(Yes, I know this article is a few weeks old, but it's not like I read NRO every day.)
Kerry’s Court
How a President Kerry would nominate.
The most profound impact the next president will have on the direction of the country, aside from prosecuting the war on terror, pertains to the nomination of judges. Absent retirements before the November election, the next president will likely nominate
between two and four justices to the Supreme Court, as well as scores of judges to the federal district and appeals courts.
Justice Scalia has noted that the tendency of judges to make, rather than interpret, the law necessarily causes the Senate's advise-and-consent function to devolve into partisan warfare. Senators confirm judicial nominees more on the basis of ideological litmus tests than on the basis of the candidate's competency, integrity, temperament, and experience. This, in turn, leads to a judiciary more likely to decide cases by invoking the "faddish slogans of the cognescenti" than by interpreting constitutional, statutory, or regulatory text — a trend favoring the rule of man over the rule of law.
...
Kerry even chastised President Bush for purportedly using a pro-life litmus test for nominees: "You do not have to believe in the existence of right-wing conspiracies to recognize that there is a clear if quiet understanding between George W. Bush and right-to-life activists that he will do everything possible if Supreme Court openings occur to add the estimated 2 justices it would take to achieve their desired result."
Kerry's reversion to a no-litmus-test stance may be an effort to inoculate his nominees, should he become President, against the kind of filibuster now employed against several of President Bush's selections for the bench. So, does this now mean that a President Kerry wouldn't demand ideological purity from his judicial nominees?
Not quite. Kerry has pledged to nominate only pro-choice judges to the Supreme Court. (The apparent calculus is: pro-life litmus test — bad; pro-choice litmus test — good.) But his waffling on litmus tests probably won't serve his nominees well. Given that Senate Democrats, who've now sanctioned implacable obstruction as a legitimate advise-and-consent tool, are likely to remain in the minority after November 2004, Kerry's nominees may pass one test only to fail another.
http://www.nationalreview.com/comment/kirsanow200405050849.asp