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WASHINGTON -- Supreme Court nominee Elena Kagan picked up more GOP backing Wednesday in her drive toward near-certain confirmation next week, even as a top Republican lashed out at her as "dangerous."
Sen. Jeff Sessions of Alabama, the senior Republican on the Judiciary Committee, warned senators in unusually dire terms against voting for President Barack Obama's choice, saying, "Be careful about it, because I'm afraid that we have a dangerous, progressive, political-type nominee."
Sessions' words of caution - he said they were primarily directed toward Democrats - came just hours after Sen. Olympia Snowe of Maine became the fourth Republican to say she would break with her party to vote for Kagan, who's in line to succeed retired Justice John Paul Stevens.
Democrats already have more than enough votes to confirm her.
In a statement, Snowe said Kagan had met her standard for a justice, "with the strong intellect, respect for the rule of law, and understanding of the important but limited role of the Supreme Court that I believe is required." She said endorsements from leading lawyers, including prominent conservatives, had persuaded her that Kagan had the judicial temperament for the job.
Sessions, however, quoted Obama allies describing Kagan as someone who shares his political views, and argued she would be a liberal rubber stamp for Obama's policies.
"I don't think the American people are going to hold harmless those who vote to impose a legal progressive, activist legislator from the bench upon them," Sessions said.
Elena Kagan news: Sen. Jeff Sessions calls Kagan a 'dangerous' nominee
YouTube - Sessions to Dem Senators: Don't Rubberstamp Kagan Nomination for Obama
So, Is Sessions right? Is Kagen really nothing more than a mirror of Obama's ideological, and purely political appointment? She will serve for decades, will her vote be constitutionally based, or will she vote strictly along "Progressive" lines? And doesn't the sitting President have the right to appoint anyone he wants?
j-mac
So, Is Sessions right?
Is Kagen really nothing more than a mirror of Obama's ideological, and purely political appointment?
She will serve for decades, will her vote be constitutionally based, or will she vote strictly along "Progressive" lines?
And doesn't the sitting President have the right to appoint anyone he wants?
j-mac
Kagan is about as far left as they get but since she is replacing another far out lefty it won't effect the balance of the court.......
it won't effect the balance of the court.......
YouTube - Sessions to Dem Senators: Don't Rubberstamp Kagan Nomination for Obama
So, Is Sessions right? Is Kagen really nothing more than a mirror of Obama's ideological, and purely political appointment? She will serve for decades, will her vote be constitutionally based, or will she vote strictly along "Progressive" lines? And doesn't the sitting President have the right to appoint anyone he wants?
j-mac
That's true Navy...but the really good thing that comes out of this....it prevent the right-wing from being able to advance their right-wing agenda. Obama saved the Supreme Court from falling into the hands of extremists....I thank GOD every day for that. The one chance that the right-wing had to take over the court within the next couple of decades was in the last election. Now...when Ginsburg retires Obama will further cement it with another young justice....most likely another moderate, but at least it will push the right-wing further back from getting their activist right-wing court.
anyone who calls Alito or roberts extremists is extremely ignorant about the court and the state of jurisprudence.
Kagan is a moderate to someone like you.
And by that argument, Alito and Roberts are only not extreme to some one like you.
actually few honest legal scholars would call them extreme.
the most extreme stuff comes from breyer--did you read his idiotic dissents in Heller and McDonald?
anyone who calls Alito or roberts extremists is extremely ignorant about the court and the state of jurisprudence.
Kagan is a moderate to someone like you.
Hold on, we need to leave the petty bickering aside on this one if we can please. I really want to know. I mean to some of the liberals, what makes Kagan a "moderate" and why do some consider her appointment a move to the right? And what makes Roberts, or Alito extreme right wing? Is it because they vote conservative on issues? Is it because they try to stick to the intent of the constitution instead of spouting nonsense like the living, breathing document stuff, and looking to other countries case law to decide?
Radical eh? So stay on point, what is Sessions worried about if it won't change the balance? And don't have to say to ourselves as conservatives that we argued for Bush to be able to appoint his ideological picks? If Kagan is dangerous as a progressive, then it only goes to prove how Obama is trying to portray himself as a moderate, while governing, and appointing from the extreme fringe.
j-mac
The 2nd Amendment barely survived a 5 to 4 vote. I would say that Kagan is a very dangerous nominee.
