This is interesting. J. Michael Luttig, a leading conservative judge and scholar who has often been mentioned as a potential Supreme Court nominee and would certainly be on the short list for the next vacancy should it happen before 2008, has resigned from the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals. He will be moving to the private sector, where he will become the vice president and general counsel for Boeing. At 51 years old, Luttig has been an appellate judge for 15 years and his chances of being named to the Supreme Court were probably the best of any sitting judge, along with perhaps Michael McConnell of the 10th circuit. I'm sure he'll be making a lot more money as a corporate general counsel, probably 4 or 5 times as much, but as a guy who has seemed destined for the Supreme Court since his 30s, it's still a surprising move. At least it is to me.
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'Tis passing strange -- do you suppose he's been to a few poker parites he shouldn't have attended? Of the conservatives that have been mentioned as front-runners for SCOTUS, he was one of the few that didn't scare me, so it's not only surprising but a mite troubling.
The fact that he has resigned from the bench doesn't mean he would be restricted from a spot on the Supreme Court, does it?
Treban - No. Current position is not a qualifier for nomination to the bench. You don't even need to be a lawyer to get appointed.
No, it doesn't mean he would be restricted from getting such a nomination, but it likely reduces his chances considerably. Traditionally, lawyers in private practice do not get nominations these days. Not out of the question, though.
The Wall Street Journal this morning has a page-one piece on Luttig's departure. Since it's subscription-only, I'll post a few grafss and e-mail the whole thing to Ed.
I hope that doesn't exceed fair use.
Ah, thanks for that, Pieter. I hadn't even considered that issue. I recall at the time reading that Luttig was very angry (and rightly so) about the administration trying to avoid judicial review. The Supreme Court ultimately did allow the charges to go forward and Padilla to be transferred, but that's not the last of it. Many speculate that the Court wanted to wait until it made its way back up to really take a whack at the administration's position. But this may explain why Luttig left. Even if he hadn't gotten discouraged by what the administration did, he may well have recognized that his position in the case took him off any list for a future nomination and that may have sapped his desire to stay on the bench. That makes sense.