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AROUND THE WEB

New York Obsever
October 15, 2005
Ben Smith and Lizzy Ratner

The Trouble With Harriet

Revolting Right Wing Recalls Manhattan 12; Intellectuals in Snit Resent Bush's Lawyer; Bork: ‘Slap in Face to Conservative Movement’

Conservative intellectuals have made a virtue of loyalty, and their rebellions are like plagues of locusts: rare and intense.

Before the uproar over President George W. Bush’s latest Supreme Court pick, Harriet Miers, the conservative elite’s most memorable recent breach came when Mr. Bush’s father broke his 1988 campaign pledge to oppose any new taxes. But the Miers rebellion reminded some older conservatives of another moment: July 26, 1971, when a dozen leaders of the small, marginal conservative movement met in William F. Buckley’s East Side apartment (where else?) to craft a public response to President Richard Nixon’s trip to Communist China.

Also see:

Also from the Observer: Federalists See in Miers a Missed Opportunity; Not From Their Garden

Federalist Society

Conservative Legal Movement

Robert Bork

Court Watch

 

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