Senate confirms nominee for Ark. judgeship

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Arkansas lawyer Leon Holmes narrowly won Senate confirmation to be a federal judge Tuesday, surviving bipartisan concerns over his views on abortion and women.

Arkansas lawyer Leon Holmes narrowly won Senate confirmation to be a federal judge Tuesday, overcoming concerns over his views on abortion and women.

The vote was 51-46, with six Democrats joining most Republicans in supporting Holmes. Five Republicans opposed him.

President Bush nominated Holmes, 53, for the U.S. District Court in the Eastern District of Arkansas in January 2003, but the nomination was slowed as attention turned to some of Holmes’ writings on his Catholic faith and rape victims.

He apologized for writing in 1980 that rape victims rarely get pregnant, calling them a “red herring” in the debate over abortion. But Holmes said his 1997 comparison of the Catholic Church’s subservient relationship with Jesus Christ to a wife’s duties to her husband was unfairly taken out of context. In an article he co-authored with his wife, he said a wife has an obligation “to subordinate herself to her husband” and “to place herself under the authority of the man.”

Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, R-Texas, cast her first vote against a Bush nominee when she opposed Holmes. “He doesn’t have the fundamental commitment to the total equality of women in our society,” Hutchison said in explaining her vote.

But Sen. Blanche Lincoln, D-Ark., said Holmes has the right to express his religious views, noting his stated remorse over his rape remark. “I, for one, accept his apology,” Lincoln said.

Anti-Catholic bias at work?
Some supporters contended anti-Catholic bias was at work in the opposition to Holmes, a charge Republicans first raised when the Senate was considering the nomination of former Alabama Attorney General William Pryor as an appeals court judge.

Sen. Jeff Sessions said members of other faiths would never be subjected to the treatment accorded Holmes. “Are we going to demand that they come before the Senate Judiciary Committee and renounce their faith before they become a federal judge?” Sessions said.

Bush gave Pryor a recess appointment in February, breaking the Democrats’ hold on the nomination.

Holmes was the last of 25 judicial nominees to be voted on by the Senate as part of an agreement struck by Bush and Senate Democrats in May. The deal guaranteed that the Senate would vote on 25 mainly uncontroversial nominees if the president agreed to stop using recess appointments to install his most contentious nominees on federal appeals courts while Congress is out of town.

The others were confirmed with ease before Congress’ July 4 recess.

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