PAGE A4, KEIZERTIMES, FEBRUARY 19, 2016 KeizerOpinion KEIZERTIMES.COM Obama must nominate justice The funeral for the late Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia hasn’t been held yet and already the forces are out to hyper- politicize the naming of his replacement. Scalia died last weekend at the age of 79 after serv- ing nearly 30 years on the nation’s highest court. He is being lionized across the spectrum as a giant in the judicial world, a fi rst-class intellecdtual and a never-say-die defender of con- servative values. The United States Supreme Court can boast any number of great think- ers in its history from John Marshall to Charles Evan Hughes to Earl Warren. The Constution calls for the president to nominate justices and the Senate to advise and consent on the choice. The confi rming of justices was a fairly routine affair until President Lyndon Johnson unwisely tried to get his friend Abe Fortas approved as chief justice to replace Earl Warren. Fortas’ own shortcomings (and the political calendar of 1968) forced him to resign from the court. In 1987 President Reagan nomi- nated Robert Bork (famous, in part, for his role in the Saturday Night Massacre of the Watergate Era). Bork was a staunch conservative and Con- stutional orginalist; he was vilifed and opposed by many groups (and one of only three Court nominees ever to be opposed by the American Civil Liber- ties Union). His nomination was de- feated by a 42-58 vote. Reagan then nominated Anthony Kennedy who was confi rmed by a 97-0 vote in February 1988. By that time the presidential race was well underway but no Democratic or Re- publican Senator called for a delay to allow for the new president to fi ll the vacancy. Fast forward 28 years and the story is very different. Within hours of the announcement of Scalia’s death Republicans (includ- ing the six presidential candidates) said that Presi- dent Obama should leave the nomination of Scalia’s successor to the next presi- dent—to be elected in 11 months and sworn in two months after that. This is no way to run our government. Republicans, who sense a victory in the presidential election, see no harm if they demand Obama stand down on naming a justice. During the debate Trump said that the Senate Republicans can use delaying tactics to assure no further Obama appointee sits on the Supreme Court. Senate Majority Leader Mitch Mc- Connell said the American people should have a say about a nominee. The American people have never had a say about a Supreme Court (or any other federal court) nominee. The public can make speeches, write let- ters, lobby their member of Congress. The president nominates and Con- gress considers and votes for or against approval. Senator Elizabeth Warren said it exactly right about McConnell’s view: the people did have a say on Court nominations when they re-elected Obama in 2012 by more than 5 mil- lion votes. If Scalia had died one or two years earlier none of this would be an issue. Let the process work as the Founding Fathers wrote in the Constitution. If politicians don’t like the system they can try to change it via amendments but that is unlikely. President Obama said this week he will fulfi ll his duty and name a nomi- nee for the vacant Supreme Court seat. He is doing what Scalia so often said government should do: heed the Constitution’s intent. Obama is right; obstructionists are wrong. —LAZ editorial What Keizer loses Tuesday’s city council meeting was the fi nal one for Brandon Smith. He submitted his resignation last week; he is moving to Salem, making him ineligible to serve on the body. Smith has served twice on coun- cil. He was appointed to a vacancy in late 2007 and won the seat in his own right in the 2008 election and served until early 2013. He commenced an unsuccessful write-in candidacy to retain his seat against Ken LeDuc. Smith ran unopposed for the city council in the 2014 election. Though always true to his politi- cal and ideological leanings, Smith was an unabashed supporter of ev- erything Keizer. That’s evident in his resume of service on a wide num- ber of commissions, committees and task forces. His chairmanship of the Keizer Parks and Recreation Advi- sory Board was important because it brought about the matching grant program that allowed the commu- nity to improve parks if it raised half of the cost of a project. Smith was at the forefront of a move to create stable funding for Keizer’s many parks. Discussions are on-going about a parks district or other options. Brandon Smith was not a showy politician. He quietly worked on the tasks at hand; he asked insight- ful questions at council meetings and didn’t accept as fi nal any answers he did not agree with. What Keizer loses with the loss of Brandon Smith from the city coun- cil is a resident who knows his own mind and wants what is best for the city and its residents and is willing to, politely, do what is necessary to achieve that. —LAZ Thanks for your kindness missing. At that moment, I received a call from my bank that it was there, safe and sound. Thank you, I love a happy ending! Yet another reason why I love living in Keizer! Audrey Butler Keizer letters To the Editor: To the gentleman who found my bank