn't make the cut.

    On March 12, Carlin's director, Al McGartland, forbade him from having "any direct communication" with anyone outside his office about his study. "There should be no meetings, e-mails, written statements, phone calls, etc." On March 16, Carlin urged his superiors to forward his work to EPA's Office of Air and Radiation, which runs the agency's climate change program. A day later, McGartland dismissed Carlin and showed his true, politicized colors" ( Michelle Malkin). Check out the story. OOps - not on GE network... Not on CNN... Not in NYTimes... therefore not real?
  • parder_dade - Jun 26, 2009
    • Rank: 3.4 / 5 (5)
    This article is not about science physics, tech, nano and it sure aint news. Keep your political slant to yourself. What kind of liberal hosers are running this website?
  • mongander - Jun 26, 2009
    • Rank: 2.3 / 5 (3)
    Science is all about massaging the data to fit your prejudice.
  • Gammakozy - Jun 26, 2009
    • Rank: 2 / 5 (4)
    Another so called objective study purporting to prove the moral superiority of liberals over conservatives. Give it a break already, this is pure delusion. Liberals seem obsessed with building themselves up by tearing anyone down who is as devoid of principles as they are.
  • GrayMouser - Jun 26, 2009
    • Rank: 3.7 / 5 (3)
    Science is all about massaging the data to fit your prejudice.

    No, that is advocacy. Or slumming for grants.
  • Landman - Jul 02, 2009
    • Rank: 3 / 5 (2)
    With all the kneejerk liberals and kneejerk conservatives arguing their biases above, it's rather amazing that no one has criticized the methodology. The statistics in this report is incredibly sloppy. First, they are using absolute numbers of various kinds of appointees without even adjusting for the total number of appointees. They should have converted everything into percentages first. Second, sampling theory makes it easy to get an estimate of the uncertainty for each conclusion, but they don't report such numbers (possibly because they never bothered to compute them). Finally, the language is somewhat biased against Bush. When numbers were slightly up, they reported it as "did NOT see a significant increase" and "an increase of ONLY half a percent" (emphasis mine). It's quite obvious that they're trying to twist the results to fit a conclusion there, rather than letting the data speak for itself.

    I personally believe that if the full truth were known Bush and Cheney and Rumsfeld would be executed for treason, but that doesn't stop me from seeing that this study is shoddy and unreliable and biased.

June 26, 2009 all stories

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