I picked up an old copy of The Nation over the weekend, the date: 10-1-2001. It was the first issue after 9/11, and prominently featured the twin towers on the cover. In it was a story that I don’t recall reading, and given the upheaval of that moment in time, I probably didn’t read it.
However, the story was worthy of the cover had it not been for the tragedy of the weeks before–
The report by Amy Bach, an attorney, was on the Federalist Society and its infiltration into law schools all over the country.
In it, she showed the web of connections that this “society” was constructing–conservative law students (Antonin Scalia was one) who didn’t like their liberal law professors’ point of view, and wanted to do something about it. That something was the Federalist Society to encourage conservative students to organize, and then make connections to the power players in the White House and the Supreme Court.
Bach names names and one of them is Jeff Sutton. He argued the cases Alexander v. Sandoval and University of Alabama et al v. Garrett. (link here: http://www.civilrights.org/monitor/vol11_no4/art1p1.html)
I did a search to see where Sutton was now–here: http://www.onu.edu/node/34771
and here: http://abovethelaw.com/tag/jeffrey-sutton/
Well, of course he was nominated to a judge position by Bush.
From the article:
“…it [Federalist policy] benefits big business, it’s anti-egalitarian, it shuts plaintiffs like the poor and disabled out of courts, and it rolls back the New Deal notion that the courts have a role to play in helping the downtrodden.”
However, Bach noted organizations of progressive and centrists, one of which is the American Constitution Society. The problem with getting organized is that progressives are not as narrow-minded, but independent in thought. It’s soooo much easier to organize when your targets are the poor, disabled, women, minorities, etc.–you know, people who have less power to fight back.