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Preparations are already well under way within the White House to fill an expected vacancy on the Supreme Court, with at least one conservative legal organization having submitted its recommendations on who should sit on the nation's top court.
The White House is keeping mum about the early preparations -- several top administration officials will not even acknowledge that preliminary work has begun, despite the serious health issues that kept Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist, 80, off the bench for much of this year.
But others with close White House connections say a short list is well into development.
"There's a normal process that the White House has definitely been pursuing for at least six months where they are soliciting views and recommendations," said Samuel B. Casey, executive director of the Christian Legal Society (CLS). "We have submitted our views."
Said one top Republican official with close ties to the White House: "The same four or five or six names keep coming up. I'm sure they have a short list already."
Top administration and White House officials -- including Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales, Solicitor General Theodore Olson and White House Counsel Harriet Miers, President Bush's longtime adviser and former personal lawyer -- are involved in the early process, according to several sources close to the White House.
Having seen President Reagan's ill-fated nomination of Robert H. Bork to the top court -- which dragged on for months and allowed opposition to mobilize against him -- the Bush administration is not uttering a word about who may be considered.
"They're very careful at the White House, so I don't know whose views besides ours that they're soliciting," Mr. Casey said.
The Christian Legal Society, he said, has "made it known to the White House who we believe are our top three most qualified candidates consistent with the president's stated views that he is looking for judges who faithfully interpret the law, not legislate from the bench."
Judge Michael W. McConnell on the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals is top of the list for CLS, a 42-year-old, 3,400-member nonprofit group that says its mission is "to do justice with the love of God."









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