Axelrod says Scalia once lobbied to get Kagan on Supreme Court

Republican lawmakers are vowing to block anyone President Obama nominates to replace Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, who died unexpectedly on Saturday.

“We’re not going to give up the Supreme Court for a generation by allowing Barack Obama to make one more liberal appointee,” Texas Sen. Ted Cruz said during the GOP debate in South Carolina on Saturday night.

But according to David Axelrod, former senior adviser to the president, it was Scalia who once lobbied for a liberal justice to fill a vacant seat on the Supreme Court.

Axelrod, now a CNN political commentator, recalled a conversation he had with the conservative firebrand at the 2009 White House Correspondents’ Association Dinner in Washington.

“We were seated together,” Axelrod writes on CNN.com. “We bantered about my hometown of Chicago, where he had taught law before ascending to the bench. He opined on wine and music and generally lived up to his reputation as a man who told and enjoyed a good story. And then our conversation took an unexpected turn.”

Scalia asked Axelrod to relay a message to Obama:

Justice David Souter, Scalia’s longtime colleague on the court, had just announced his retirement, creating a vacancy for President Obama to fill. Scalia figured that as senior adviser to the new president, I might have some influence on the decision — or at least enough to pass along a message.

“I have no illusions that your man will nominate someone who shares my orientation,” said Scalia, then in his 23rd year as the court’s leading and most provocative conservative voice. “But I hope he sends us someone smart.”

A little taken aback that he was engaging me on the subject, I searched for the right answer, and lamely offered one that signaled my slight discomfort with the topic. “I’m sure he will, Justice Scalia.”

He wasn’t done. Leaning forward, as if to share a confidential thought, he tried again.

“Let me put a finer point on it,” the justice said, in a lower, purposeful tone of voice, his eyes fixed on mine. “I hope he sends us Elena Kagan.”

Axelrod was surprised by the overture because Kagan, Obama’s solicitor general, would be seen “plainly” as “a liberal in the context of the court.”

Obama didn’t nominate Kagan, instead choosing Sonia Sotomayor, who became the first Hispanic member of the Supreme Court when she was confirmed by the Senate in 2009.

But when another vacancy opened up with the retirement of Justice John Paul Stevens, Obama did nominate Kagan, who joined Scalia on the bench in 2010.

“We have become inured to the animus that characterizes the relationship between many of our elected officials in these highly partisan times,” Axelrod concludes. “But members of the court, free from the pressures of running for office, relate to each other in a different way. So much so that a conservative lion would lobby the President’s adviser for his liberal friend.”

Source Article from http://davidduke.com/axelrod-says-scalia-lobbied-obama-adviser-get-kagan-supreme-court/

You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

Leave a Reply

Powered by WordPress | Designed by: Premium WordPress Themes | Thanks to Themes Gallery, Bromoney and Wordpress Themes