Mr. Thompson probably wanted to know who the opponents were, so he could calculate the votes on each side of the issue. Of course, the votes are always pretty much 50/50, except for those with a vested interest in the system who will vote against any changes.
It's a tough road. And, while I know that you would like to make a constitutional issue out of this, the problem is always the same. Courts do not want to touch legal issues that appear to injure the weak -- in this case children. So, even if you start with the argument that giving both parents anything less than a 50/50 split, absent a showing of parental unfitness, you are wandering in the land of substantive due process -- an area in which there are two U.S. Supreme Court Justices (Scalia, Thomas) who are on record as believing no such constitutional right exists. As for what Roberts and Alito think, I don't know, but I wouldn't be surprised if both would lean heavily against substantive due process arguments.
That's four stacked against you before you petition for certiorari. And, Stevens could pass away any day, in which case President Bush will start looking for stealth candidates to try to pass by the Democratic majority. If Bush succeeds, then there will be no substantive due process, and your case is over before it starts.
Thus, I suggest you continue working the legislative angle -- which you seem to be doing remarkably well.
It's a tough road. And, while I know that you would like to make a constitutional issue out of this, the problem is always the same. Courts do not want to touch legal issues that appear to injure the weak -- in this case children. So, even if you start with the argument that giving both parents anything less than a 50/50 split, absent a showing of parental unfitness, you are wandering in the land of substantive due process -- an area in which there are two U.S. Supreme Court Justices (Scalia, Thomas) who are on record as believing no such constitutional right exists. As for what Roberts and Alito think, I don't know, but I wouldn't be surprised if both would lean heavily against substantive due process arguments.
That's four stacked against you before you petition for certiorari. And, Stevens could pass away any day, in which case President Bush will start looking for stealth candidates to try to pass by the Democratic majority. If Bush succeeds, then there will be no substantive due process, and your case is over before it starts.
Thus, I suggest you continue working the legislative angle -- which you seem to be doing remarkably well.