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Alito and the meaningless opposition of the gay left

Dale Carpenter, law professor at the University of Minnesota and my erstwhile Log Cabin collaborator when he lived in Houston, on the gay lobby and the Alito nomination:

The national gay groups all oppose Alito, and did so even before his confirmation hearings. But they have pretty much taken themselves out of any serious debate about President Bush’s judicial nominees. Their position is basically this: “We have a specific pro-gay agenda, which we understand to include the right to abortion without restrictions. We want to advance this agenda, to the extent possible, through the courts. We oppose any nominee for whom there is no affirmative evidence that he fully supports our agenda and is willing to advance it judicially.”

Since no Republican judicial nominee is going to meet this test, national gay groups might as well announce that they will oppose any and all judicial nominees for the remainder of the Bush presidency and be done with the matter. Their opposition will be ineffectual, as it has been on all of Bush’s nominees. But at least we could dispense with the charade that they actually care about, and have “analyzed,” an individual nominee’s record.

Read the rest.

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