■*i
NOMINATIONS OF JOSEPH T. SNEED TO BE
DEPUTY ATTORNEY GENERAL AND
ROBERT H. BORK TO BE SOLICITOR GENERAL
^ HEARINGS
BEFORE THE
COMMITTEE ON THE JUDICIARY
UNITED STATES SENATE
NINETY-THIKD CONGRESS
FIRS.T SESSION
ON
NOMINATIONS OF JOSEPH T. SNEED, OF NORTH CARO-
LINA, TO BE DEPUTY ATTORNEY GENERAL AND ROBERT H.
BORK, OF CONNECTICUT, TO BE SOLICITOR GENERAL
JANUARY 17, 1973
Printed for the use of the Committee on the Judiciary
;ov DOCS
73
152 U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE
973\ ^2-446 WASHINGTON : 1973
K6S6drCn u. S Government Documents Depository
L i b rd ry - Franklm Pierce Law Center Library
' D359B ^^^jSI
NOMINATIONS OF JOSEPH T. SNEED TO BE
DEPUTY ATTORNEY GENERE AND
ROBERT H. BORK TO BE SOLICITOR GENERAL
HEARINGS
BEFORE THE
COMMITTEE ON THE JUDICIARY
UNITED STATES SENATE
NINETY-THIRD CONGRESS
FIRS.T SESSION
ON
NOMINATIONS OF JOSEPH T. SNEED, OF NORTH CARO-
LINA, TO BE DEPUTY ATTORNEY GENERAL AND ROBERT H.
BORK, OF CONNECTICUT, TO BE SOLICITOR GENERAL
JANUARY 17, 1973
Printed for the use of the Committee on the Judiciary
VDOCS
!2-446
esearch
Library.
U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE
WASHINGTON : ms
U. S Government Documents Depository
Franklin Pierce Law Center Library
_. D359B ^ jJ/A
Boston ^mMc Ubraiy
Boston, MA 02116
COMMITTEE ON THE JUDICIARY
JAMES O. EASTLAND, Mississippi, Chairman
JOHN L. McCLELLAN, Arkansas ROMAN L. HRUSKA, Nebraska
SAM J. ERVIN, Jr., North Carolina HIRAM L. FONG, Hawaii
PHILIP A. HART, Michigan HUGH SCOTT, Pennsylvania
EDWARD M, KENNEDY, Massachusetts STROM THURMOND, South Carolina
BIRCH BAYH, Indiana MARLOW W. COOK, Kentucky
QUBNTIN N. BURDICK, North Dakota CHARLES McC. MATHIAS, Jr., Maryland
ROBERT C. BTRD, West Virginia EDWARD J. GURNEY, Florida
JOHN V. TUNNBY, California
(n)
CONTENTS
Wednesday, January 17, 1973
Page
•ared statement of Sam J. Ervin, Jr., U.S. Senator from North
arolina 2
imony of :
Jesse Helms, U.S. Senator from North Carolina 1
Joseph T. Sneed, of North Carolina, nominee to be Deputy Attorney
General 3
Lowell P. Weicker, U.S. Senator from Connecticut 5
Robert H. Bork, of Connecticut, nominee to be Solicitor General 5
munications from :
Charles D. Ablard, Associate Deputy Attorney General 16
Clarence Mitchell, director, Washington Bureau, National Associa-
tion for the Advancement of Colored People 26
(III)
NOMINATIONS OF JOSEPH T. SNEED TO BE DEPUTY
ATTORNEY GENERAL AND ROBERT H. BORK TO BE
SOLICITOR GENERAL
' WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 17, 1973
U.S. Senate,
Committee on the Judiciary,
Washington^ B.C.
The committee met, pursuant to notice, at 10 :35 a.m., in room 2228,
Dirksen Senate Office Building, Senator James O. Eastland (chair-
man) presiding.
Present: Senators Eastland, McClcllan, Hart, Burdick, Tunney,
Hruska, Fong, Thurmond, and IMathias.
Also present: John H. Holloman, Francis C. Rosenberger, and
Thomas D. Hart, of the committee staff.
The Chairman. This hearing is on the nomination of Joseph T.
Sneed of North Carolina to be Deputy Attorney General.
Senator Helms, you may proceed.
STATEMENT OF JESSE HELMS, U.S. SENATOR FROM NORTH
CAROLINA
Senator Helms. Mr. Chairman and other distinguished Senators, I
am Jesse Helms of North Carolina and I thank you for the privilege
of appearing before this committee this morning for the purpose of
presenting to you a highly respected resident of North Carolina who
has been nominated by the President to be Deputy Attorney General.
I met Mr, Joseph T. Sneed III, for the first time last week. Subse-
quent to our meeting, Mr. Chairman, I made inquiry of several sources
as to his background and competence. Without exception, he was given
si^lendid reconunendations by those who have known him and worked
with him.
Briefly, ]Mr. Sneed has been professor of law and dean of the Duke
University Law School since February 1971. Before coming to Duke
University, he had built an outstanding academic career at a number
of excellent law schools in Texas, New York, Massachusetts, and
California.
Mr. Sneed was born in Calvert, Tex., on July 21, 1920. After under-
graduate work at Southwestern University, he attended the law school
at the University of Texas, which awarded him a law degree in 1947.
His legal education. I should mention, was interrupted by service dur-
ing the Second World War as a staff sergeant in the U.S. Army Air
Force.
For 10 years after graduation, he remained at the University of
Texas Law School, first as an instructor, then as assistant professor,
(1)
then as associate professor, and finally as a professor of law. In add?
tion, during the years 1949-50, he served as assistant dean in 1952,
he was a consultant to the Texas Legislative Council, and from 1954
to 1956 he was counsel to the firm of Graves, Daughtery and Greenhill
in Austin, Tex.
In 1957, Mr. Sneed left the University of Texas to join the law
faculty at Cornell University in Ithaca, N.Y., as a professor of law.
Harvard Universitj^ awarded him an S.J.D. degree in 1958. There-
after, he remained at Cornell until 1962, when he moved to Stanford
University Law School as a professor of law. While at Stanford, Mr.
Sneed served as president of the American Association of Law Schools
in 1968, and as a member of the California Law Revision Commission
in 1970. He received an LL.D. degree from Southwestern University
in 1968.
In addition to numerous articles, Mr. Sneed is the author of "Con-
figurations of Gross Income" published in 1967. He is a member of the
bar of Texas and of New York, Order of the Coif, the American La^v
Institute, the American Judicature Society and the American Bar
Association. He is a widely recognized expert in the field of taxation.
He is married to the former Madelon Juergens and they have three
children.
My inquiries have convinced me that Mr. Sneed comes to the job
of Deputy Attorney General with an outstanding academic back-
ground. I commend him to this committee as unusually well qualified
for the position. ■ i
Thank you, Mr. Chairman. W I
The ChairjMan. I want to place in the record a statement from
Senator Ervin in support of the nomination of Mr. Sneed to be
De])uty Attorney General. « i
[The statement referred to follows :] • " 1
Statement of Senator Sam J. Ekvin, .Jr. in Support of the Nomination of
Joseph T. Sneed, III to Be Deputy Attorney General of the United States
Mr. Chairman. I .sincei'ely regret that a previous commitment prevents me
from personally expressing to the Committee my support for the nomination of
Joseph T. Sneed, III, as Deputy Attorney General of the United States.
Mr. Sneed is presently serving as Dean of the Duke University School of Law
in Durham, North Carolina. North Carolinians take great pride in the outstanding
national reputation of the Duke Law School and its tradition of academic excel-
lence. Joseph Sneed has contrihuted to that tradition during his tenure on the
Duke faculty and has won the respect and admiration of his colleagues there.
Mr. Sneed's academic and professional qualifications for Deputy Attorney
General are impressive. He received his LL.B. degree from the University of
Texas, an S.J.D. degree from Harvard Univer.sity, and an LL.D. degree from
Southwestern University. After receiving his LL.B. from the University of Texas
in 1947. he served until 1957 as a member of its law school faculty. While in
Austin, Texas, he was associated with the law firm of Graves, Daughert.v, and
Greenhill. From 1957 to 1962, Mr. Sneed was Professor of Law at the Cornell
University Law School, in Ithaca. New York. Thereafter, he joined the law
faculty at Stanford University where he served until coming to Duke University
in 1971.
I am confident that, ba-sed upon Mr. Sneed's excellent professional background
and reputation and his outstanding academic achievements, Joseph Sneed will
render distinguished service to our country as the new Deputy Attorney General.
Certainly, the country at this time has great need for a man of his abilities in
this important position.
I urge the Committee to approve Mr. Sneed's nomination. Certain of his con-
firmation, may I add that I am personally looking forward to working with Mr.
Sneed on matters of mutual interest in the years ahead.
The Chairman. Mv. Sneed, is your biography before you correct?
TESTIMONY OF JOSEPH T. SNEED, NOMINEE TO BE DEPUTY
ATTORNEY GENERAL
Mr. Sneed. Yes, sir; Senator Eastland, it is substantially correct.
