THE SUPREMES

May 05, 2009 18:15

Since David Souter announced his resignation from the Supreme Court, speculation has been rampant about who President Obama might nominate as his replacement.

For those who might wish to discuss the potential candidates a bit more intelligently (and, really, who wouldn't?), the following are among contenders mentioned so far:

Merrick Garland ( ( Read more... )

americasdebate, politburo

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Comments 16

zulfiqar_rgh May 6 2009, 00:09:05 UTC
Based on the fact that this Court is in dire need of some diversity (and there are political constituents to reward/placate) I'm guessing that someone like Sotomayer seems most likely at this point. Female, Hispanic, a poor background, and something of a pragmatic background. Rumor has it that she may not be the brilliant jurist that Obama wants, but he doesn't have to "nail it" right away, I suppose. After all, he's likely to get at least two more appointments. Justice Stevens is 89. And Justice Ginsburg has a pretty nasty form of cancer. She's also nearing "ancient" descriptions. Justice Kennedy is 72, and Justice Scalia is 73. Neither are in bad health, but neither are inhabiting the bodies of much younger men, either. With rationalizations in parentheses, my wish list for the three picks would look something like this ( ... )

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wertz May 6 2009, 00:43:12 UTC
I thought we were just about to lose our first gay justice. You're not going to tell me Souter is straight, are you?

Sotomayor may not be the worst choice, but I suspect the recent Ricci v. DeStefano case will be used as a bludgeon by the GOP to kill her nomination. I doubt Sullivan or Yoshino have much of a chance, either - sadly.

Obama may still try Sotomayor, but he might also try Deval Patrick (unless he thought it would look too much like identity politics). But I do think Al Gore would be a brilliant choice - and not solely for the poetic justice.

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zulfiqar_rgh May 6 2009, 01:11:28 UTC
Indeed. It's a good point. When talking about Justice Souter, I do need to remember to say things like "openly gay" versus just "gay," don't I? Or, perhaps that's just insensitive? Maybe I should stick to the official line of "active jogger ( ... )

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wertz May 6 2009, 02:30:49 UTC
Yeah, this one is hard to second-guess. I suspect that, for this nominee, he'll go with someone he thinks is "safe"and won't create too many waves in the advise and consent process. I'm just not sure who that is.

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bon_homme_dane May 7 2009, 07:57:56 UTC
LOL, I'd love it if Al Gore was on the bench!

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wertz May 7 2009, 16:29:23 UTC
Definitely. And it would drive the "textualists" crazy.  :D

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bon_homme_dane May 7 2009, 19:29:52 UTC
It sure would be some payback..lol!

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wertz May 8 2009, 22:25:54 UTC
Plus he'd probably be fairly good at the job.

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