Samuel Alito and the Supreme Court
On first glance, he looks like a good choice for Bush. Alito is top sirloin from the conservative perspective, as opposed to the spam-like mystery they perceived in Harriet Miers. Also, while very conservative, he tends to be cool in presentation. It sounds like he can give a pretty good “Here, I stand” presentation to the Senate without coming across as crazy.
That will make it tough for ideological opponents—which probably includes me though I will reserve judgment until I learn a bit more about him. Americans don’t like obvious ideologues, but they do like firmness. Most Americans also don’t know much about the relationship between court decisions and rights, except for really big decisions like Roe v. Wade or Brown v. Board. If he doesn’t break down and start drooling while discussing how he’ll get the King James Bible back into the schools or if something equally bizarre in his past doesn’t come back to haunt him, then opponents will have a lot of trouble raising public opposition.
Alito might lose anyway, particularly if he indicates some lack of support for women’s rights (aside from abortion). One of the true sea changes of the past thirty years has been the growth in publicly active, conservative women who don’t like Roe v. Wade but who otherwise want to be equals in the public sphere. If I were getting to question him, the evolution of the rights of women is where I would focus my questions.