The Chairman. It will be placed in the record.
[The biographical sketch of Mr. Sneed follows :]
Joseph T. Sneed, III
Born : July 21, 1920, Calvert, Texas.
Marital status: Married (wife, Madelon), three children.
Legal residence : North Carolina.
Education : 1937-1941, Southwestern University, Texas, B.B.A. degree. 1941-47,
University of Texas, Austin, Texas; LL.B. degree. 1958, Harvard University,
S.J.D. degree. 1968. Southwestern University, LL.D. degree.
Bar : 1948-1958, Texas ; New York.
Military service: November, 1942-February 1946, U.S. Army Air Force, S/Sgt.
Employment : 1947-57, University of Texas, Instructor. 1947-51, Assistant Pro-
fessor of law. 1951-54, Associate Professor of law. 1954-57, Professor of law.
1949-50, Assistant Dean. 1954-56, Graves, Daugherty & Greenhill, Austin, Texas,
Counsel. 1957-62, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, Professor of law. 1962-
71, Stanford University Law School, Stanford, California, Professor of law.
February 1971-present, Duke University Law School, North Carolina, Dean and
Professor of law.
Ofiice : Duke University Law School, Durham, North Carolina.
Home : 2815 Chelsea Circle, Durham, North Carolina.
The Chairman. Senator McClellan ?
Senator McClellan. I have no questions.
The Chairman. Senator Hart ?
Senator Hart. I had an opportunity to visit with Dean Sneed yes-
terday. I did not ask him then and I am going to ask him now if he
had an3'thing to do with the development of any school desegregation
plans in North Carolina ?
Mr. Sneed. No, sir; Senator Hart. I have been in the State only 2
years and I have not participated in any way. My duties as a dean
have been all consuming
Senator Hart. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
The Chairman. Senator Burdick ?
Senator Burdick. I have no questions, Mr. Chairman.
The Chairman. Senator Tunney ?
Senator Tunney. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
I had the opportunity, because Dean Sneed has spent so much time
in California teaching at Stanford University, to talk to many emi-
nent attorney in California who know him and they all have praised
the dean for his integrity and his brilliance. They are universal in
their opinion that he would be a very fine Deputy Attorney General. I
am pleased to join Avith my colleagues in saying I am most happy to
support the nomination.
Mr. Sneed. Thank you. Senator Tunney.
The Chairman. Senator Hruska ?
Senator Hkuska. Mr. Chairman, it was with interest that I can-
vassed the records of both of these nominees. They have both compiled
a very significant record in their field of the law.
I do know that one of the products of Mr. Sneed's teaching is on mj
staff and if Mr. Sneed will do as good a job and as fruitful a job in his
new assignment as he did with Malcolm Hawks in teaching him the
law, then I forecast a very, very fine future for him.
Mr. Sneed. Thank you, Senator. I had very good material.
Senator Hruska. Mr. Sneed, have you been in the office there these
recent days being briefed and being oriented a little bit?
Mr. Sneed. To some necessary degree, yes, sir. I have been commut-
ing between Durham and Washington.
Senator Hruska. Did you have occasion to inquire about the pro-
gress being made on the Department of Justice's proposal to revise the
Federal Criminal Code?
Mr. Sneed. Only in a general sense, Senator Hruska. I do know that
the Criminal Division is working on the project. The Office of Crimi-
nal Justice is also involved and there is every intention on the part of
the Department to go forward with whatever suggestion it cares to
make at the appropriate time.
Senator Hruska. It will be with interest that we will follow up on
that. We have done a lot of work on it, and we expect to get it to a
point of action sometime this calendar year.
Mr. Sneed. I am aware of that and will do everything in my power
to assist.
Senator Hruska. I have no further questions, Mr. Chairman.
The Chairman. Senator Fong ?
Senator Fong. Mr. Chairman, I have no questions. I should like to
congratulate Mr. Sneed and INIr. Bork on their nominations. Although
I am a Harvard man, I am never the less very happy to see a Yale man
succeed a Harvard man as Solicitor General.
The Chairman. Senator Thurmond ?
Senator Tihtrmond. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Dean Sneed, I want to congratulate you upon your appointment.
Mr. Sneed. Thanl^ you, sir.
Senator Thurmond. I feel that you will be a great asset to the Jus-
tice Department in the performance of its work.
Looking over your record you appear well qualified. You have been
a soldier, you have been a distinguished teacher of law, you have prac-
ticed law, you seem to meet all of the qualifications. If I did not know
you, llowe^'er, and had any questions, from the high esteem in which
I hold the able and distinguished Senator from North Carolina, Sen-
ator Helm, I would cast my vote for you on his recommendation. It
will be a pleasure for me to suppoi't you.
Mr. Sneed. Thank you. Senator Tlnirmond.
The Chairman. Senator ISIathias?
Senator Mathias. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I would just lilce to
welcome ]Mr. Sneed to the connnittee, and to express my admiration
for his record, and to wish liim well in the performance of his duties.
Mr. Sneed. Thank you. Senator Mathias.
The Chairman. Does anybody else have any questions?
Senator Hart. Mr. Chairman, I am advised that the Senator from
Massachusetts, Mr. Kennedy, does have questions he would like to
address to Dean Sneed and will be here vei^ shortly. I am sure that
before we have finished with Professor Bork, Senator Kennedy will be
here.
The Chairman. We will now tak(» uj) the nomination of Robert H.
Bork of Connecticut to be Solicitor General of the United States, vice
Erwin N. Griswold.
Senator Weicker of Connecticut is recognized.
STATEMENT OF LOWELL P. WEICKER, U.S. SENATOR FROM
CONNECTICUT
Senator Weicker. Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman. I appre-
ciate your courtesy and the privilege of appearing before your
committee.
Mr. Chairman, it gives me a great deal of pleasure to present to your
committee Prof. Robert Bork, who has been nominated by the Presi-
dent for the position of Solicitor General of the United States. Pro-
fessor Bork has a very rich background both in the practice of law and
in the academic field relating to the law and is at present professor at
the Yale Law School in New Haven.
Very briefly, he served with distinction in our Armed Forces, in the
U.S. ikiarine Corps, and then went into private practice of law in
Chicago, which practice involved some 7 to 8 years of his life, and then
on to the Yale Law School where he is at present an associate professor.
I think it is a mark of the esteem in which he is held by members of
the judiciary that three Federal judges selected Professor Bork to
devise a reapportionment plan for the State of Connecticut. I have
had occasion to sit down and chat at length with the nominee. I find
him to be a man of great integrity, certainly of academic brilliance,
and of a deep commitment to the high principles that guide this
Nation, and I think he will make a superb Solicitor General, and in-
deed am very proud that he comes from my State of Connecticut.
The Chairman. Thank you, sir.
Professor, is your biography before you correct ?
TESTIMONY OF ROBERT H. BORK, NOMINEE TO BE SOLICITOR
GENERAL OF THE UNITED STATES
Mr. Bork. Yes, it is. Senator.
The Chairman. It will be placed in the record.
[The biographical sketch of Mr. Bork follows :]
Robert H. Bork
Born : March 1, 1927, Pittsburgli, Pa.
Marital status: Married (wife, Claire), three children.
Legal residence: Connecticut.
Education : 1944-45, University of Pittsburgh, Pa. 1947-53, University of Chi-
cago. 1948, B.A. Degree. 1953, J.D. Degree.
Bar : 19.53, Ulnois.
Military service: 1945-46 and 1950-52, active duty, U.S. Marine Corps Reserve,
1st Lt., inactive status until December, 19.58 when discharged as captain.
Employment: 1953-54, University of Chicago, Research Associate, Law and
22-446—73-
Economics Project. 1954-55, Private practice, Willkie, Owen, Farr, Gallagher &
Walton, New York, New York. 1955-62, Kirkland, Ellis. Hodson, Chaffetz and
Masters, (now Kirkland & Ellis) Chicago, Illinois, Associate and Member. 1962-
present, Yale University Law School, New Haven, Conn., Associate Professor of
law. 1965, Professor of law.
Office : Yale University, New Haven, Conn.
Home : 142 Huntington St., New Haven, Conn.
Senator Hart. Professor Bork, as with the clean, we had a visit yes-
terday afternoon. I certainly want to compliment yon on the impres-
sive academic career which has been yours and, as I indicated yester-
day, there are some questions I Avould like to ask you.
The first bears on somethino; I was not aware of, althouo-h I should
have been, when you were visiting yesterday. As I now understand it,
we are being asked to confirm you now when there is no vacancy for
the position.
It is my understanding that Dean Griswold, the present Solicitor
General, has announced no plans to resign and indeed indicates that
he will be on the job through the end of the court term in June.
I remember Senator Thurmond several years ago expressing some
concern al30ut the practice of confirming people before there was a
vacancy. At that time there was a possibility that we might be chang-
ing administration but there is not that possibility in this case. Now,
what would be your status between now and the end of June if we
advise and consent to this nomination ?
