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Washington Post, August 19, 2005
Roberts Resisted
Women's Rights; 1982-86 Memos Detail Skepticism
Author : Amy Goldstein, R. Jeffrey Smith and
Jo Becker
Supreme Court nominee John G. Roberts Jr. consistently
opposed legal and legislative attempts to strengthen
women's rights during his years as a legal
adviser in the Reagan White House, disparaging
what he called "the purported gender gap"
and, at one point, questioning "whether
encouraging homemakers to become lawyers contributes
to the common good."
In internal memos, Roberts urged President Ronald
Reagan to refrain from embracing any form of
the proposed Equal Rights Amendment pending
in Congress; he concluded that some state initiatives
to curb workplace discrimination against women
relied on legal tools that were "highly
objectionable"; and he said that a controversial
legal theory then in vogue -- of directing
employers to pay women the same as men for
jobs of "comparable worth" -- was
"staggeringly pernicious" and "anti-capitalist."
Roberts's thoughts on what he called "perceived
problems" of gender bias are contained
in a vast batch of documents, released yesterday,
that provide the clearest, most detailed mosaic
so far of his political views on dozens of
social and legal issues. Senators have said
they plan to mine his past views on such topics,
which could come before the high court, when
his confirmation hearings begin the day after
Labor Day.
Covering a period from 1982 to 1986 -- during
his tenure as associate counsel to Reagan --
the memos, letters and other writings show
that Roberts endorsed a speech attacking "four
decades of misguided" Supreme Court decisions
on the role of religion in public life, urged
the president to hold off saying AIDS could
not be transmitted through casual contact until
more research was done, and argued that promotions
and firings in the workplace should be based
entirely on merit, not affirmative action programs.
In October 1983, Roberts said that he favored
the creation of a national identity card to
prove American citizenship, even though the
White House counsel's office was officially
opposed to the idea. He wrote that such measures
were needed in response to the "real threat
to our social fabric posed by uncontrolled
immigration."
He also, the documents illustrate, played a bit
role in the Reagan administration's efforts
in Nicaragua to funnel assistance to CIA-supported
"contras" who were trying overthrow
the Marxist Sandinista government.
In one instance, Roberts had a direct disagreement
with the senator who now wields great influence
over his confirmation prospects, Senate Judiciary
Committee Chairman Arlen Specter (R-Pa.). In
a 1983 memo, Roberts was dismissive of a "white
paper" on violent crime that had been
drafted by one of Specter's aides. Noting that
the paper proposed new expenditures of $8 billion
to $10 billion a year, Roberts wrote: "The
proposals are the epitome of the 'throw the
money at the problem' approach repeatedly rejected
by Administration spokesmen."
President Bush nominated Roberts, now a judge
on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District
of Columbia Circuit, four weeks ago.
Yesterday's deluge of more than 38,000 pages
of documents has particular political significance
-- because of their content and their timing.
The papers, held in the Ronald Reagan Presidential
Library in California, are likely to be the
last major set of written material from Roberts's
past to become public before his confirmation
hearings.
Senate Democrats have been pressing the Bush
administration to release Roberts's files from
the highest-ranking position he has held in
the executive branch, as the Justice Department's
deputy solicitor general from 1989 to 1993
under President George H.W. Bush. But administration
officials have asserted that those records
should remain private on the grounds of attorney-client
privilege.
Previously released documents, from slightly
earlier in the Reagan era, when Roberts was
a special assistant to Attorney General William
French Smith, have established that the young
lawyer was immersed in the civil rights issues
of the time, including school desegregation,
voting rights and bias in hiring and housing.
The new batch provides the most extensive insight
into Roberts's views of efforts to expand opportunity
for women in the workplace and in higher education.
His remark on whether homemakers should become
lawyers came in 1985 in reply to a suggestion
from Linda Chavez, then the White House's director
of public liaison. Chavez had proposed entering
her deputy, Linda Arey, in a contest sponsored
by the Clairol shampoo company to honor women
who had changed their lives after age 30. Arey
had been a schoolteacher who decided to change
careers and went to law school.
In a July 31, 1985, memo, Roberts noted that,
as an assistant dean at the University of Richmond
law school before she joined the Reagan administration,
Arey had "encouraged many former homemakers
to enter law school and become lawyers."
Roberts said in his memo that he saw no legal
objection to her taking part in the Clairol
contest. Then he added a personal aside: "Some
might question whether encouraging homemakers
to become lawyers contributes to the common
good, but I suppose that is for the judges
to decide."
After the White House, Arey went on to run for
Congress, serve on presidential advisory committees,
work as an attorney at a major law firm in
the West, serve as vice president for congressional
relations for a Washington lobbying firm, and
was eventually appointed in 2002 as a senior
associate commissioner of the Food and Drug
Administration. She has retired.
Roberts's comment about homemakers startled women
across the ideological spectrum. Phyllis Schlafly,
the president of the conservative Eagle Forum
who entered law school when she was 51, said,
"It kind of sounds like a smart alecky
comment." She noted that Roberts was "a
young bachelor and hadn't seen a whole lot
of life at that point."
