For
immediate release: For
more information:
NATIONAL RIGHT TO
NOMINATION OF ELENA KAGAN TO
On
In light of the President's stated intent, senators have an
obligation to probe whether Elena Kagan will tolerate limits on abortion,
enacted through normal democratic channels, or will seek to impose extreme
pro-abortion views by judicial decree. Ms. Kagan herself argued
forcefully in 1995, in a lengthy book review published in the University of
Chicago Law Review, that such inquiries by
senators are a legitimate and necessary part of the confirmation process.
In the most recent Supreme Court ruling dealing with abortion and
the rights of unborn children, Gonzales v. Carhart, on
(Since the Gonzales case was decided, dissenting Justice
David Souter has been replaced by Justice Sonia Sotomayor. Most
analysts believe that Sotomayor would be very likely to join the pro-abortion
bloc when such issues are revisited in the future.)
There are troubling indications that Ms. Kagan generally favors an
activist, results-oriented approach to constitutional law. For example,
in her 1995 law journal article, she wrote, “The bottom-line issue in the
appointments process must concern the kinds of judicial decisions that will
serve the country and, correlatively, the effect the nominee will have on the
Court’s decisions . . . If that is too results oriented … so be it. . .”
She also wrote that “it should be no surprise by now that many of the votes a
Supreme Court Justice casts have little to do with technical legal ability and
much to do with conceptions of value.”
Regarding Ms. Kagan's specific views on the Court's past
abortion-related rulings, there is little on the public record. But Ms.
Kagan may have betrayed a possible personal animus towards the pro-life
movement in a 1980 essay lamenting Republican gains in the 1980 election, in
which she referred disparagingly to “victories of these anonymous but Moral
Majority-backed [candidates] . . . these avengers of ‘innocent life’ and the
B-1 Bomber . . ." Was Ms. Kagan so dismissive of the belief
that unborn children are members of the human family that she felt it necessary
to put the term "innocent life" in quote marks, or does she have
another explanation? Would she be able to set aside any animus she has
towards those who fight to protect innocent human life, when reviewing laws duly
enacted for that purpose?
The National
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