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May 25, 2013
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Advise and Wimp OutPosted on May 12, 2010By Ruth Marcus Supreme Court nominee Elena Kagan has—or had, anyway—the right vision of what confirmation hearings for the high court should be. If she lived up to her own standard, she could improve the process enormously—and be confirmed anyway. Kagan has the unusual experience of having looked at the confirmation process from the vantage point of a frustrated congressional staffer. When Ruth Bader Ginsburg was nominated in 1993, Kagan served as special counsel to then-Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Joe Biden. Ginsburg, Kagan later wrote, used a “pincer movement” to avoid giving substantive answers. Either senators’ questions were too specific, in which case Ginsburg claimed she was forced to demur because she might be called on to decide such a dispute. Or they were too general, in which case Ginsburg—surprise!—was forced to demur because, or so she testified, it was impossible to “talk in grand terms about principles that have to be applied in concrete cases.” Heads, I don’t answer. Tails, I don’t answer. Either way, I get confirmed. Two years later, reviewing Yale law professor Stephen Carter’s book about the Supreme Court nomination process, “The Confirmation Mess,” Kagan concluded that the real mess was “not that the Senate focused too much on a nominee’s legal views, but that it did so far too little.” Advertisement Yes! End the farce! Free the Senate Judiciary Committee! I’ve been frustrated for years over nominees’ understandable reluctance to answer any but the most banal questions in any but the most banal way, and by the Senate’s much less understandable acquiescence to this confirmation stonewalling. That strong term isn’t mine—it’s Kagan’s. Both Ginsburg and the next nominee, Stephen Breyer, she wrote, “stonewalled the Judiciary Committee to great effect, as senators greeted their ‘nonanswer’ answers with equanimity and resigned good humor.” This is a bipartisan failure with partisan motivations. Democrats have little incentive—little, that is, beyond their constitutional duty to advise and consent—to push hard to obtain meaningful answers from nominees of Democratic presidents. Republicans perform equally limply when they are in the same position. The precedent created by this senatorial enabling ends up shielding nominees even when there is some desire for more rigorous examination. The underlying fallacy is that it would be inappropriate, even unethical, for nominees to reveal their views. But it is ridiculous to think that asking nominees to describe their overall judicial philosophies or even their general approach to particular legal issues would compromise their independence or impartiality. Of course it would be wrong for a nominee to commit, explicitly or implicitly, to voting a certain way. But as Kagan noted, “we do not have to proceed nearly so far down the road of silence as ... recent nominees would take us—to a place where comment of any kind on any issue that might bear in any way on any case that might at any time come before the court is thought inappropriate.” As Kagan argued, senators are entitled at the very least to a discussion of “the judge’s understanding of the role of courts in our society, of the nature of and values embodied in our Constitution, and of the proper tools and techniques of interpretation, both constitutional and statutory.” And to more than that. Senators can insist “on seeing how theory works in practice by evoking a nominee’s comments on particular issues—involving privacy rights, free speech, race and gender discrimination, and so forth—that the court regularly faces.” Kagan, not surprisingly, backed away from this view at her confirmation hearing for solicitor general. “I’m not sure that, sitting here today, I would agree with that statement,” she said when Sen. Orrin Hatch quoted Kagan to herself. Come on. This was not impulsive jotting. It was a lengthy, footnoted consideration of the confirmation process. Her White House handlers, no doubt, will do their best to ensure that Kagan’s hearings are a repeat of Sonia Sotomayor’s: relentlessly uninformative. Senators of both parties shouldn’t stand for, as Kagan put it, another “vapid and hollow charade, in which repetition of platitudes has replaced discussion of viewpoints and personal anecdotes have supplanted legal analysis.” Free Elena Kagan! Then confirm her. Ruth Marcus’ e-mail address is marcusr(at symbol)washpost.com. © 2010, Washington Post Writers Group New and Improved CommentsIf you have trouble leaving a comment, review this help page. Still having problems? Let us know. If you find yourself moderated, take a moment to review our comment policy. |
By dihey, May 16, 2010 at 10:58 am Link to this comment
If you would care to read the book “The Island at the Center of the World” by Mr. Kolko you might be less upset by a NY clique of lawyers. Boston, or for that matter any other large US city, might be a much more worrisome provenance.