Mr. Bork. What I had intended to do and what I have worked out.
Senator, with Dean Griswold is that I will come down very frequently,
because there are large problems of transition in that office. During
the spring Dean Griswold will be handling cases, of course, which he
has helped develop and prepare but, in addition to that, cases will be
coming in that are really cases that will affect the next term of the
court. Dean Griswold has very kindly offered to educate me in the
operations of that office and to talk with me about the problems in
cases coming up for the next term. So there is a transition period, and
a period of education of me by the Dean.
Senator Hart. I certainly can understand why it would be desirable
to familiarize yourself, with the work, but could not that be done on
a consultative basis? "Why should we advise and consent to your nomi-
nation as the Solicitor General when there is the Solicitor General
named Griswold? How do you work with two Solicitors General?
;Mr. Bork. Senator, I would not be the Solicitor General because that
would not become effective until T were actually sworn in. I would not
expect to be sworn in until such time as the dean's resignation became
effective. But there are, I think, a number of good practical reasons
why it would be very desirable if I could be confirmed previously to
that. One of them has to do with working on the cases if I were known
to be confirmed and therefore certain to take office.
Senator Hart. Would you participate in the decisions then?
Mr. Bork. I would participate in discussions about the cases.
Senator Hart. But you do not have to be confirmed as the Solicitor
to do tliat.
Mr. Bork. No, no ; I do not. The other thing, of course, is
Senator Hart. What is the practical advantage ?
Mr. Bork. Well, T think if it were certain that I would be the Solici-
tor General it would make much more sense for me to put my contri-
bution into that discussion and. in addition to that. Senator, thcTC is
tlie i)robleni of staffing;. That is an office that lias a regular turnover, a
lot of youno; people come to that office and Avork for a year or 2 or
;") and then leave, and there is some recruiting to be done, and if the
staff is to be chosen to fill those vacancies, then I think it would be
well that the man who does the recruiting and chooses the personnel
know that in fact he is going to be the Solicitor General when they
come on the job.
Senator Hart. Well, Secretary of Defense Laird indicated last sum-
mer that he was going to retire beginning with the new term, but we
were not asked to advise and consent to Secretary Richardson's nomi-
nation until about the time of the chance. Defense is a pretty compli-
cated department, too. Do you think it is a good precedent if we begin
this as a ]3attern of practice to act on a nomination 6 months ahead of
time ?
Mr. BoRK. Senator, I think that the worth of the precedent might
vary a good deal from office to office. I cannot speak as to other offices. I
do not. candidly, see any problem with this office. I think what is to be
known about me is already known. I think it would have considerable
practical advantage if I were confirmed at this time so I could begin
to phase in and do the things that have to be done.
Senator Hart. How does Dean Griswold feel about this?
Mr. BoRK. Dean Griswold and I have discussed this procedure and
he is thoroughly in accord with my phasing in in this fashion.
I would say the dean has been extremely cooperative and extremely
kind and I look forward — one of the benefits of this office is the oppor-
timity to observe him on the job and to learn from him.
Senator Hart. I think we would kid ourselves to pretend that an
opportunity to observe, to come to know personnel, and, if it is desir-
able, even to have an input into decisions, requires the confirmation of
the indicated successor. There may be additional leverage as the result
of the confirmation although succession is 6 months ahead but given
the temperament of Dean Griswold I am sure you would be as welcome
as a consultant as a confirmed successor. Is that not true ?
Mr. BoRK. I am sure I would be welcome with Dean Griswold. There
is no problem there, Senator.
Absent confirmation, which implies the possibility that confirmation
will not be forthcoming, I would think it would be unfortunate if I
went ahead and put my input into these various decisions of staffing,
of cases, and so forth, and then it turned out for some reason or other
that there was a different Solicitor General in that office in the fall,
having to live with things that I had influenced, a staff perhaps I had
chosen, that he had not chosen.
Senator Hart. "We must be careful that we do not do too niuch by
this precedent. So much of what you say could equally be said with
respect to most other ]D0sts.
On the matter that we did talk about — and if I had known about this
6-month thing I would certainly have raised it
Mr. BoRK. Yes, sir.
Senator Hart. You have expressed yourself freely, and always
with tight reasoning, on a number of subjects, antitrust matters, civil
rights. You will now for 6 months be a kind of Solicitor General, and
8
then presumably the Solicitor General after that, and in that role you
will be the Governmenfs appeal lawyer. Is that not a shorthand way
of describing what you will be doinfj?
Mr. BoRK. That is quite accurate, Senator, yes.
Senator Hart. It is a policy post ?
Mr. BoRK. Not particularly, Senator. I view it as a post of being the
attorney for the Government.
Senator Hart. AVhat if the Government takes a position in the field
of antitrust or civil rights that you think is wrong, and have said in
the past is wrong, what do you do ?
Mr. BoRK. What will I do ? I will enforce the policy of the Govern-
ment in antitrust as the Government defines it. I do not define it,
Senator.
I might say that in practice both for defendants in antitrust cases
and for plaintiffs in antitrust cases I frequently urged positions that
as an academic I would criticize.
Senator Hart. If the Assistant Attorney General in charge of civil
rights has recommended action be taken against a school district or
several school districts, or if the Assistant Attorney General in charge
of antitrust wants to go after a conglomerate, and you believe on the
law that you would take a different view in both cases if you were the
Assistant Attorney General, as Solicitor General what do you do?
Mr. BoRK. Well, of course. Senator, the initial determination to file
a lawsuit against a conglomerate or against a school district would not
come within my office at all.
Senator Hart. That is right.
Mr. BoRK. Those cases would be filed and then come to me, if at all,
upon appeal. At that stage, I am sure that I would continue the policy
of the Justice Department, even if I disagreed as an academic with
that policy. But that, I take it, is not relevant to my performance of
these duties: that is, my personal academic disagreement would not be
relevant to the performance of these duties.
Senator Hart. Really your answer disarms me. I was going to read
you some of the things you have written in both areas. Am I to under-
stand that your concept of your duties as the Solicitor General is to
appeal, as aggressively and as effectively as you can, those Government
positions taken by the Justice Department notwithstanding the fact
that those positions may run squarely counter to strong opinions you
have voiced and written earlier?
Mr. BoRK, That is correct. Senator. I have had that experience, I
may say, in practicing law. Lawyers on the other side have pointed out
tlita I had Avritten something in support of their position, and I have
had occasion to say in coui't "I am trying to enforce the law and not
my own opinions."
Senator Hart. I do not want to take more than my share of time and
will yield very shortly in order that others may proceed.
You participated. Professor Bork, in a symposium on the Cam-
bodian incursion which was printed in the American Journal of Inter-
national Law, Your remarks — ithey were very brief really — included
comment on the President's authority for that invasion. At the con-
clusion of your remarks, you said :
The Cambodian incursion and its aftermath do raise important constitutional
questions but they do not seem to me to be the questions posed by some of the
9
other panelists. I think there is no reasons to doubt that President Nixon had
ample constitutional authority to order the attack on the sanctuaries in Cam-
bodia seized by the Vietnamese-Vietcong forces. That authority arises from the
inherent powers of the Presidency and from congressional authorization.
The real question in the situation is whether Congress has the constitutional
authority to limit the President's discretion with respect to this attack. Any
detailed intervention by Congress in the conduct of the Vietnamese conflict con-
stitutes a tresspass upon the power the Constitution reposes exclusively in the
President.
You siig:o;est, if I read your article correctly, that Congress can end
' our involvement in Vietnam. Wliile all of us hope we are approaching
a resolution of that, could you explain how, in your view, the Congress
does have the constitutional power and could end that war if our hopes
' are dashed again ?
]Mr. BoRK. Senator, referring to the article, or the brief comment,
you are reading from, my position there was that Congress certainly
has broad power over war or peace. It should be able to make that
decision. I was discussing the Cambodian incursion as more of a tac-
tical problem because the enemy had seized bases in Cambodia and
were attacking into South Vietnam from there, and because the Gov-
ernment of Cambodia welcomed the American incursion and under
those circumstances, and all of these cases depend heavily on circum-
stances, under those circumstances that seemed to me to resemble a
tactical field decision, not an invasion, and not a starting of a new war
and, therefore, to be within the President's powers. And it seemed to
me that Congress, under those circumstances, ought not to assert con-
stitutional power over tactical decisions and I thought that was one.
It certainly seems to me that the major question of war or peace is
always for Congress.
I miglit add, Senator, that this is a kind of c^uestion that will almost
certainly never come into the Solicitor General's ofiice or to the courts.
Senator Hart. Maybe I am asking for your advice as a constitu-
tional lawyer whether or not it comes to you as the Solicitor General.
In that same article, you say :
I arrive, therefore, at the conclusion that President Nixon had both constitu-
tional power to order the invasion and that Congress cannot with constitutional
propriety undertake to control the details of that incursion.
You have developed that point in your answer.
