WASHINGTON — Senate Democrats lambasted one of President Barack Obama's picks for a federal judgeship in Georgia on Tuesday, skewering him for his past votes on abortion and the Confederate flag.
It was unclear whether Michael Boggs' nomination to become a federal district judge in Georgia was in peril. He is now a judge on that state's appeals court.
At a hearing of the Senate Judiciary Committee, Democrats repeatedly challenged his votes as a Georgia state legislator a decade ago. They focused on his support for measures to post information online about doctors who perform abortions and to keep the Confederate battle emblem on the Georgia flag.
At several points Tuesday, Boggs agreed with Democrats who said abortion doctors had faced attacks and threats from opponents of the procedure and that posting online information about them could jeopardize them further. He said at the time, he wasn't aware of that.
Asked by Sen. Al Franken, D-Minn., how old he was at the time, Boggs said he was 37.
"Thirty seven years old and a state legislator, and you were not aware of any of that," Franken said with a tone that sounded incredulous.
Boggs said as a state legislator, he was representing his constituents' views. He said he now believes his vote on abortion doctors was wrong and he's glad the Confederate emblem was later removed from the state flag, saying Thursday that it was a symbol of organizations "that spouted overt racism."
In 1956, Georgia changed its flag to prominently feature the Confederate battle flag, which featured a diagonal blue cross with white stars over a red field. The current flag, without the Confederate emblem, was approved in 2003.