card, I would like to say “thank you” for going out of your way to return it to my bank. As fate would have it, I was frantically searching for my card today when I realized it was Keizertimes Wheatland Publishing Corp. • 142 Chemawa Road N. • Keizer, Oregon 97303 phone: 503.390.1051 • web: www.keizertimes.com • email: kt@keizertimes.com Lyndon A. Zaitz, Editor & Publisher SUBSCRIPTIONS One year: $25 in Marion County, $33 outside Marion County, $45 outside Oregon PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY Publication No: USPS 679-430 POSTMASTER Send address changes to: Keizertimes Circulation 142 Chemawa Road N. Keizer, OR 97303 Periodical postage paid at Salem, Oregon Replacing Scalia will take epic effort By MICHAEL GERSON A public offi cial can fi ght to ex- pand the power and prerogatives of his offi ce with skill and cunning. De- fending the prerogatives of other of- fi cials, in another branch of govern- ment, is done only out of principle. Justice Antonin Scalia spent a career in America’s judicial aristocracy de- fending representative democracy. He wanted courts to play a limited, supportive role, interpreting texts produced by representatives of the people. If new meanings are required —as they often are, in a varied, pro- gressing country—then it is the peo- ple who need to provide them. “Do you think the American people would ever have ratifi ed” the Constitution, Scalia asked, if they had known that “the meaning of this document shall be whatever a major- ity of the Supreme Court says it is?” On issues such as abortion rights, he said that judges “vote on the basis of what they feel,” which amounts to “the destruction of our democratic system.” The reaction of judges who enjoy a starring role in American govern- ment was, and is, negative. Which is unsurprising. Progressive judges have an interest in making their private moral intuitions the law of the land, without the inconvenience of having to persuade their fellow citizens. If judicial decision-making involves the interpretation of evolving standards, this gives tremendous infl uence to the interpreters. Progressives gener- ally like this approach because it has secured progressive outcomes. But, as a political theory, there is nothing particularly liberal about it because it grants immense political power to a small self-serving, self-dealing elite. Here is Scalia: “The non-original- ist judge who decides what the mod- ern Constitu- tion ought to mean—perhaps by applying his favorite prin- ciples of moral philosophy, or perhaps only by applying his own brilliant analysis of what the times require—escapes the application of any clear standard, by which we may conclude that he is a charlatan.” In exposing this scheme, Scalia— the strongest of Catholics—was thor- oughly Protestant in his disposition. He viewed the advocates of a “liv- ing Constitution” in much the same way that Martin Luther viewed the Roman Catholic priesthood—as a class maintaining its power through mystifi cation and the claim that only it can interpret sacred texts. Sca- lia argued for the plain meaning of texts, available to everyday people. A priesthood of citizens. And Scalia did spark something of a reformation, in- spiring a generation of judicial origi- nalists who have gained serious infl u- ence in academia and on the bench. The question “Who judges?” is also the question “Who rules?” Scalia, the brightest judicial light of his time, wanted the representative branches to rule. And so how is the legislative branch likely to respond to a Su- preme Court vacancy as consequen- tial as the one Scalia’s death creates? Not well. In the plain meaning of the text of the Constitution, appointing “judges of the Supreme Court” is a presidential power. And Alexander Hamilton, in Federalist 76, asserts broad presidential discretion in exer- cising this authority and sets out nar- row grounds for the Senate to reject other views nominees. All of which now means little. The nomination system is broken beyond recognition. And yes, it is Democrats who started it. The nomination of Robert Bork to the Supreme Court during the Reagan years set the pat- tern—in ideologically decisive nom- inations—of war-room style cam- paigns involving opposition research and public defamation. As far as I can tell, there is no going back. President Obama’s task is further complicated by exceptionally bad re- lations with Congress. Most Repub- lican leaders can (and do) relate sto- ries of snubs and disdainful treatment by the president. He has no chits of goodwill to cash. And the political pressures on Senate Majority Leader Mitch Mc- Connell all go in one direction: to delay and delay, without even a Judi- ciary Committee vote. If McConnell allows a decisive change in the Su- preme Court on his watch, conserva- tives will ask: What good is having a Senate majority anyway? The revolt against McConnell would be broad, and include much of the Republican presidential fi eld. Obama will attempt to change this dynamic with an appealing and/ or exceptionally qualifi ed nominee. Could the Iowan leader of the Ju- diciary Committee, Chuck Grassley, really oppose an Iowan? Could the Senate refuse someone who it ap- proved for a lower court