But you continue :
This conclusion in no way detracts from Congress war powers, for that body
retains control of the issue of war or peace. It [Congress] can end our armed
involvement in Southeast Asia.
How?
Mr. BoRK. Well, Senator, I confess that I have not studied the ques-
tion of the particular form your efforts take, whether it would be — if
that were the decision of Congress — whether it should be by cutotf of
funds or some other mechanism. I am sorry to say I have not studied
it. I was at that point, in that brief comment, merely trying to point
out there was a spectrum of war powers running from Congress major
powers to the President's more detailed powers.
Senator Hart. Is it fair to say that clearly you believe we have the
power to end our involvement, and inescapably it follows that the
President would be obliged to respect that ending, if we can end it,
and that it means the President cannot ignore us?
10
1
Mr. BoRK. As I read the Constitution, Senator, the uUimate power
of war and peace resides in the Congress.
Senator Hart. You have not thought through how we end it ?
Mr. BoRK. No, sir ; I have never addressed myself-
Senator Hart. We have the power, you feel certain of that ?
Mr. BoRK. It seems to me the Constitution requires that conclusion.
Senator Hart. The Constitution operates equally on the legislative
and the executive branches ?
Mr. BoRK. Indeed, Senator.
Senator Hart. I pass for the moment.
The Chairman. Senator Burdick?
Senator Burdick. I have no questions, Mr. Chairman.
The Chairman. Senator Tunney ?
Senator Tunney. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
I share with my distinguished colleague from Michigan a concern
about the confirmation process taking place 6 months in advance. I
do not, however, feel that this in and of itself should be a reason for
denying confirmation.
But I wonder if you could, Mr. Bork, say if there would be any
reason why, to your knowledge, 6 months from now you could not just
as readily be confirmed as you would be today ?
Mr. BoRK. No, Senator. I think, as I understood the time element, I
think it would be a little over 4 months when I planned to assume that
office rather than 6. But I do not know of any reason why the con-
firmation could not occur then.
It would be a considerable practical advantage if it occurred now
for the reasons I have detailed with Senator Hart, and the President
has nominated me at this time and my name is before the Senate.
Senator Tunney, As I understand the role of the Solicitor General
in all cases involving the executive branch, including the regulatory
agencies, with the exception of the ICC, the Solicitor General grants
or denies requests of petitions for certiorari or to appeal adverse
decisions ; and if the Government is the respondent, the Solicitor Gen-
eral decides whether to contest the appeal. And the Solicitor General
also participates as amicus curiae on his own initiative or upon the
court's requests; and the Solicitor General is often involved in inter-
agency disputes before the court and may take one side or the other.
This would indicate that the Solicitor General does have consider-
able power in determining what cases will be heard before the Supremaj
Court and what cases will be appealed or not. In a statistical study if
was found that the Solicitor General approved less than 20 percent o:
the requests for certiorari petitions sought by executive departments!
and less than 60 percent of those requested by the appellate sections o"
the Justice Department, and less than 65 percent of those requested bjjj
regulatory agencies.
Wliat this means is simply that the Solicitor General imposes to
very considerable extent his philosophy or his view of legal matte
upon the process of appellate review to the Supreme Court.
I must say I, as was Senator Hart, am disarmed by your statemeni
that even though an appeal related to a matter that you personally!
legally, and philosophically disagreed with, that you would exprei
the will of the Government in the appeal.
11
However, before we <Tet to the appeal, before the appeal action takes
place, would not you have wide room for imposing your own personal
view of the law upon that appellate process even where you disagreed
with the Attorney General or witli the appellate division of the Justice
Department?
Mr. BoRK. That is an impoi'tant question, Senator Tunney. I would
like to point out that the Solicitor General has the degree of freedom
that he does have by custom and tradition really on condition that he
not abuse it. By law he is under the Attorney General's direction so
that there is the fact that the discretion tliat the Solicitor General has,
I think, is reposed only because it is understood that he will not abuse
it.
Secondly, the Solicitor General must view himself, I think, as an
officer of the Court, and he must, to the degree possible, obtain the
confidence of the Supreme Court. I do not see how a Solicitor General
who imposed his own views upon the appeal process and kept cases
from the Court that the Court thinks it ought to have, could conceiv-
ably retain the trust of that Court. I think he would, in effect, destroy
his own value as Solicitor General if he did that.
Senator Tunney. Well, in light of that, I would like to ask you
about a statement tliat you wrote in the September 1969 issue of For-
tune magazine in which you criticized the antitrust policy of the Nixon
administration. You said :
The Nixon administration's announced determination to wage war on con-
glomerate mergers — with special but by no means exclusive attention to the
acquisitions of the top 200 manufacturing companies — must rank as one of the
bleakest, most disappointing developments in antitrust history.
Do you continue to hold this true of the Nixon administration's anti-
trust policy ?
Mr. BoRK. Senator, in my opinion, which is my opinoin as an aca-
demic in this field, tlie conglomerate merger campaign was an anti-
trust mistake. However, it should be said that this administration,
and this Justice Department, continues to enforce the antitrust laws
vigorously. They have guidelines about conglomerate mergers. Those
will be enforced, and sliould such a case come up to me that case will
be dealt with in line with that policy and not in line with my academic
opinion I expressed in that article.
Senator Tunney. You just answered my next question.
Let us go to another area of antitrust enforcement where the Solici-
tor General may have an impact and that is the Federal Trade Com-
mission. The FTC was responsible for bringing the organizational
case against Proctor and Gamble in its acquisition of Clorox which
went a long way to establish the principle that one large company
could not acquire another company having a large share of a market
where the first company is a potential entrant into that market.
In your 1967 Fortune magazine article you strongly disagreed with
the Supreme Court's o]:)inion affirming the FTC's position, and near
the end of your discussion, you observe that "defendants are simply
not winning cases they should win in the Supreme Court." Earlier in
that article you noted that the then Solicitor General Thurgood Mar-
shall had to decide whether to seek Supreme Court review of the Court
of Appeals decision adverse to the FTC.
12
If this case had come to you as Solicitor General — with the FTC
requesting Supreme Court review — what would have been your posi-
tion? Would you have approved the Commission seeking review?
Mr. BoRK. Well, it is a little hard to answer that now, Senator. I
think I probably would have. Of course, I would have to put myself
back at that time as to what the policy of the administration was with
respect to that kind of merger. If the policy of the administration was
to go after it, yes, I would haA'^e approved the appeal.
Senator Tunney. You would have approved the appeal, and that is
in line with your answer to a previous question that you would enforce
the policy of the Justice Department and the other agencies as they
relate to these and antitrust matters?
Mr. BoEK. Yes, sir.
Senator Tunney. Let us move from antitrust policy to the first
amendment. In a recent article you wrote that the "first amendment
must be cut off when it reaches the outer limits of political speech."
You argued that only explicitly political speech should be protected
by a first amendment :
The category of protected speech should consist of speech concerned with gov-
ernmental behavior, policy or personnel .whether the governmental unit involved
is executive, legislative, judicial or administrative. Explicitly political speech
is speech about how we are governed and the category therefore includes a wide
range of evaluation, criticism, electioneering and propaganda. It does not cover
scientific, educational, commercial or literary expressions as such. A novel may
have impact iipon attitudes that affect politics, but it would not for that reason
receive judicial protection.
Now would you care to relate that comment to how you feel about
recent Supreme Court decisions relating to the freedom of speech?
Mr. BoRK. Senator, the article you have there, I think I should point
out, is explicitly a tentative and rather theoretical attempt to deal with
the problem, and it starts off with an attempt to pick up Professor
"Wechsler's concept of neutral principles and see what can be done with
that concept. At the end of the article I point out that I think these
are the conclusions that are required by that idea of neutral prmciples,
but that I am not sure about the whole subject. It seems to me. to move
closer to your question, Senator, that — let me say that article is a theo-
retical exercise. As a professor, I am paid to speculate, and I do specu-
late ; sometimes I wish I had confined myself to writing about spend-
thrift trusts, but I speculated in that area, and I think the concept of
neutral principles suggests those results.
If you move, then, away from the concept of neutral principles and
adopt some other concept those results are not required. I do think that
the speech about politics, speech about government, speech about can-
didates, legislatures, judges and so forth, are the core of the first
amendment. That is the most important part of the first amendment,
because the first amendment is essentially about the political processes
by which we govern ourselves in a representative democracy.
It seems to me as you move out from there the first amendment's
claims may still exist but certainly by the time, in my own view, by
the time they reach the area of pornography, and so forth, the claim of
first amendment protection becomes rather tenuous.
Senator Tunney, In other words, you feel that the Supreme Court
in some recent cases in relation to pornography did not interpret the
law correctly ?
13
Mr. BoRK. I think some of the guidelines they have laid down are
unfortunate, Senator, because they are going to have a terrible time
applying them, and as I recall, the Supreme Coui-t has taken up a lot
of those cases again this term in an effort to review the whole problem.
