Word: bork
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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Before the Judiciary Committee began its hearings on Bork's nomination to the Supreme Court, Specter was considered one of three undecided Senators on the 14-member panel. During a tough, often dazzling interrogation of the nominee, he seemed to be leaning away from Bork. But last week, after the Senator grilled pro- and anti-Bork witnesses with equal vigor, the judge's supporters felt Specter was inclining their way. Specter was characteristically cryptic. Although he challenged Bork's shifting positions on civil rights and women's issues, he told conservative Economist Thomas Sowell that the judge's more recent...
...Judiciary Committee prepares to vote on Bork this Thursday -- a deadline it may miss owing to the length of much of the testimony -- Specter is the least predictable of the three fence-sitters. Bork lobbyists conceded last week that Arizona Democrat Dennis DeConcini may be "gone," likely to join six other Democrats considered certain to reject the judge. Forecasters think that Alabama's Howell Heflin will be the only Democrat on the panel to vote for Bork, joining five certain Republican supporters...
Thus if Specter goes against Bork, the committee will probably vote 8 to 6 to send the nomination to the Senate with an unfavorable recommendation. If Specter comes out in favor of the controversial jurist, the committee will most likely be deadlocked 7 to 7, with no recommended outcome...
...impasse on the Judiciary Committee would only heighten the drama of the full Senate vote that will ultimately determine Bork's fate. What worries Bork backers and detractors alike is that the full complement of 100 Senators may be as torn over the nominee as the Judiciary Committee has been. The Senate, says White House Counsel A.B. Culvahouse, is "up for grabs, almost equally divided." The White House is already stepping up its lobbying effort to get Bork confirmed. Chief of Staff Howard Baker will start meeting with Senators this week. The President, too, is getting more involved: last week...
...Administration also hopes that a pro-Bork vote by Heflin will inspire other conservative Southern Democrats to risk offending their increasingly influential black constituents by supporting the nomination. The Democrats hold a 54-to-46 majority in the Senate, so Bork will need all the crossover votes...