News
2005-09-15
Roberts dodges
gay rights question
During Senate
confirmation hearings on Wednesday, U.S. Supreme Court
chief justice nominee John Roberts demurred from answering a
gay rig
During Senate
confirmation hearings on Wednesday, U.S. Supreme Court
chief justice nominee John Roberts demurred from answering a
gay rights question posed by Sen. Russ Feingold. The
Wisconsin Democrat asked Roberts whether he thought
the Constitution gives Congress the power to ban
employment discrimination against gays and lesbians. Roberts
replied, as he has many times in this week's
confirmation hearings, that he can't express an
opinion on matters he might have to rule on. "Personally,
I believe that everybody should be treated with dignity in
this area, and respect," he said. "But the legal
question of Congress's authority to address that,
though, is one that could come before the courts."
Feingold also
grilled Roberts about a memo he wrote when he was a White
House lawyer in 1985, suggesting that a note saying
the AIDS virus is not transmitted through casual
contact be dropped from briefing materials for
President Reagan. Roberts said Wednesday he did not
"want the president giving out medical advice if it was a
subject of some uncertainty." Feingold retorted that
the mode of transmission was fairly well
understood in 1985 and that the suggested change
represented a lost opportunity for "presidential leadership
and reassurance." (Sirius/OutQ)
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