I think when you get cases that appear to be 'much the same on the
facts going different ways, as has happened in this field, you have
perhaps a suggestion, an indication, that the law could use some fur-
ther refinement.
Senator Tuxnfa'. Would you feel it to be appropriate where you
disagree with a Supreme Court decision of the past to appeal the case
to the Supreme Court in the hope that you can get a reversal of a
previous opinion?
Mr. BoRK. I am sorry. I think that would be appropriate if there
was reason to believe that the Supreme Court wished to reconsider the
subject. I do not think I ought to take appeals up just because I would
like to reconsider the subject.
Senator Tunxey. But where you felt that the Su])reme Court, as it
is presently constituted, might revei^se itself, I take it that you believe
that it would be appropriate to appeal even where there had been a
decision that was contrary to what your own personal views were and
are and where you had a feeling that the Supreme Court might make a
decision which would be more in line \\'ith your views?
Mr. BoRK. Senator, I think that whether I think the Supreme Court
is likely to do it, whether to come down more in line with my views, or
perhaps less in line with my views, if I have reason to believe the
Supreme Court wants to consider the subject, it seems to me, as an
officer of the court, I ought to bring that case up and explain the
varying positions that are available.
Senator Tunney. You have challenged the correctness of the "one
man, one vote'- formula established by the Supreme Court in Reynolds
V. Films and companion cases. In a December 1968 Fortune magazine
article you state that "on no reputable theory of constitutional adjudi-
cation was there an excuse'' for the "one man, one vote" doctrine. Do
you continue to believe that the Supreme Court erred in establishing
the "one man, one vote" pi-inciple ?
Mr. BoRK. I do. Senator, I think the Supreme Court was quite right
in Baker a.gainst Carr in going into the reapportionment field and I
think Justice Stewart had what I would consider the correct approach,
which would be to say "Show me a rational apportionment plan, show
me that the majority of the people in that State can change that ap-
portionment plan when they wish to and I will approve it."
I think "one man, one vote" was too much of a straight jacket. I do
not think there is a theoretical basis for it.
I may add my own experience as a special master in Connecticut
applying the "one man, one vote" rule in the State confirms me in that
belief.
Senator Tunney. In Reynolds v. Shns, the Solicitor General argued
the case for the United States, as amicus curiae, at the request of the
Supreme Court. The Solicitor General argued for "one man, one vote."
If you had been Solicitor General, would you have been able to argue
for "one man, one vote?"
iSIr. BoRK. "Would I have been able to ? Yes, sir ; I would have been
able to. I would have advised against it.
14
Senator Tunney. You ayouIcI have advised the court agamst it
or
Mr. BoRK. I would have — it is a little hard to speak without putting
it in an institutional context. If it were that kind of an important case
I am sure the Solicitor General would confer with other members of
the Justice Department about it. In that kind of conference I would
have advised against urging a "one man, one vote" position. I would
also have wished, whether my advice were accepted or not, to explain
to the court that there were the following options, kinds of roads the
court might take, and try to explain to the best of my ability what I
considered to be the benefits or costs or detriments to each such option.
Senator Tuxnet. And that despite the fact that the Attorney Gen-
eral requested you to argue in favor of "one man, one vote?"
ISIr. BoRK. I think I would say to the Attorney General at that time,
"I will do so." I also would advise that we explain to the court, since
we have an obligation to the court that a private litigant does not
always have, that we explain to the court what some of the problems
with that approach may be and what alternative approaches there
might be.
Senator Tuxxey, "Well, if a "one man. one vote" case should arise
while you are the Solicitor General, would you file an amicus brief
attempting to limit the doctrine of "one man, one vote" as enunciated
by the court?
Mr. BoRK. I have not made any decision about it. Senator, in fact
had not even thought about it. I do not think it is likely to come up
because the court has on its docket this term reapportionment cases
from all over the country, and I think it is a good guess that they
intend to review that entire field. Whether they will confirm "one man,
one vote" or move to some other position, I do not know.
Senator Tunney. Do you think that you could sign a brief that was
inconsistent with your personal views?
Mr. BoRK. I think I can. Senator, and I know that I have.
Senator Tunxey. I have other questions but I do not want to take
the time if tliere are others who have questions.
Senator Hruska. Go ahead.
Senator Tunney. In an August 1963 New Republic article you
opposed the enactment of the then proposed Interstate Public Accom-
modations Act. In a subsequent letter, you stated :
The proposed legislation, which would coerce one man to associate with
another on the ground that his personal preferences are not respectable, repre-
sents such an extraordinary incursion into individual freedom, and opens up so
many possibilities of governmental coercion on similar principles, that it ought
to fall within the area where law is regarded as improper.
In light of this statement of your beliefs, I would like to ask you a
few questions about enforcement of the Civil Rights Act.
Mr. Bork. Senator, may I
Senator Tunney. Yes.
Mr. BoRK. I should sav that I no lonirer agree with that article and
I have some other articles that I no longer agree with. That hapj^ens to
be one of them. The reason I do not agree with that article, it seems to
me I was on the wrong tack altogether. It was my first attempt to
write in that field. It seems to me the statute has worked very well and
15
I do not see any problem with the statute, and were that to be proposed
today I would support it.
Senator Mathias. Would the Senator from California jdeld for just
a minute in the light of his previous generous offer.
Senator Tunney. Yes.
Senator INIathias. I, unfortunately, have to leave the committee in a
few minutes and I have just two or three very brief questions.
Let me say, first of all, that I was considerably encouraged and
pleased by the colloquy between you and Senator Hart in Avhich you
stated your conviction, which is a conviction I share, that the Con-
gress is still the repository of the power to decide the issue of war
and peace. It is an important statement on your part and one that I
welcome and applaud.
You said that this was just a general constitutional conviction on
your part, not one that you had thought out in its tactical aspects and
how it would be implemented. I would like to offer one possible means
of implementing it, one that I certainly hope we will never resort to,
one that I hope that the lubricant of goodwill that has kept the Gov-
ernment working for so long will prevent us from ever resorting to,
but it is the simple act of one Chamber of the Congress, either the
House or the Senate, failing to concur in an appropriation bill to
supply the funds to continue hostilities.
It would seem to me, and I would like to ask you what your attitude
would be, that this would simply be the end of it, if either the House
or Senate did not approve an appropriation bill or did not act on it
one way or the other.
Mr. BoRK. Senator, I must say I really have not studied this aspect
of the question at all. What we have, what the Senator had there, is
that I was a discussant on a panel, and the panel was about the Cam-
bodian incursion, and I was merely suggesting the range of powers
that I thought the Constitution suggested were appropriate to the
President, on the one hand, and the Congress, on the other, and I am
afraid that is about as far into that field I have gone. Ultimately, I
think, war or peace is for the Congress. I have not really thought
about how, in varying situations, the Congress makes its will known
if it wishes to.
Senator Mathias. I feel that as you enter the field you are on the
right path and I walk with you.
I have only one other question to ask and it is are you currently
of counsel in any active litigation ?
Mr. BoRK. I am currently an attorney for two plaintiffs in anti-
trust cases in New Haven. I intend, if confirmed, to wind up my par-
ticipation in those cases altogether very shortly.
Senator Mathias. Either to resign as counselor or
Mr. BoRK. In fact, I have filed a motion in one case to withdraw
as counsel. The judge asked that I stay in for a while longer, and I
thought it was proper to do so until confirmation or something of
that sort occurred, because it is a case I started and had been the prime
mover in it.
Senator Mathias. It would seem to me that it might be helpful to
you for your protection as well as being of help to the committee to
give us some official notice of the title of those cases, not at this point,
but to supply it for the committee at some point.
16
Mr. BoRK. All right.
[The following letter was subsequently received by the committee.]
Associate Deputy Attorney General,
Washington, B.C.
Hon. James O. Eastland,
Chairman, Judiciary Committee, U.S. Senate, Washington, B.C.
Dear Senator Eastland: At his confirmation hearing on January 17, 1973,
Professor Robert H. Bork was aslied to supply the names of those cases in which
he was involved at present. Accompanying this letter you will find names of two
cases pending in the Federal District Court for the District of Connecticut which
Mr. Bork informs me are the only two cases he is associated with.
Sincerely,
Charles D. Ablard,
Associate Deputy Attorney General.
Enclosure.
(1) Landmarks Holding Corporation, et al, plaintiffs v. Hamden Mart, Inc.,
et al defendants. Civ. Act. No. 14,.572 (D. Conn.) (counsel for plaintiffs).
(2) George P. AJcer, Richard C. Bond, Jervis Langdon, Jr., and Willard Wirtz,
Trustees of the property of Penn Central Transportation Company, successo-rs in
interest, Richard Joyce Smith, Trustee of the property of The New York, Neiv
Haven <£ Hartford Railroad Company, plaintiffs, v. United States Steel Corpora-
tion, Bethlehem Steel Corporation. Armco Steel Corporation, Edgeivater Steel
Company, Baldwin-Lima-Hamilton Corporation, and Ahex Corporation, defend-
ants. Civ. Act. No. 12,156 (D. Conn.) (counsel for plaintiffs).
