Click Here to Go to the Ashbrook Center's Homepage

Subscribe to Our Email Update
 
SEARCH
 

Home



Support the Ashbrook Center



Subscribe to Our E-Mail Update




No Left Turns:
The Ashbrook
Center Blog







Ashbrook Scholar Program

Master of American History and Government




Book of the Week:
Ataturk: Lessons in Leadership from the Greatest General of the Ottoman Empire
by Austin Bay




  Podcasts



Other Ashbrook
Web Sites:


AshbrookScholar.org



mahg.ashland.edu



TeachingAmerican
History.org


Document Library

Constitutional Convention

The American Founding



Presidential
Academy.org




Congressional
Academy.org




Letters from
an Ohio Farmer




VindicatingThe
Founders.com




ClassicsOf
Strategy.com

Recovering Civic Virtue
Editorial
October 2005

by: David Forte


With the nomination of Samuel Alito to the Supreme Court, President Bush has recentered himself on values consonant with his basic instincts and our constitutional order. The nomination will cause a fractious contest in the Senate, but it is a contest that, for the sake of the country, needs winning. The President, once known for his take-charge attitude and his courage, has stopped playing to the media and returned to his practice of civic virtue that is also needed on the court. He has sought the greater good of the country over his personal desires, preferences, and possible gains for himself.

The nomination comes as a relief to principled conservatives around the country. For some time now, the White House has been cast adrift from its moorings. Except for the rock solid dedication to the cause of liberty in Iraq, the administration has seemed to be without a sense of direction, dismayingly like the years of Bush I. It was reacting episodically to events and crises that buffet it. One way in which one knows that an administration is losing a sense of its own persona is when it frames responses to problems more to fit media criticism than to contend with the objective demands of history. It promises, in the heat of negative publicity, hundreds of millions of dollars to rebuild after hurricane Katrina, which could make a city like New Orleans only a better and more valuable target for the next series of hurricanes. Responding to a media barrage, the President suggests that a central cause of the damage and suffering arising from hurricane Katrina is the result of racial discrimination in New Orleans rather than in its location.

Another sign of an administration in search of a mission occurs when it prizes personal loyalty over dedication to principle. Cronyism, in part, left FEMA inadequately staffed to face multiple hurricanes. Loyalty, not principle, led the Vice-President’s Chief of Staff allegedly to engage in a cover-up.

Most signally, it was in the nomination of Harriet Miers that the President began to lose touch with the very basis of his Presidency. First, it was another appointment bred of cronyism. Second, he bowed to pressure from Justice O’Connor, the media, and his wife Laura (who frankly should have had the good judgment not to embarrass her husband) to appoint a woman. Third, after his first quasi-stealth candidate, John Roberts, made it through the Senate, the President sought someone with virtually no public position on anything. Fourth, knowing that Miers is a born again Christian, he equated fundamentalist Christians with the political feminists who had demanded a woman, thinking he could satisfy both. Fifth, he unknowingly ratified the Democrats’ version of the Supreme Court: a policy-making body needing partisans who will vote the "right" way on particular social issues. Lastly, he thought that his intuition about Miers was a sure guide, an uncomfortable reminder of when he claimed he really knew Vladimir Putin because he "was able to get a sense of the soul" of the man.

True, a few fundamentalist Christians had climbed aboard, but many more conservative opinion leaders immediately saw the folly. Few made excuses for the misstep. Robert Bork termed it a "disaster." George Will wrote, in one of his milder critiques, that there was no evidence "that she possesses talents commensurate with the Supreme Court’s tasks." Warming to his dismay, Will noted that the President’s capitulation to the demand for diversity was based on "the obvious assumption that the Supreme Court is, like a legislature, an institution of representation." Senator Sam Brownback, although displaying the prudence of expression appropriate for his station, clearly signaled that the nominee was not fit for the task before her.

At bottom, the commentators were calling the President to account for failing to exercise civic virtue and for failing to nominate a public servant schooled in the practice of civic virtue. Imbibing the lessons of the Greeks and Romans, as well as the teachings of the Scottish Enlightenment, and living the experience of the common law, the Framers understood that the virtuous man of politics must seek the good (Socrates), develop the habit of acting rightly (Aristotle), be true to one’s office (Cicero), obey the law of nature (Locke), and have a sense of moral balance in governance (Montesquieu).

Happily for the conservative movement, the President’s critics showed that leading conservatives in this country are less interested in policy results (as important as they may be) than they are in moral attitude of governance which is civic virtue. It was this attitude of governance that came out of the character of George Washington. It is what drove John Adams to assert that a free society lives under the rule of law, not the rule of men. It is what the Constitution concretizes, and the Federalist Papers explicates. It is the lesson taught by John Marshall who declared that "the framers of the constitution contemplated that instrument, as a rule for the government of courts, as well as of the legislature." We have come to call this attitude of governing Originalism, in regard to the courts, after the seminal speech by Edwin Meese in 1985. It is, in sum, this attitude of governance that turns a representative democracy into a republic of virtue.

As fine a person as she is, as competent a lawyer as people say she is, the fact is that Harriet Miers had not developed the solid understanding of what it takes for a Supreme Court Justice to fulfill his role. She lacked the Aristotelian virtues bred of education and reflective experience that would direct a person in such a position of awesome responsibility. She was unequipped to weather the blandishments of a liberal mindset, which is often lacking sufficient respect for the Constitution’s origins, and occasionally unapologetically so. The critics of the President metaphorically held their heads as they viewed at least a half dozens candidates who were trained in the virtues of judging, skilled in discerning the Constitution’s original understanding, and who had been shown to be thoughtful and articulate.

