John Roberts
Approval Rate: 87%
Reviews 9
by abichara
Mon Sep 19 2005Roberts is a solid jurist who will bring his expertise to the Supreme Court. He is overwhelmingly well-qualified and will be a consensus builder within the court. In my view, these are the most important issues that need to be considered when picking a Chief Justice. A good manager is needed for the job; someone who considers his colleagues viewpoints, and ensures that duties like conference calls and opinion writing are well-distributed amongst all the justices. Many Chiefs have been mediocrities because of their inability to juggle these contending roles. Roberts seems poised to continue that tradition that began under Rehnquist. Some in the Senate will oppose him due to some of his more conservative views, but mere politics alone shouldn't be the deciding issue here. You want a candidate who has a clear grasp of the law and will interpret it with fairness. Roberts clearly has a modest view of the role of the judiciary and he believes in that upholding precedent is important for t... Read more
by andrewscott
Mon Sep 12 2005I'm impressed with the choice so far. A quote John Roberts made yesterday struck a chord in me: I have no platform. Judges are not politicians who can promise to do certain things in exchange for votes. If he's sincere as his word, he's nailed what a good judge means to me. A good judge doesn't have their judgement tainted by deep prejudices that keep the mind from seeing the true picture of a specific case. If a judge's positions are too predictable due to personal biases, it takes the point away of having debates for the judge's behalf. People complain about the courts being politicized all the time. I believe Roberts is true enough to the Founding Father's ideal of judicial fairness and sharp enough as a thinker to deserve this nomination.
by genghisthehun
Tue Aug 09 2005He should breeze through. The fun is now handicapping the no votes. I'll start with the following: Babs Boxer (D) California--the idiot's delight Patty Murray (D) Washington--stupid people need a senator, too; Charles Schumer (D) New York--senator windbag; Patrick Leahy (D) Vermont--senator yesterday's news.
by 37102002
Sat Jul 23 2005seems like a decent enough fellow. not filled with ego. appears as if he will look at cases with at least an attempt at impartiality, which is what a judge should do but often does not. more important than his ideological bent to me is his expressed desire to maintain stability within the law. that is a good thing. major upheaval is not what is needed from the supreme court.
by louiethe20th
Fri Jul 22 2005May not have a huge amount of experience,but still has the intelligence and ostensibly the forbearance to get the job done.Will make a fine addition to the high court in my opinion.
by mrpolitical
Fri Jul 22 2005I'll give him a five because he's more than a potential nominee...he actually is one now. Nominees like Roberts-those with lengthy legal careers yet with seemingly little if any controversy injected into them- tend to become justices who switch thier views once they get the robe. A good point is made when one asks how someone could be on the planet for fifty years but still maintain vague views on such crucial issues. Conservatives seeking comfort in seeing that far left groups disdain him should think twice: the extreme left is bound to hate any Republican nominee for the Supreme Court. I understand the concern in ensuring that nominees get confirmed but when you have a Republican majority in so many aspects of goverment (both local and federal) and you have justices who are the epitome of liberal judicial activism like Ginsberg and Breyer on the court...it's time to change priorities. My main fear is not so much that Roberts won't be a Scalia or Rehnquist but rather that he will beco... Read more
by jamestkirk
Wed Jul 20 2005He's paid his dues and is a more than worthy candidate. He graduated magna cum laude from Harvard Law School-that says a lot. Take a look at his experience, the Presidents he has worked for, and his experience arguing cases before the Supreme Court. He should be easily confirmed.
by eschewobfuscat_ion
Tue Jul 19 2005He's the guy! Former Rehnquist clerk. One of a select, few lawyers who has tried several cases before the Supreme Court. Limited paper trail as a judge. How many gauntlets are they gonna throw down in anticipation of the confirmation hearings? Here's the burning question: is he obligated to answer the question, posed by Chuck Schumer in his upcoming confirmation hearing: Would you overturn Roe v. Wade? (Hint: he probably won't.)
by gopmember76
Tue Jul 19 2005Evidently he rated a 5 on Bush's list: he's the choice.