Senator Matiiias. Thank you very much. I appreciate the kindness
of the Senator from California in yielding.
Senator Tunnet. Thank you.
I was interested in your statement that you no longer agree with
the position that you held in 1963. Does that mean that you would
vigorously enforce the Interstate Public Accommodations Act?
Mr. Bork. Certainly, Senator. If it comes to me on appeal, I will
take the Government's position.
Senator Tunney. Have you taken a position with respect to the
correctness of the Supreme Court's decisions in South Carolina v.
Katzeribach and Kaizenhach v. Morgan., which upheld the constitu-
tionality of the 1965 Voting Eights Act?
Mr. Bork. I have, Senator. My position was that I thought South
Carolina against Katzenbach was correct, and I thought Katzenback
against Morgan was incorrect.
Senator Ttjnney. You thought it was incorrect ?
Mr. Bork. Yes.
Senator Tunnet. Do you still feel that way today ?
Mr. Bork. Well, insofar as Katzenbach against Morgan says, as I
read it to say, that Congress controls the content of constitutional
protection, I think that is incorrect because I think that is ultimately
under the tradition of judicial review we have had in this country. I
think that is ultimately a question for the Supreme Court.
Senator Ttjnney. Do you feel that you are prepared to make that
appeal if the Attorney General had wanted you to, despite your per-
sonal feelings?
Mr. Bork. If the Attorney General wanted me to take that appeal I
would take that appeal.
Senator Tunney. If further questions should arise about the con-
stitutionality of tlie Voting Rights Act, could you as Solicitor Gen-
eral take a position consistent with Katzenha-ch v. Morgani
17
Mr. BoRK. Could I take one consistent with it? I think so, Senator
if that is indicated.
Senator Tunney. Have you a position with respect to the correct-
ness of the Supreme Court's decision in Havfer v. Virginia Board of
Electio7is, which held that the imposition of the poll tax was uncon-
stitutional ?
Mr. BoRK. I think I have, Senator. I am trying to cast my mind
back on things I have written. I think I have previously indicated
that that case, as an equal protection case, seemed to me wrongly de-
cided. It might have been decided the same way, and now we are
getting into areas of speculation and theory more appropriate to my
role as a professor.
It seems to me a lot of those cases are really essentially republican
form of government clause cases and maybe you can uphold that de-
cision on a theory like that rather than on an equal protection theory.
May I add. Senator, that was a case in which there was no evidence
or claim of racial discrimination in the use of the poll tax. If there
had been, of course, it would be properly an equal protection case
and the result would have come out just the way it did.
Senator Tunney. How do you feel now about the decision. Do you
think that as far as the welfare of the Nation is concerned, the Harper
case was correctly decided ?
Mr. BoRK. I do not really know about that, Senator. As I recall, it
was a very small poll tax, it was not discriminatory and I doubt that
it had much impact on the welfare of the Nation one way or the other.
Senator Tunney. How about the welfare of those people who had
to pay it and might not have been able to afford to pay it, for those
people who perhaps would have been inhibited from registering to
vote and voting because of the poll tax ?
Mr. BoRK. Well, I would hope that a State would take some meas-
ures to enable those w^iose means do not permit them to pay a tax like
that to pay it or to be relieved of it.
Senator Tunney. What about the constitutional issue ?
Mr. BoRK. Well, I think that is a question of degree. It depends
upon the size of the poll tax, but I think we are discussing something,
Senator, that is past us down the road.
Senator Tunney. You do not think it is any longer an issue ?
Mr. BoRK. No, I do not think it is an issue of any sort today and I
certainly am not interested in reviving it as an issue.
Senator Tunney. And you would have no difficulty arguing the law
as the Supreme Court announced it in that case ?
]Mr. BoRK. None whatsoever.
Senator Tunney. You state in a June 1968 article in New Republic
that :
The virtue of minimum-wage legislation is an article of faith with collectivist
liberals, but its effects and the sources of its real political appeal are far differ-
ent than they imagine. The popular myth is that minimum wages redistribute
wealth from wealthy employers to poor workers. The plain truth, recognized by
economists of widely different political persuasions, is that the effect of such
laws is to protect well-paid, highly skilled workers from the competition of the
less skilled.
In light of this statement, what are your views on the wisdom of the
Federal laws regulating minimum wages and maximum hours for
workers ?
18
Mr. BoRK, Those are two different cases. There may be a case for
regulating maximum hours which is for the health of the workers,
and it is a different question and I must say that the issue I am about
to discuss with you is not one I would discuss as Solicitor General. It
is not my question at all, it is not even a question for the judge, the
wisdom of those laws, it is only a question for Congress. But if you
nevertheless wish me to go on, I think that economists of very different
persuasions, in fact I do not know an economist, regardless of his poli-
tics, who will not say that raising minimum wages is detrimental to
the less skilled memlDers of the work force, and particularly to, it is
particularly harmful to the efforts of blacks to obtain employment. I
have seen that demonstrated theoretically and I have seen it demon-
strated empirically.
Senator Tunney. Empirically how ?
Mr. BoRK. Well, for example, in the article you cite. Senator, there
is a statement taken from an economist that the first time black teenage
unemployment deviated, became larger than white teenage unemploy-
ment was when a minimum wage law, an effective minimum wage law,
went into effect.
Senator Tunxey. I recognize that others of more liberal persuasion
perhaps than you have made the same argument. I do not think this is
an appropriate forum for us to fight it out.
Mr. BoRK. If I may say, Senator, in that article you are quoting
from, I do claim to be a liberal. I suppose we may argue about the
claim, but I do claim to be a liberal.
Senator Tunney. You may be.
[Laughter.]
Senator Tunney. But does your opposition to minimum wage laws
extend to other labor laws, such as those providing for collective bar-
gaining and for job safety?
]\fr. BoRK. Xo, it certainly does not apply to job safety. "\^nien you
say opposition. Senator, this is not one of the causes of my lifetime. It
was a remark made in a piece about politics, and I do not spend my
time running around opposing minimum wage laws. I do not oppose
effective job safety laws or minimum hours.
Senator Tunxey. Thank you very much, Mr. Bork.
Senator Hart (presiding). Senator Hruska ?
Senator Hruska. Mr. Bork, how many professional members has
the staff of the Solicitor General's office ?
Mr. Bork. At present 14, Senator.
Senator Hruska. Is that considered an adequate number for the
volume of work that crosses the desks ?
Mf. Bork. Well, it is not so considered by Dean Griswold. He thinks
he can use three, four, or five additional members. But he also has no
place to house them if he had them.
Senator Hruska. Tliat would indicate that the volume is quite sub-
stantial, would not it?
Mr. Bork. It is indeed.
Senator Huruska. And, of course, it is only the difficult decisions
that reach the Solicitor General's office. If they are not difficult they
are disposed of long before they get to the attention of the Solicitor
General, is that not correct?
19
Mr. BoRK. "Well the clean, as I understand it, Senator, makes a
practice of looking at every decision about a case that goes through
his office, and it seems to me that is a salutary practice, and I would
try to do that. Of course, many of them are quite easy decisions. They
come with recommendations from the division of the Government in-
volved, plus a recommendation from a member of the Solicitor Gen-
eral's statf, but I think it is salutary for the Solicitor General to know
as much as possible about the flow of work through the office.
Senator Hruska. Would you have any idea how many cases are now
pending in the Supreme Court that will require argument by the
Solicitor General ?
Mr. BoRK. I think the Solicitor General's office is likely to have
about 60 major cases, 60 cases which will be decided on the merits.
Senator IIruska. How many ?
Mr. BoRK. Sixty, approximately 60 a term. But all of those are not
argued by the Solicitor General. Members of his staff argue them as
well, and often the lawyers from the various divisions of the Gov-
ernment who are primarily concerned with the matter may argue
cases.
However, tlie Solicitor General does shape the case with those peo-
ple, and work on the brief. It is not a question of just turning over
the case to the other people, but in terms of argument the Solicitor
General himself does not argue all of those cases.
Senator Hruska. There is certainly reason to seek an orderly tran-
sition from one Solicitor General to another, and I presume that
would involve getting familiar Avith the cases that are pending, is
that not true ?
Mr. BoRK. That is correct. The dean has provided a desk for me
and the thought was that when confirmed I would come down there
and begin working on the flow of matters through the office, being
educated by him.
Senator Hruska. Some thought has been given to the matter of
your confirmation at the present time rather than waiting until a
later time. Some of the considerations are that you would be able to
phase out your present occupation, and make an orderly entry into
the very complex and very important duties of the Solicitor General.
Have you any comments along that line? I know you have partici-
pated in discussion along that line?
Mr. BoRK. I think it would be terribly helpful. Senator, if I were
confirmed so that people to whom I offered staff positions would know
in fact the offer was going to last, and they would be able to make
their plans, and I could contribute my discussion in the cases coming
up next therm with everybody secure in the knowledge that at least
I would have some responsibility in those cases.
