––––––––––––––––––––
Subscribe to the Legal News!
https://test.legalnews.com/Home/Subscription
Full access to public notices, articles, columns, archives, statistics, calendar and more
Day Pass Only $4.95!
One-County $80/year
Three-County & Full Pass also available
- Posted August 04, 2010
- Tweet This | Share on Facebook
Courts - U. S. Supreme Court Confirmation on track, Senate starts Kagan debate Nearly all Democrats, handful of Republicans, support nominee

By Julie Hirshchfeld Davis
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) -- A confirmation vote is all but assured for Supreme Court nominee Elena Kagan as the Senate begins debate on making her the fourth female justice.
Supporters and opponents were to weigh in during debate starting Tuesday on President Barack Obama's nominee. A vote is expected before week's end. Confirming Kagan, 50, for a lifetime seat on the court is one of the last pieces of business senators will attend to before departing for a monthlong vacation.
Kagan is in line to succeed retired Justice John Paul Stevens and become the fourth woman to sit on the court.
Nearly all Democrats and a handful of GOP senators are expected to vote for Kagan, who has served as the Obama administration's solicitor general.
Most Republicans say the former Harvard Law School dean isn't fit to be a justice because she'd try to mold the law to her liberal political views. They also criticize her lack of experience as a judge or courtroom litigator.
"It is all but certain that, if confirmed, Ms. Kagan will bring to the bench a progressive activist judicial philosophy which holds that unelected judges are empowered to set national policy from the bench," Sen. Jeff Sessions of Alabama, the top Republican on the Judiciary Committee, wrote to senators Monday.
Kagan's proponents call her a highly qualified nominee who could help bring consensus to the ideologically polarized court.
Published: Wed, Aug 4, 2010
headlines Detroit
headlines National
- ABA Legal Ed council suspends accreditation standard focused on diversity
- How law firms can grow, address artificial intelligence and tackle other challenges in 2025
- In ‘power move’ over independent agencies, Trump demands review of proposed regulations
- Could courts run out of options if federal officials defy court orders?
- Judge texted bailiff, clerk that he can’t be in court next day because ‘I just shot my wife,’ jurors are told
- Judge admonished for ‘undignified’ behavior, including gestures mimicking pumping of breast milk