Report thisBy omop, May 16, 2010 at 10:16 am Link to this comment
THE BEST OF THE FOUR IS NOT ONLY FROM NEW YORK SHE’S A MOSANTO
DEFENDER.
http://www.thepeoplesvoice.org/TPV3/Voices.php/2010/05/16/obama-s-latest-
monsanto-pick-elena-kagan#more11480
gerard.
you better come up with a better quip than that mormon gunslinger.
Report thisBy gerard, May 13, 2010 at 11:50 am Link to this comment
Better a New York clique than a Utah gun-slinger? Ah, me! Maybe the mongrel lot would be better—if they ever got their act together and stopped chewing each other out.
Report thisBy omop, May 13, 2010 at 10:52 am Link to this comment
One valid point of view: If approved 300 odd million Americans will have their
rights determined by a New York clique. For according to the NYT:
“Kagan is so MANHATTAN, Scalia is so QUEENS
Ginsburg is so BROOKLYN and Sotomayor is so BRONX”, the author of a
biography of Justice Antonin Scalia is quoted as saying.. “They adopted in their
identities the whole New York sensibility.”
One valid point of view according to Ozark Jethro: “You all sure her name is
Kagan and not Dangerfield”.
Who caress if these FOUR OUT OF NINE JUSTICES ARE FROM NEW YORK CITY
Report thiswhen Ozark Jethro “don’t give a never mind.”
By gerard, May 13, 2010 at 10:00 am Link to this comment
McIn says:
“Still, we the people have to evaluate these candidates. I’m not comfortable accepting a nominee because he or she has been vouched for by the president or anyone else.”
1. “We the people”—even if we had a set of standards by which to judge her—are a pretty mongrel lot who would probably never agree on anyone.
Report this2. “...I’m not comfortable accepting a nominee because he or she has been vouched for by the president or anyone else.” Me neither. But, but, but ... she is and has been “judged” by any number of people who have known her, worked with her, heard her speak and teach over the years. The question is, when is enough? Who are enough? Plus, I hope she can remain free enough after all the inspections to change her mind if a case comes before her that demands it.
Frankly, she surely won’t please all the people all the time, and the bottom line is (sadly) she’ll be chosen by people with power to dictate terms behind the scenes anyway. Or am I too cynical?
By McTN, May 12, 2010 at 9:07 pm Link to this comment
By gerard, May 12 at 9:29 pm #
Case by case: The problem with asking judicial nominees to answer specific questions on important issues in the abstract is that, the moment a specific case comes before them, they will be held to their abstract answer, even though there may be extenuating circumstances in the specific case that demand an escape route from the rigidity of the previous abstract commitment.
Yes, you are right. The press is looking for a story and will magnify every pause and burp for drama.
Still, we the people have to evaluate these candidates. I’m not comfortable accepting a nominee because he or she has been vouched for by the president or anyone else. I suspect the Supreme Court is a challenging environment where hardball is played. If she can’t bat, she shouldn’t sit on the bench either.
Report thisBy mrfreeze, May 12, 2010 at 7:36 pm Link to this comment
Instead of a congressional hearing, I have a much quicker more elegant way to assess the credentials of a SCOTUS candidate:
Have him/her reach for a coin at the bottom of a boiling pot of water….just like in the good-old-days. After all, the hearings today are truly the vapid and useless events Kagan called them years ago.
Report thisBy gerard, May 12, 2010 at 5:29 pm Link to this comment
Case by case: The problem with asking judicial nominees to answer specific questions on important issues in the abstract is that, the moment a specific case comes before them, they will be held to their abstract answer, even though there may be extenuating circumstances in the specific case that demand an escape route from the rigidity of the previous abstract commitment. “You didn’t so-and-so, and that means you are inconsistent.”
Report thisRemembering that “consistency is the hobgoblin of small minds”, it seems to me that a primary consideration in the case of judges is that they maintain, in addition to deep knowledge of the law itself, a flexibility within the statement of the law that allows them to see more than one interpretation of any given legal quandary.
The law, if confined to exact interpretation regardless of extenuating circumstances, is a prison in which true justice cannot survive.
Fair judgment requires the flexibility demanded by varying human situations which are multi-faceted, and eternally in flux. Except in very simple cases, to hold to rigid interpretations without nuance sacrifices equity. (Not that flexibility guarantees equity, but it can come closer.)
That is precisely why the Supreme Court is comprised of nine members instead of one.