I had not mentioned that as to my personal life, of course, it would
materially smooth my way if I could arrange schooling for my chil-
dren and find a place to live, and so forth, secure in the knowledge
that I would indeed be here.
Senator Hruska. I have no further questions, Mr. Chairman.
Senator Hart. The exchange you had with Senator Tunney on your
article in the Indiana Law Journal was a rather complex analysis
and I think in fairness we ought to have the entire article.
20
Mr. BoRK. Yes.
[The article "Neutral Principles and Some First Amendment Prob-
lems" in the Indiana Law Journal, Fall 1971, was filed with the
committee.]
Senator Hart. Also, I read you an excerpt from a symposium
printed in the American Journal of International Law and I think
the whole article ought to be included in the record.
[The article referred to was filed with the committee.]
Senator Tunney. Perhaps, Mr. Chairman, we ought also to include
the New Republic article and the Fortune articles.
Senator Hart. Yes, all of them.
[The articles referred to were filed with the committee.]
Senator Hart. I have some questions on that first amendment point
of free speech : how far does it go, what is involved ? Wlien you were
talking to Senator Tunney, you suggested two extremes, political
comment and in quotes "pornography." There is a very hot area at
the moment that lies some place in between, and that is the business
of the press freedom, and the power of the Government to compel a
newsman to divulge confidential sources. How do you handle this.
What is your feeling ?
Mr. BoRK. Well my feeling is. Senator, it is not a topic, again, that
I have looked into and can express a position. My feeling is that it
would be well to have some careful legislation about the subject be-
cause obviously tliere are cases, I am sure, in which a reporter ought
to protect his sources and there are cases where he obviously ought
not to.
Senator Hart. Do the cases where he should be permitted to pro-
tect his sources, in your judgment, relate .to explicitly political stories,
as you use that phrase ?
Mr. BoRK. I would suppose so. Senator, I really should not hazard
opinions on this because I have not thought this through and, further-
more, I hate to hazard opinions on it because, if confirmed, I may find
myself taking a position in a case and I would hate to have a lawyer
on the other side read to be a statement I made today which is to the
contrary.
Senator Hart. We have already described a number of statements
that are going to be read to you if, in fact, you appear in court, as
you told us you will-
Mr. BoRK. I know, I know.
Senator Hart. — in opposition to already stated positions.
Mr. BoRK. But those are positions I have thought through. Those
are subjects which I have thought through. This is certainly one I
have not thought through. It would seem to me that the area in which
the Government's power to get information about a source is greatest
would be in the area where a violent crime had been observed or na-
tional security, espionage, something of that sort, is involved.
It seems to me the Government's power would be least in the area or
maybe nonexistent in an area where something properly called politi-
cal speech was involved.
Senator Hart. I am not pushing you now for an answer on an aspect
of this tliat you have not thought through. But I think the key to it is
whether you believe and understand the first amendment is available
only with respect to political speech, disclosure, protest?
21
Mr. BoRK. I have to insist, I am afraid that when I wrote that article
I was entering into a field for the first time, and I was trying out a
theoretical concept, if you will. I do not know what I will ultimately
conclude in the field. I have changed my mind on large issues in the
past. I do not think that theoretical concept is anything I would ever
urge on the court. It was speculative writing which professors are
expected to engage in, without meaning that that is what they believed
for all time or that is wliat they think would be appropriate for some
other organ of Government to pick up at that time and it is explicitly
stated to be speculative in that sense.
Senator Hart. I told you that your answer with respect to your will-
ingness to move as some Assistant Attorney General might want on an
appeal even though it was to advocate a position that you had earlier
written against, disarmed me. But I have to reach for the arms, at least
mildly now, because as I understood you when you were talking to
Senator Tunney on the "one man, one vote" issue you said that you
would be able to defend the "one man, one vote" proposition as it has
evolved but that you would advise against it.
ISIr. BoRK. I meant if the administration were
Senator Hart. '\'\niom are you going to ad^dse ?
Mr. BoRK. Well, the question Senator Tunney asked me essentially
was, I think, if I had been Mr. Cox at the time that camp up, when
you had no firm law on the subject, and the question was what should
the courtdo in this area, that is a subject so important that I am sure
the Solicitor General confers with other persons in Justice and, per-
haps, elsewhere, I do not know. In that kind of conference, in deciding
what should Justice's position be on this matter, I would have advised
internally against pushing for "one man, one vote" as the resolution of
the problem and would have urged that the position taken by Justice
Stewart be taken as the solution to the problem.
Senator Hart. You also said, I believe, that you would sign a brief
although the brief represented a view that you, as an individual and as
a lawyer, felt to be wrong. I have read in the press that Dean Gris-
wold has taken an opposite ^dew and will not sign briefs ?
Mr. BoRK. I think there is a distinction there. Senator. What I
meant was that when I thought the law was wrong but it was the law I
would sign the brief. If I think it is not the law, I certainly won't
sign the brief.
_ Senator Hart. Very specifically, you wrote some very harsh criti-
cism of the Justice Department's action against IBM in an antitrust
case.
Now, the resolution of that case on appeal, I suppose, is a long way
off, but let's assume it comes when you are the Solicitor General. What
do you do about it ?
Mr. BoRK. At that time, if it comes, if you mean if the Government
loses below. Senator, I think it would depend on a variety of factors,
and one would be the recommendation of the Assistant Attorney Gen-
eral, one would be the recommendation of the Attorney General, one
would be the grounds upon which the court below went, one would be
the state of the law as it had developed in the interim. There would be
a wide variety of factors to be considered.
Senator Hart. Have we the cart before the horse? You sav one
element would be the position of the Attorney General. But won't you
be advising the Attorney General ?
22
Mr. BoRK. Yes. So would tlie Assistant Attorney General in charge
of antitrust.
Senator Hart. Well, in that setting is it possible to say that you
would inescapably, would you not- — and I am not using this criti-
cally— be using the Office of Solicitor General inescapably as an op-
portunity of advancing your own views on policies with respect to
that case ?
Mr. BoRK. I trust not, Senator. When you say advancing my own
views, how do you mean. Senator, you mean by not allowing an appeal ?
Senator Hart. Arguments against the appeal, counseling against
the appeal, because in your judgment it would be an imprudent inter-
pretation or economically undesirable result ?
Mr. Bork. Well, you know, I find it a little hard to place myself in
that ]30sition in the future, and one thing I hope to learn is how the
office opera/tes. Certainly if I got into a discussion — my position about
the wisdom of this kind of case is well-known, so, well, let's discuss
what the policy is aside from my position about the wisdom of bring-
ing that kind of a case.
Senator Hart. If you shared all my sound views on antitrust this
would not bother me a bit. I think you should.
Mr. BoRK. I will make the attempt. Senator.
[Laughter.]
Senator Hart. No specific issue bears more directly on the domestic
scene than Federal courts seeking to deliver 14th amendment guaran-
tees to children who are found to be in segregated schools and as a tool,
with all its unhappy limitations, is bussing and in some situations it is
found to be the only, although limited, means available to give some
relief.
Now, you played a substantial role, if the press reports are correct,
in drafting the President's so-called Equal Educational Opportuni-
ties Act of 1972, at least you had a role in shaping its basic structure,
and you have several times said that you feel that the bill is good policy
and constitutionally somid.
I was referred to and found very interesting one aspect of your testi-
mony before the House comhiittee, which is at page 1509 of the printed
hearings. Your testimony is as follows :
I would be clear about this : Congress certainly may not deny all remedies for
segregation. I do not think Congress could even completely ban bussing as a
single remedy. As the court noted in the strong opinion involving the North
Carolina bussing statute, there are cases in which bussing is essential to the vin-
dication of a constitutional right, and I would think it highly doubtful that
Congress could ban bussing and have that statute stand up in the courts.
Do I take it from that passage that if the constitutional right cannot
be vindicated without a particular remedy, there is only one remedy
available to vindicate the right, that Congress cannot deny the court
the availability of that remedy?
Mr. BoRK. I believe that to be the case. Senator, because it seems to
nie that in such a case Congress would be denying the right and I pre-
viously just suggested that is not within the power of Congress.
May I make one comment. Senator. I think the press reports are not
entirely accurate. I was called in as a consultant to the Cabinet Com-
mittee on Education. The breadth of my consultation was entirely
within the area of law and the constitutionality of that bill. I was not
23
the only consultant, and I have confined my statements about the bill
entirely to the constitutional issue, because it seems to me that is the
only place such expertise as I may have obtains.
Senator Hart. All right.
I appreciate that clarification of your role, and I asked the question
because much of your defense of the bill has been based on the distinc-
tion between rights, which you deem absolute, and the remedies avail-
able for violation of those rights which, as you say, may involve bal-
ance and compromise of peoples' claims.
But I take it from the passage I have quoted that if the right cannot
be fixed any other way then Congress cannot legislate out of the hands
of the court that one tool ?