Those who took the President to task did him the greatest service and honor. They grabbed him by the lapels and said, "Snap out of it!" And he has. He put aside his desire for an Hispanic, or a woman, and chosen a person that, if confirmed, could be another great justice on the Supreme Court. With the nomination of Judge Alito, who was his first choice before advisers panicked him into the nomination of Miers, he has repaired to the values that he first brought forward to the American people when he ran for the Presidency, the same values that rallied our people after 9/11, and the values for which he was elected.

David Forte is a Professor of Law at Cleveland-Marshall College of Law in Cleveland, Ohio and an Adjunct Fellow of the Ashbrook Center.



 


Printer-Friendly Version

Upcoming Events

Ashbrook Center in Florida
Monday, February 13

Pat Tiberi on the American Dream
Tuesday, February 21

Reed Browning on the War of Austrian Succession
Friday, February 24

David Tucker on Fear and Freedom
Friday, March 23

Terrence Moore on Education Reform
Friday, April 20


Recent Publications


Rick Santorum and Limited Government by Andrew E. Busch

Who Owns the Bard? by Ellen Tucker

Clarence Thomas and the Wisdom of the Founding by Ken Masugi

U.S. Headed in the Right Direction by Peter W. Schramm

Deficits and Cultural Politics by David Marion

America’s Future in New Europe by Justin Paulette

Our Discussion of Islam by David Foster

The Tea Party and Nullification by Michael Sabo

Drama Queens: Elizabeth Taylor, Camille Paglia, and the Purposes of Female Power by Julie Ponzi

Honoring Ronald Reagan by Peter W. Schramm

Realigning American Politics: Do We Still Hold These Truths? by Matthew Spalding

Reagan’s Inherent Goodness Made Him One of the Great Presidents by Peter W. Schramm

Reagan the Radical by Stephen Knott

Huck Finn and the Constitution by David Foster

Free Speech for Plutocrats: One Year Later by David Forte


Audio Archive


Ramesh Ponnuru on Obamanomics (2011)

Gordon Lloyd on Political Economy (2011)

Steven Hayward on the Health of Capitalism in America (2011)

Rich Lowry on American Exceptionalism (2011)

Mackubin T. Owens on Civil-Military Relations (2011)

Christopher Burkett on James Madison (2011)

John Boehner (2011)

Jonah Goldberg on Liberalism (2010)

Mitt Romney (2010)

John Kasich on the Future of Ohio (2009)

Conference on the Presidency and the Courts featuring President George W. Bush (2008)

Jeb Bush on America’s Promise (2008)

Glenn Beck on Militant Islam (2006)

Karl Rove on Conservatism (2005)

James McPherson on the Battle of Antietam (2005)

David Hackett Fischer on Liberty and Freedom (2004)

William Bennett on the Politics of War (2004)

Edwin Meese on Homeland Security (2003)

Barbara Bush on CSPAN (2003)

Victor Davis Hanson on Terrorism (2003)

Benjamin Netanyahu on Attaining Peace (2002)

Clarence Thomas on the Supreme Court (1999)

Margaret Thatcher on Ronald Reagan and Freedom (1993)

Dick Cheney on American Foreign Policy (1991)

Ronald Reagan on John Ashbrook (1983)

  Real Logo
Visit our archive of over 200 other Ashbrook speeches at
audio.ashbrook.org or subscribe to our
Events Podcast.








ASHBROOK SCHOLAR PROGRAM | MASTER OF AMERICAN HISTORY AND GOVERNMENT |
PUBLICATIONS | EVENTS | PODCASTS | NO LEFT TURNS BLOG | AUDIO ARCHIVE | DONATE | ABOUT US

 

Ashbrook Scholar Program:  Home | Apply Online | Request More Information | Course of Study | Faculty | Speakers |
Why Study History or Political Science? | Internship Opportunities | Student Publications | Financial Assistance | FAQ | Contact Us

Master of American History and Government:  Home | About | Admission | Schedule of Courses | Course Registration | Tuition | Faculty | Request More Information

TeachingAmericanHistory.org:  Home | Saturday Seminars | Summer Institutes | Partner on a Teaching American History Grant | Historical Documents Library | Audio Lectures and Discussions | Constitutional Convention | Ratification of the Constitution

Presidential Academy for American History and Civics:  Home | About the Program | Documents and Texts | Faculty | Itinerary | Application

Congressional Academy for American History and Civics:  Home | About the Program | Documents and Texts | Faculty | Itinerary | Application

Podcasts:  Home | What's a Podcast? | Subscribe

No Left Turns Blog  Home | Archive | Postings by Author | Comments by Our Readers | What's in a Name? | RSS Site Feed

Publications:  Home | Editorials | On Principle | Right from the Center | Dialogues | Books | Monographs |
Ashbrook Statesmanship Theses | Res Publica | Publication Request Form | Publications by Subject

Events:  Home | John M. Ashbrook Memorial Dinner | Major Issues Lecture Series | Colloquium |
Van Meter Scholarship Luncheon | Conferences and Special Events | Calendar of Events | On-Line Speeches (RealAudio)

About Us:  Home | Board of Advisors | Staff | Who Was John M. Ashbrook | Support the Ashbrook Center |
Map and Directions

 

Verizon Foundation
Support for ashbrook.org is provided by the Verizon Foundation.


John M. Ashbrook Center for Public Affairs
Ashland University
401 College Avenue | Ashland, Ohio 44805
(419) 289-5411  |   (877) 289-5411 (Toll Free)