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Bush chooses Miers for Supreme Court Known for thoroughness and her low-profile, Miers is one of the first staff members to arrive at the White House in the morning and among the last to leave. When Bush named her White House counsel in November 2004, the president described Miers as a lawyer with keen judgment and discerning intellect — "a trusted adviser on whom I have long relied for straightforward advice." He also joked of Miers, "When it comes to a cross-examination, she can fillet better than Mrs. Paul." With no record, liberals say the White House should be prepared for Miers to be peppered with questions during her Senate confirmation. "Choosing somebody who is not a judge would put that much more of a premium on straight answers to questions because there would be that much less for senators and the public to go on when looking at such a nominee's judicial philosophy," says Elliot Mincberg, counsel with the liberal People for the American Way. Formerly Bush's personal lawyer in Texas, Miers came with the president to the White House as his staff secretary, the person in charge of all the paperwork that crosses the Oval Office desk. Miers was promoted to deputy chief of staff in June 2003. As an attorney in Dallas, Miers became president in 1996 of Locke Purnell, Rain & Harrell a firm with more than 200 lawyers where she worked starting in 1972. After it merged a few years later, she became co-manager of Locke Liddell & Sapp. When Bush was governor of Texas, she represented him in a case involving a
fishing house. In 1995, he appointed her to a six-year term on the Texas Lottery
Commission. She also served as a member-at-large on the Dallas City Council and
in 1992 became the first woman president of the Texas State
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