Top Judiciary Republican insists on weeklong delay in action on Kagan, vote set for next week
By Julie Hirschfeld Davis, APTuesday, July 13, 2010
Democrats grant GOP a weeklong delay on Kagan
WASHINGTON — The top Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee has won a weeklong delay in scheduled action to send Elena Kagan’s Supreme Court nomination to the full Senate for confirmation.
Sen. Jeff Sessions of Alabama says GOP senators need more time to review written answers Kagan supplied for questions they posed after her confirmation hearings, and to inquire still further into how she would behave as a justice.
There’s little doubt the Judiciary panel, where Democrats have a lopsided majority, will approve President Barack Obama’s nominee to succeed retiring Justice John Paul Stevens, and that she’ll win Senate confirmation within weeks. Democrats have more than enough votes to elevate her, and a handful of Republicans is likely to join them.
THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP’s earlier story is below.
WASHINGTON (AP) — The gun lobby is advertising against Elena Kagan and Republican opponents are laying out their case against her, but President Barack Obama’s Supreme Court nominee appears just weeks away from Senate confirmation.
Judiciary Committee Republicans are expected Tuesday to request a one-week delay before a panel vote to send Kagan’s nomination to the full Senate. Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., the Judiciary chairman, has said he would grant such a request.
That would push a committee vote to next week, leaving Kagan on track to win Senate confirmation before the Senate leaves in early August for a monthlong break — and in time to take her seat when the court begins a new term this fall, as Obama has asked.
Kagan, the 50-year-old who has served as the Obama administration’s solicitor general, would succeed retiring Justice John Paul Stevens and become the fourth woman on the court, as well as the third sitting female justice.
Democrats have more than enough votes to confirm her and Republicans have shown no inclination to block the move through a filibuster, although some influential outside groups are urging them to do so.
The National Rifle Association is asking gun owners to urge senators to oppose Kagan or filibuster her confirmation. The pro-gun rights group said Monday that it planned to begin circulating a Web advertisement comparing Kagan’s answers on gun issues at her confirmation hearings with those of Obama’s first high court nominee, Justice Sonia Sotomayor, who they contend misled senators last year about her support for the right to bear arms.
Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, who announced his opposition to Kagan the day after her hearings ended, laid out his case against her in a magazine piece Monday. Writing in the conservative National Review, Hatch said she has a political background and activist judicial philosophy that make her ill-suited for the Supreme Court.
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