by 97-0? It will not matter. In part because the Supreme Court has assumed such a large role in American life, a decisive shift in its ideological com- position would be an event of mas- sive political consequence. And no one will be bringing the Federalist Papers to this knife fi ght. (Washington Post Writers Group) Put more effort into CTE for students Some of our state legislators will get into something that has complex features and then over-simplify it for the sake of political gain. A classical example of such a matter is a guest opinion in another newspaper by Republican Senator Ted Ferrioli of John Day who wrote glowingly but without a word about the historic shortcomings regarding career and technical education programs (CTE) for Oregon high school students. He began reasonably enough when he wrote that in spite of low graduation numbers and poor school outcomes, it’s important for state po- litical leaders to want to bring about investments for improvements in Oregon’s schools. Wisely, he doesn’t want to see another task force de- voted to this matter; rather, he seeks budget allocations for programs that have, mostly in other times and places, proven their value. These are career and technical education pro- grams or CTEs. Ferrioli reminds readers in his piece that the state’s Department of Education reported recently that CTE students in Oregon are 15.5 percent more likely to graduate from a high school in four years time than their fellow students, without CTE involvement. This information should surprise no one who has been in Oregon public education for a while as this statistic could have been borrowed from report after report on the value and importance of career and vocational education as long ago as the 1970s if not decades before. Unlike schools in most European nations where academic and voca- tional-technical schools are separate- ly made available to those with prov- en, tested aptitude leanings in either direction. Our high school students are not so well directed. Here it’s been found by attempt after attempt to install them all over the state, too many Oregon parents have resisted nearly to the “death” any ef- fort to separate their child from oth- ers who are college-bound until they are hit over the head with a fi gura- tive hammer that their child is not interested in an academic college education. That alternative-minded child should have been trained dur- ing their high school years in a skill or trade that could lead to a well-paying job that provides a living wage. Another factor is that Oregon is generally unwilling to put the dollars necessary to build career and technical programs with cutting edge facilities, instructors, administra- tors and working relationships with the world of work. The students who do attend can appreciate signifi cant learning outcomes, have a chance to move from a learning center, as Fer- rioli writes, “prepared for real family- wage jobs in today’s workforce.” At the end of the last century I worked as executive director to the state council on career and vo- cational education. The council was populated by 16 gubernatorial ap- pointees from education, relevant state agencies, business and industry, with its main task to identify and assess all career and vocational edu- cation programs in Oregon’s high schools and community colleges. It was a diffi cult task at best because the Vocational Education Division of the Department of Education did not appreciate a group outside its walls assessing its successes (and — horrors— its failures). Furthermore, gene h. mcintyre although I testifi ed before appropri- ate committees of the Oregon Leg- islature, with information the likes of which Ferrioli references, the distri- bution of state monies always came up wholly to what my council and I, with hard evidence in hand, advo- cated. I hope that the Legislature sup- ports funding for CTE programs all over the state. We’ll see whether Salem-Keizer School’s CTE pro- gram succeeds ; if it remains mar- ginal as has been CTE in Ore- gon, while the principal (not from a voc-tech background) wanting to present success, have the ability to improve on inadequacies or hide behind the modern day bureaucrat- ic slight-of-hand that so often char- acterizes our public school manage- ment operations circa 2016. Meanwhile, too, when it comes to jobs like those in construction, maintenance, repair work and ag- riculture, so many workers now are of Hispanic/Latino origin. Because many of these jobs require dirty hands, long hours and exposure to the elements, too many American youth don’t want them and will instead re- sort to crime, marijuana sales, a gov- ernment handout, etc. Unless this challenge can be dealt with in ways that encourage a change for young people born here, who aren’t driven by their parents for status fulfi llment, these many jobs will continue to be fi lled by newcomers from Central America. Hence, a grand redesign of our high schools with as much voca- tional as academic opportunity could make a huge difference. If Ferrioli is sincere, he’ll rally his associates and the governor around a secondary school consequential make over. (Gene H. McIntyre’s column ap- pears weeky in the Keizertimes.)