Miers says she made no promise on abortion

Published: Tuesday, Oct. 18 2005 12:00 a.m. MDT

WASHINGTON — Supreme Court nominee Harriet Miers told a key Senate Democrat on Monday that she had not promised anyone that she would oppose abortion rights if she is confirmed to the nation's highest court.

After a private meeting with Miers, Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., said she had told him that "no one knows how I would rule" on cases involving abortion. That issue is likely to headline Miers' upcoming Senate confirmation hearings because Miers would replace Sandra Day O'Connor, one of six justices on the nine-member court who has backed abortion rights.

Schumer added that he was unable to squeeze much information from Miers, who is the White House counsel, about her legal views. Schumer said that he was particularly "surprised" that she declined to discuss a ruling in 1923 that helped to establish the concept of personal privacy, the legal foundation for abortion rights.

"I didn't learn answers to so many important questions," said Schumer, who described Miers as much less informative than Chief Justice John Roberts was during similar meetings after Roberts' nomination to the high court in July. "On many, she wouldn't give answers, and on many others, she deferred, saying, 'I need to sort of bone up on this a little more.' "

Miers' trip to Capitol Hill on Monday came hours after an op-ed column in The Wall Street Journal suggested that on Oct. 3, the day Miers was nominated, two Texas judges who are friends of hers told several conservative Christian leaders during a conference call that Miers probably would vote to oppose abortion rights if she were confirmed.

The Journal said Texas Supreme Court Justice Nathan Hecht and federal Judge Ed Kinkeade of Dallas made the remarks during a call that included James Dobson of Focus on the Family, conservative activist Gary Bauer and others.

After that meeting, Dobson suggested that he had received private assurances from the White House that Miers was a nominee who deserved the support of conservative Christians who oppose abortion. Dobson said later that he had received no specific assurance that Miers would oppose abortion.

In interviews, Hecht has said Miers - who belonged to an evangelical church in Dallas that condemns abortion - would follow the law, not her religious beliefs, in her decisions. Kinkeade has praised Miers without speculating on how she might rule in abortion cases.

Schumer said Monday that he asked Miers whether anyone had been given assurances on how she would vote as a justice and that she "disavowed that completely."

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