There's something very wrong with one of our most basic rights is that close to no longer being one of our most basic rights.
Oh pul-lease......I would bet that most conservatives themselves would label Alito and Roberts as very conservative and to the fr right. That's why they like them.
At least TRY to be honest.
As for Kagan....have you been following the confirmation or looked at her record? There is a reason why people on the left are not happy with her selection....but that would require that you actually look at and study some of the facts.
How can you bring yourself to make such an outlandish accusation? Where's the evidence? Your basic rights still exsist! You still have the freedom to say what you want, go where you want, do pretty much anything you want, dress how you like, eat wherever you prefer, obtain any kind of job without the need for a work permit (unless you're an illegal alien), obtain just about any kind of weapon that's legally permissable to purchase, own and carry under the law, worship as you please.
What basic right has been taken away from you, apdst? WHAT!?!
It's this kind of hyper-partisian BS that just drives me crazy!!! :censored Enough already!!! :stop:
:rantoff: To the thread topic...
Every once in a while even the Judiciary needs to have a balance of power within its ranks. The confirmation of Sotomeyer and Kagen helps to even out things within the Judicial Branch somewhat. It's been mostly Conservative for a very long time and until the recent SC ruling to overturn campaign financial contribution from corporations, I really didn't have a problem with the decisions made by that judicial body. I do believe the President has the right afforded him under the Constitution to appoint whomever he sees fit to sit on the SC. It's kind of like what happens with Congress from time to time in that every once in a while one side of the political spectrum holds the reigns until their time is done. Only problem with SC nominees is that once appointed they sit for life! So, a "replacement" isn't nominated unless and until one dies or retires (usually due to health reasons). And when that does happen nobody really knows for sure which side of the political spectrum the next President will be on.
The nation can only hope that when the time comes the next SC nominee will be someone who will render a decision moreso to uphold the law rather than merely imposse their moral stamp on it or rule from within their own political ideology. To that, I think both Sotomeyer and Kagan are very capable of rendering decisions within the spirit of the law.
"Sticking to the intent of the Constitution?" Now that's funny. Alito and Roberts ALWAYS vote in favor of the corporation when the issue is the individual v. the corporation. They ALWAYS vote in favor of the governmet when the issue is an individual v. the Government.
far right would be
1) stating that the federal government has absolutely no power to regulate small arms or holding that the expansion of the commerce clause was unconstitutional--however in Heller and McDonald, the power to regulate small arms was assumed to some extent even by those who understood it is clearly an individual right to keep and bear arms
2) far right would be holding that the war on drugs-especially weed grown in California and consumed in california-is unconstitutional because the commerce clause did not grant the federal government that power/ Yet the USSC upheld such bans
3) Far right would be holding that most of the new deal legislation should be treated the same way ND legislation was treated in Schechner Poultry
4) Far right would be holding that the federal government does not have the power to tell private businesses who they have to serve or that they have to treat women or blacks or people over 40 the same as other employees. Yet the Court in Burlington Northern and Santa Fe RR v White expanded employee rights under Title VII
the Roberts Court is moderately statist Hardly "far right"
That's true Navy...but the really good thing that comes out of this....it prevent the right-wing from being able to advance their right-wing agenda. Obama saved the Supreme Court from falling into the hands of extremists....I thank GOD every day for that. The one chance that the right-wing had to take over the court within the next couple of decades was in the last election. Now...when Ginsburg retires Obama will further cement it with another young justice....most likely another moderate, but at least it will push the right-wing further back from getting their activist right-wing court.
You are not a good person to judge where the far right is, just as I am not a good person to judge where the far left is. We both lack the proper perspective.
really? I have spent a rather large amount of the past 29 years of my life reading legal decisions. I constantly read commentaries on decisions. I have argued dozens of appellate cases. I suggest I have a rather well grounded opinion on what constitutes extreme left and extreme right in American jurisprudence
Jurisprudence yes, you have a strong grounding. What is the far left and far right, not so much.
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