Archives set to release records from Supreme Court nominee Kagan’s time in Clinton White House
By Julie Hirschfeld Davis, APFriday, June 4, 2010
Senators await Clinton-era files on Kagan
WASHINGTON — Supreme Court nominee Elena Kagan’s paper trail is about to get a lot longer.
The William J. Clinton Presidential Library is scheduled Friday afternoon to release the first batch of a 160,000-page trove of records from Kagan’s service in the former president’s White House. The National Archives announced it would post 46,500 pages on the library’s website.
Kagan, who is President Barack Obama’s choice to succeed retiring Justice John Paul Stevens, served first as a counsel and then as a domestic policy adviser to Clinton between 1995 and 1999.
During that time, the White House was juggling a host of hot-button issues that could become flash points in Kagan’s confirmation hearings, from gun control and abortion rights to a landmark anti-smoking measure that ultimately died in the GOP-led Congress.
Kagan, 50, stepped aside last month from her post as Obama’s solicitor general to focus on winning confirmation.
Republican senators and conservative activists have complained that Kagan’s views and judicial style remain a mystery because the public record from her professional past is so thin. The former Harvard Law School dean has never served as a judge, has little courtroom experience and published relatively little during her years in academia.
Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, and its ranking Republican, Sen. Jeff Sessions of Alabama, requested the Clinton-era documents two weeks ago. Leahy scheduled Kagan’s confirmation hearings to begin June 28, and the nation’s archivist said his staff would finish sorting through and releasing the records by that deadline.
Sessions has since warned that he would ask for a delay unless the files were produced in time for senators to peruse them well in advance of questioning Kagan. Republicans don’t have the power to change the hearing date, but they could seek to prolong the session or delay a committee vote on Kagan’s nomination.
White House counsel Bob Bauer told Sessions in a letter this week that Obama does not intend to claim executive privilege to prevent release of the documents. If Clinton wants to keep anything secret, Bauer said, the White House would try to cut a deal that would satisfy both sides.
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