CBS NEWS
Robert H. Bork, who stepped in to fire the Watergate prosecutor at
Richard Nixon's behest and whose failed 1980s nomination to the Supreme
Court helped draw the modern boundaries of cultural fights over
abortion, civil rights and other issues, has died. He was 85.
Son
Robert H. Bork Jr. told The Associated Press his father died Wednesday
at Virginia Hospital Center in Arlington, Va. The son said Bork died
from complications of heart ailments.
A spokesman for the
Hudson Institute in Washington, where Bork held the title of
distinguished fellow, confirmed his death to CBS News.
Brilliant,
blunt, and piercingly witty, Robert Heron Bork had a long career in
politics and the law that took him from respected academic to a totem of
conservative grievance.
Along the way, Bork was accused
of being a partisan hatchet man for Nixon when, as the third-ranking
official at the Justice Department he fired Watergate special prosecutor
Archibald Cox in the Saturday Night Massacre of 1973. Attorney General
Elliot Richardson resigned rather than fire Cox. The next in line,
William Ruckelshaus, refused to fire Cox and was himself fired.
Bork's
drubbing during the 1987 Senate nomination hearings made him a hero to
the right and a rallying cry for younger conservatives.
The
Senate experience embittered Bork and hardened many of his conservative
positions, even as it gave him prominence as an author and long
popularity on the conservative speaking circuit.
Known
before his Supreme Court nomination as one of the foremost national
experts on antitrust law, Bork became much more widely known as a
conservative cultural critic in the years that followed.
His
1996 book, "Slouching Towards toward Gomorrah: Modern Liberalism and
American Decline," was an acid indictment of what Bork viewed as the
crumbling ethics of modern society and the morally bankrupt politics of
the left.
"Opportunities for teen-agers to engage in sex
are ... more frequent than previously; much of it takes place in homes
that are now empty because the mothers are working," Bork wrote then.
"The modern liberal devotion to sex education is an ideological
commitment rather than a policy of prudence."
Bork, known
until his death as "Judge Bork," served a relatively short tenure on
the bench. He was a federal judge on the nation's most prestigious
appellate panel, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, from
1982 until 1988, when he resigned in the wake of the bitter Supreme
Court nomination fight.
Earlier, Bork had been a private attorney, Yale Law School professor and a Republican political appointee.
At Yale, two of his constitutional law students were Bill Clinton and Hillary Rodham.
"I no longer say they were students," Bork joked long afterward. "I say they were in the room."
Nixon named Bork as solicitor general, the administration's advocate before the Supreme Court, in January 1973.
Bork
served as acting attorney general after Richardson's resignation, then
returned to the solicitor general's job until 1977, far outlasting the
Nixon administration.
Long mentioned as a possible
Supreme Court nominee, Bork got his chance toward the end of Ronald
Reagan's second term. He was nominated July 1, 1987, to fill the seat
vacated by Justice Lewis F. Powell.
Nearly four months
later the Senate voted 58-42 to defeat him, after the first national
political and lobbying offensive mounted against a judicial nominee.
It was the largest negative vote ever recorded for a Supreme Court nominee.
Reagan
and Bork's Senate backers called him eminently qualified - a brilliant
judge who had managed to write nearly a quarter of his court's majority
rulings in just five years on the bench, without once being overturned
by the Supreme Court.
Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass.,
summed up the opposition by saying, "In Robert Bork's America there is
no room at the inn for blacks and no place in the Constitution for
women."
Critics also called Bork a free-speech censor and a danger to the principle of separation of church and state.
Bork's
opponents used his prolific writings against him, and some called him a
hypocrite when he seemed to waffle on previous strongly worded
positions.
Despite a reputation for personal charm, Bork
did not play well on television. He answered questions in a seemingly
bloodless, academic style and he cut a severe figure, with hooded eyes
and heavy, rustic beard.
Stoic and stubborn throughout, Bork refused to withdraw when his defeat seemed assured.
The
fight has defined every high-profile judicial nomination since, and
largely established the opposing roles of vocal and well-funded interest
groups in Senate nomination fights. Bork would say later that the
ferocity of the fight took him and the Reagan White House by surprise,
and he rebuked the administration for not doing more to salvage his
nomination.
The process begat a verb, "to bork," meaning
vilification of a nominee on ideological grounds. In later years, some
accused Bork of borking Clinton nominees with nearly the zeal that some
liberal commentators had pursued him.
Bork denied any
animus, and said he was happy commenting, writing and making money
outside government. Even friends did not entirely believe that.
"He
was very embittered by the experience," said lawyer Andrew Frey, a
longtime friend who worked for Bork in the solicitor general's office.
"He was not well treated, and partly as a result of that he did become
more conservative."