While Republican
governor Mitt Romney reinforces his conservative
credentials around the country in preparation for a possible
presidential run in 2008, in his home state of
Massachusetts he has leaned more to the left when
filling judicial vacancies, according to a published
report. Of the 36 people Romney has named to be judges or
clerk magistrates, 23 are either registered Democrats
or unenrolled voters who have made contributions to
Democratic politicians or who have voted in Democratic
primaries, according to records reviewed by The Boston Globe.
Overall, Romney has nominated nine registered
Republicans, 13 unenrolled voters, and 14 registered
Democrats, including two gay lawyers who have
supported expanding rights for gays and lesbians. Romney
insists he does not look at political leanings when
nominating judges but rather concentrates on legal
experience and toughness on crime. "People on both
sides of the aisle want to put the bad guys away," he said.
Romney points out that so far he has not had a
chance to appoint judges to the highest state courts,
where he would change his criteria to include "strict
construction, judicial philosophy." "With regard to
those at the district and clerk magistrate level, their
political views aren't really going to come into play unless
their views indicate they will be soft on crime,"
Romney said.
Still, some see a contradiction between his
judicial nominations and his efforts to appear more
conservative around the nation, which could backfire
politically. "I've long since given up trying to figure out
what makes Mitt Romney tick," said Joyce Kauffman, former
cochair of the Massachusetts Lesbian and Gay Bar Association.
Romney has been praised by the legal community
for replacing regional judicial nominating committees,
which were viewed as politically tainted, with a
centralized commission. The commission considers applicants
during the first phase of the selection process
without names on applications to make sure candidates
are judged on their merits alone. After Romney makes a
nomination, the selection must be approved by the Governor's
Council, where Democrats hold eight of nine seats.
"He's tried to have a process devoid of politics,
[but] he also has to get his nominees approved by the
Governor's Council, and that is not a bipartisan
body," said Bradley H. Jones Jr., Republican minority leader
in the house.
In May, Romney selected for a district court
judgeship Stephen S. Abany, a former board member of
the Massachusetts Lesbian and Gay Bar Association who
organized the group's opposition to a 1999 bill to outlaw
same-sex marriage. The apparent contradictions might not
play well in the GOP strongholds where Romney has been
touting his conservative credentials in recent months.
South Carolina's Republican primary voters might
think twice about supporting a Massachusetts governor
whose judicial picks have been "actively lobbying for
gay marriage," said Rick Beltram, chairman of the
Spartanburg County, S.C., Republican Party, which hosted
Romney at a fund-raiser in February. "That could be a
problem," he said. (AP)