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NATIONAL RIGHT TO LIFE COMMENTS ON THE
NOMINATION OF ELENA KAGAN TO U.S. SUPREME COURT
WASHINGTON -- The National Right to Life
Committee (NRLC), the federation of
right-to-life organizations in all 50 states,
issued the following statement regarding
President Obama's nomination of Elena Kagan to
fill the seat on the U.S. Supreme Court that is
being vacated by Justice John Paul Stevens. This
statement may be attributed to NRLC Legislative
Director Douglas Johnson.
On
April 21, 2010, President Obama used thinly
veiled code language to communicate his clear
intent to choose a nominee who would be hostile
to legislative attempts to protect unborn
humans. The President stated that he wanted
someone “who is going to be interpreting our
Constitution in a way that takes into account .
. . women’s rights,” and that this was going to
be “very important” to him as he viewed our
“core Constitution” as protecting the “bodily
integrity” of women.
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 April 18, 2007, a
five-justice majority upheld the federal
Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act. Yet on that
occasion, four justices in dissent -- including
Justice Stevens -- argued for a constitutional
doctrine that would have invalidated the ban on
partial-birth abortions and also, by
implication, condemned virtually any other law
or government policy intended to discourage
abortion. If the dissenters’ position became
the position of the majority of the Supreme
Court, various types of laws that have been
deemed permissible under Roe v. Wade
could be invalidated by judicial decree, perhaps
including the Hyde Amendment (restricting
government funding of abortion) and parental
notification laws. It is appropriate and
necessary for senators to inquire into whether
Ms. Kagan would embrace the extreme,
results-oriented doctrines enunciated by the
dissenting justices in that case.
(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 Right to Life Committee is the nation’s
largest pro-life group with affiliates in all 50
states and over 3,000 local chapters
nationwide. National Right to Life works
through legislation and education to protect
those threatened by abortion, infanticide,
euthanasia and assisted suicide.
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