WASHINGTON — When President Bush's lawyers made a list of potential nominees to the Supreme Court, they put John G. Roberts Jr. at the top.
The appeals court judge was seen as smart and cautious, conservative in his leanings, but not an outspoken ideologue prone to making brash pronouncements. And he was seen as a persuader, someone whose personable approach and intellect could make him a leader on the high court.
For The Record
Los Angeles Times Friday July 22, 2005 Home Edition Main News Part A Page 2 News Desk 1 inches; 48 words Type of Material: Correction
Supreme Court nominee -- An article in Wednesday's Section A profiling Supreme Court nominee John G. Roberts Jr. said he was a member of the Federalist Society. Roberts has given speeches to the conservative group, but does not recall having been a member, a White House spokeswoman said.
Roberts, 50, was also the clear favorite of Washington's Republican legal establishment -- whether to succeed his old boss, Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist, or, as it turned out, to fill the seat left by the departure of Justice Sandra Day O'Connor.
Even leading Democratic lawyers, including former Clinton-era Solicitor General Seth Waxman and the late Lloyd Cutler, had endorsed his nomination to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit two years ago. They said he was a superb lawyer, a brilliant writer and an effective oral advocate.
His personal resume seems impeccably upright as well: a native of Buffalo, N.Y., who grew up in Indiana; captain of the high school football team; worked summers in a steel mill to help pay his way through college; top of his class at Harvard Law School.
He is described as low-key and assiduous; compared with some of the other candidates Bush was considering, he seems almost a little boring.
Roberts has always moved easily among crowds of differing political persuasions. His legal mentor at his Washington law firm was longtime Democratic lawyer E. Barrett Prettyman Jr. And the best man at his wedding was a personal injury lawyer, not typical company for a conservative.
The lawyer, Floridian Dean Colson, clerked for Rehnquist with Roberts.
"I just think he is as smart and as fine a lawyer as there is in America," Colson said.
"I am impressed by the fact that some of the groups that are on the far right opposed him, and some on the far left opposed him. Maybe that means he is a really good choice," Colson said.
Roberts' wife, Jane, is also a Washington lawyer, and they have two children, Jack, 4, and Josie, 5. Colson, who said the couple met on a blind date, described Roberts as "a totally regular guy," adding that "there's no one more fun to watch a ballgame with or have pizza and a beer with."
Though liberal interest groups have been determined to fight a conservative nominee, Roberts might not give them much of a target.