Schlafly said, "I knew Lyn Arey. She is
a fine woman." But she added, "I
don't think that disqualifies him. I think
he got married to a feminist; he's learned
a lot."
Kim Gandy, president of the liberal National
Organization for Women, which already has opposed
Roberts, reacted more harshly. "Oh. Wow.
Good heavens," she said. "I find
it quite shocking that a young lawyer, as he
was at the time, had such Neanderthal ideas
about women's place."
For its part, the White House defended its nominee.
"It's pretty clear from the more than
60,000 pages of documents that have been released
that John Roberts has a great sense of humor,"
said Steve Schmidt, a spokesman for Bush. "In
this memo, he offers a lawyer joke."
On other matters involving women's rights, Roberts
in 1983 criticized a report that lauded strides
by states to combat sex discrimination in the
workplace, that had been endorsed by then-Transportation
Secretary Elizabeth Dole. In a Jan. 17 memo
to his boss, White House counsel Fred F. Fielding,
Roberts wrote that "many of the reported
proposals and efforts are themselves highly
objectionable." Roberts singled out three
ideas for particular criticism: what he characterized
as a California requirement that employers
take into account affirmative action, in addition
to seniority, when laying off workers; another
California proposal to require women to be
paid the same as men for state jobs considered
of comparable worth; and a Florida proposal
to charge women lower tuition than men at state
colleges because their earning power was less.
He wrote that it was "imperative that the
report make clear . . . that the inventory
is just that and that proposals appearing in
it are not necessarily supported by the administration."
In a Sept. 30, 1983, memo, regarding an upcoming
presidential interview with a newspaper, Spanish
Today, Roberts suggested that the president,
in answer to a potential question concerning
illegal immigrants, note that proposed immigration
reform legislation would allow some immigrants
to be legalized.
"I think this audience would be pleased
that we are trying to grant legal status to
their illegal amigos," Roberts wrote.
In a January 1982 memo he wrote about legislation
that he said would "heap benefits"
on the Texas Band of Kickapoo Indians. Explaining
their history, Roberts wrote, "The Kickapoos,
originally from the Great Lakes area, did not
stop running from their encounter with Europeans
until they reached Mexico, where they now hold
17,000 acres of land" and "provide
migrant labor in the U.S." Roberts said
he had no legal objections to the bill, which
he said was consistent with administration
policy, but added that its "provisions
seem overly generous -- particularly in light
of the fact that these are, generally speaking,
Mexican Indians and not American Indians."
At one point in 1986, he railed against a draft
review of a book by Harvard Law professor Laurence
H. Tribe in George Washington University's
law review. He said the review, by an associate
law professor at the University of Toledo,
was "trite, sophomoric pablum" and
contained "shallow and unconvincing"
criticism of Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist
-- for whom Roberts had clerked -- "calculated
to endear the author to liberal academia."
In another instance in which he made his own
political frame of reference clear, Roberts
gave his advice on proposed rules that would
prohibit recipients of federal grants or contracts
from using that money for lobbying or other
forms of political advocacy. Liberal groups
that received such money were complaining that
the rules were intended to harm them. Roberts,
in a February 1983 memo, agreed that the proposals
were too broad, but worried more about the
hit that government contractors would take.
"It is possible to 'defund the left' without
alienating [defense contractors] TRW and Boeing,
but the proposals, if enacted, would do both,"
Roberts opined.
In a memo to Fielding dated May 7, 1985, Roberts
addressed the ethics of allowing a Falls Church
Girl Scout to meet the president in the midst
of the annual cookie drive. "Elizabeth
. . . has sold some 10,000 boxes and would
like to sell one to the President. The little
huckster thinks the President would like the
Samoas," he wrote, before concluding that
he had no objection to deviating in this case
from the White House's practice of avoiding
"an implied endorsement" by the president.
On matters of religion, Roberts was sympathetic
to an expansion of its role in public life.
Roberts wrote in 1984 that he found "sound
and in my view compelling arguments" in
favor of "equal access" legislation
to require schools to accord student religious
groups the same rights of assembly as other
organizations.
That same year, he was asked to review a draft
speech to be given by then-Education Secretary
William J. Bennett to the Knights of Columbus,
a Catholic men's organization. Other White
House officials had said the speech was too
divisive, as it criticized Supreme Court rulings
that had blocked the posting of the Ten Commandments
in public schools and prohibited public school
teachers from giving remedial classes at parochial
schools. "Bennett's point is that such
decisions betray a hostility to religion not
demanded by the constitution," Roberts
said. "I have no quarrel with Bennett
on the merits."
Staff writer Ceci Connolly in Washington; staff
writers Amy Argetsinger and Sonya Geis in Simi
Valley, Calif.; and researchers Jill Bartscht,
Meg Smith and Madonna Lebling contributed to
this report.
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