Mr. BoRK. Right. I entirely agree with that. Senator. If it were any
other way, Marbury against Madison would not mean anything.
Senator Hart. I wish the full committee were here to hear that.
Lastly, how do you feel about a constitutional amendment? How
does that start: no citizen shall be denied the equal protection of the
law ? Wliat about an amendment that saj^s in substance that no citizen
except a black child shall be denied the equal protection of the law ?
That is the way I have interpreted many of the amendments that have
come to my attention. Could we do that ?
Mr, BoRK. I beg your pardon, Senator, what was the nature of that
constitutional amendment?
Senator Hart. Well, it was partly a speech rather than a question.
Mr. BoRK. All right.
Senator Hart. The need for busing is the result of a finding that a
14th amendment right is being denied to somebodv's children. "VVliile
legislative proposals have been made to attempt to outlaw busing as
a remedy, increasingly there is developing an understanding, and I
think you vrould help us in making this clear, that really there is no
way to escape the mandate of the i4th amendment. You would have
to amend the 14th amendment to, as they say, outlaw busing. How do
you feel about such a matter ?
Mr. BoRK. You mean a constitutional amendment ? Senator, I testi-
fied in that same hearing to which you referred that I did not think
a constitutional amendment was appropriate in this field.
Maybe I should clarify one thing about the particular busing bill
that i said was probably constitutional. It is legislation that enters
into an area where the constitutional guidelines are quite few, and I
think that a reasonable or a rational lawyer can only make estimates
of probability. But with that in mind, it ought to be noted that the bill
I testified about did not ban busing for students in the 7th grade and
up. it merely said to the court : Look at other remedies and see if they
will do the job. If they won't, then you may order busing.
For the students in *6th grade and below, the bill said : Busing may
be ordered but only within certain quantative limits, which I cannot
now recall exactly." That distinction rested in part upon the Supreme
Court's opinion in the Sioami case in which the court suggested that
the ages of students might make a difi^erence in the appropriateness
of busing. It is a careful bill, it is a qualified bill. Senator Hart.
Senator Hart. "^^Hiich was amended, and that you are talking about
got lost.
Mr. BoRK. I was not involved in it after the initial drafting.
24
Senator Hart. I understand.
Getting back to the constitutional amendment, I assume that the
Constitution can be amended to do anything the amendment says
which then by definition becomes constitutionaL But what I am ask-
ing is what is your opinion as to the wisdom of amending the 14th
amendment so as to prevent the use, the mandatory use, of buses ?
Mr. BoRK. I would oppose that. Senator, and I have opposed that
in the testimony to which you refer.
Senator Tunney. I have one last question that is stimulated by
your line of questioning, Mr. Chairman. I am curious to know with
respect to antitrust what your attitude is to the guidelines that
Donald Turner issued in 1968 with respect to horizontal mergers. He
said that in these kinds of mergers between firms for market shares
of 4 or 5 percent each that this conceivably would violate the anti-
trust laws. Do I understand your thinking correctly that the merger
would have to involve somewhere around 30 percent of the market
share in order to be violative of the antitrust laws ?
Mr. BoRK. Senator, let me clarify that. I think it will have to be
somewhere around 30 percent before a realistic economic danger ap-
pears. That may not be the same thing as violative of the antitrust
laws. The antitrust laws may deny an amount below where the eco-
nomic danger appears. The law is shaped by the Brown Shoe decision
and by the Pahst decision. Brown Shoe said a 5 percent market share
is illegal and Pabst suggests 4.49 percent is illegal.
Senator Tunney. And Mr. Kauper, who has of course now taken
over as head of that division, has indicated that he is going to enforce
the guidelines. As a matter of policy you would have no difficulty
arguing these cases on appeal to the Supreme Court if Mr. Kauper
asks you to argue them even though in your own personal view it was
a poor policy ?
Mr. BoRK. I would have no difficulty pointing out to the court that
this is what the law that is established says. If the court asks me the
questions you have asked me about my personal opinion about the
economics of the situation, I would answer precisely the same way I
have answered you.
Senator Tunney. Right.
The one thing that I must say from these hearings is that I have
gained the impression that you are prepared to put aside your own
personal philosophy and to argue cases on appeal and to bring cases
up for appeal on the basis of the policy as enunciated by the agencies
and the Attorney General and on the basis of the law as it presently
stands.
Mr. BoRK. That is correct, Senator.
Senator Ttttstney. Thank you very much.
Senator Hart. This may be repetitious and if it is please advise
me. T was late in arriving. A question has been developed in the Demo-
cratic caucus of the Senate which each committee chairman is asked
to direct to nominees in their confirmation hearing. I do not know
whether Chairman Eastland asked it or not before he left but let me
ask both Professor Bork and Dean Sneed : Are you able to commit
to the committee your willingness to appear and testify under con-
ditions of reasonable notice and adjustments of schedules and so on
25
in matters that bear on tlie subject matter of your department and
responsibilities ? Dean Sneed ?
Mr. Sneed. Senator, the answer is clearly affirmative, of course,
subject to the conditions that are stated in your question. I personally
am a firm believer in as much exchange as there can be between the
two branches of government, the executive and the legislative, and I
shall do everything that I can to accommodate the interests of the
two branches.
Senator Hart. Professor Bork ?
Mr. BoRK. Senator, I find m^^self unable to improve upon the dean's
statement, sir.
Senator Hart. I am not sure we are directed to narrow that ques-
tion but — and not just out of curiosity — let me narrow it a little.
President Nixon, and this goes back to the confirmation of Attorney
General Kleindeenst as it related to ITT and executive privilege,
President Nixon had issued an Executive order that described rather
narrowly the circumstances under which an executive agency official
should decline to disclose to Congress information that Congress
sought. As I recall it included as a requirement that he designate
someone on his behalf to designate the material that was subject to
the claim of confidentiality. The Attorney General, as some of us
understood it, went beyond that and asserted a seemingly inherent
right in a department, specifically the Justice Department itself, to
make that kind of judgment, that it had the right to plead silence, so
to speak, without the President's indication that he wanted it treated
as confidential.
Would you agree that the only basis for withholding information
is the protection of the confidentiality of communications involving
the President and that it can be asserted only at the direction of the
President ?
Mr. Sneed. Senator Hart, my understanding of this somewhat
murky area of executive privilege leads me to believe that it is some-
what broader than you have stated. I know that is not a wholly satis-
factory answer nor am I able to give you an answer which has a very
sharp edge to it. But my reading of the Reynolds case, for example,
leads me to assume that it is somewhat broader. A somewhat broader
view also may be inherent in the Freedom of Information Act.
Senator Hart. Professor Bork ?
Mr. BoRK. It is a field, it is an area, I have not studied, Senator, but
it would seem to me that there may be occasions when a case in pro-
gress would be something that an attorney ought not to talk about
quite aside from the President's involvement.
Senator Hart, The answers which both of you have made to the
basic question which the Democratic caucus has directed to be asked,
your willingness to appear and testify, satisfies me.
The Senator from Massachusetts has sent a memorandum which
indicates that he is presiding at a Health, Education, and Welfare
hearing and that if he is not able to get here before we adjourn he
asks that he be given an opportunity to address questions in writing
to you, to the two nominees, which will be communicated before the
end of business today. Is there objection to the issuance of those ques-
tions and the receipt of the answers ?
26
Senator Hruska. No objections.
]\Ir. BoRK. Do I understand the questions will be received today?
Is that correct ?
Senator Hruska. That is right.
Senator Hart. Maj^ I ask that a communication addressed to me
from Clarence Mitchell, Director, Washington Bureau of the Na-
tional Association for the Advancement of Colored People, be in-
cluded in the record.
[The document referred to follows :]
Washington, D.C, January 15, 1973.
Hon. Philip Hart,
U.S. Senate, Washington, D.C:
The NAACP notes that hearings will be held on the nomination of Mr. Robert
H. Bork on Wednesday, January 17. We urge that Mr. Bork be questioned on
whether he supports the transportation of children to public schools when such
transportation is necessary to meet constitutional requirements in school deseg-
regation cases. Increasingly the Department of Justice appears to be seeking to
slow down and even nullify court orders supporting the historic decision of
Broion v. Board of Education. The latest example, of course, is the Department's
attempt to postpone the application of a decision requiring desegregation of the
public schools in Prince Georges County, Maryland. We urge that Mr. Bork be
questioned on whether he will continue the present policy of using the power of
the Federal Government to slow down school desegregation. We are aware of the
fact that a person serving in the Department of Justice may later be considered
for a judicial post either in the Supreme Court or at some other level. On the
basis of Mr. Bork's record to date, we would think that any attempt to place
him in the judicial branch of government should be a subject for extensive hear-
ings. We will appreciate it if this telegram is incorporated in the hearing record.
Clarence Mitchell,
Director, Washington Bureau, NAACP.
Senator Hart. If there are no further questions we will adjourn at
the call of the Chair.
Thank you very much.
[Whereupon at 12 :05 p.m., the committee adjourned subject to the
call of the Chair.]
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