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Who should Obama pick to replace Souter?
I'd like to add Charles J. Ogletree (Professor at Harvard Law) to the list. According to the blogosphere, here are the frontrunners:
Johnnie Rawlinson (9th Circuit Court of Appeals, African American woman); Leah Ward Sears, (chief justice of the Georgia Supreme Court, African American woman); Sonia Sotomayor (2nd Circuit Court of Appeals, Hispanic woman); Kim McLane Wardlaw, 9th Circuit, Hispanic woman); Diane Wood, (7th Circuit, woman, knows Obama from her time teaching at the University of Chicago); Jennifer Granholm (Michigan governor, woman); Merrick Garland, U.S. Court of Appeals, DC Circuit); Deval Patrick (Massachusetts governor, African American, Obama friend); Cass Sunstein (University of Chicago law professor, Obama friend) GOP gears up for Court fight - Glenn Thrush and Manu Raju - POLITICO.com |
Just know it will not be a white male.
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6 out of 9 ain't bad? |
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Guess that makes the racism against whites OK. Be curious what the press would say (and the Al Sharpton crew) if the non-spoken work was 'no black men'. |
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That had been the non-spoken word for years (and for women). The S.Ct. was established in 1789. Thurgood Marshall, the first non-white male, was selected to the bench in 1967, and served until 1991 where he was replaced with....:shizzle:.... Clarence Thomas. A one-for-one swap-out for the black dude. O'Connor was the first non male selected to the bench in 1981, followed by Ginsburg in 1993. So, during the 220 years that the S. Ct. has been established, only four justices were something other than white male. ... but I regress... |
How about Wagner
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Michelle Obama
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Bill Clinton
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The media has Sonia Sotomayor, who sits on the bench of the U.S. Court of Appeals, 2nd Circuit and Kathleen Sullivan, Dean of Stanford University Law School, pegged as the two leading candidates. Both would be controversial candidates for various reasons.
A lesser known, yet very qualified pick would be Harold Hongju Koh, former Dean of the Yale Law School and recent Obama nominee as legal counsel for the State Dept. Koh will have have some huge tasks at hand (i.e. Guantanamo), if his nomination is approved. This guy should get the nod, but the Asian always gets passed over in both the white man's and black man's world unless there's a computer involved. Sonia Sotomayor - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Kathleen Sullivan - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Harold Hongju Koh - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Of course, Jeremiah Wright and Al Sharpton are patiently sitting by the phone, waiting for Barack's call. |
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And I doubt you are naive enough to 'have a feeling' I think you knew exactly where this would head ;) |
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If you are suggesting my question is baited, I'd suggest you read it again. It is very open ended and is race and gender neutral. Of course I would expect some dialogue about race and gender, but not racism or sexism. I was asking for your opinion. I guess we all know what that is now. We don't need to go back 220 years. It is irrelevant because...well, for obvious reasons. Let's just look to the last 30, 20 or 10. It doesn't matter. I'm not looking to diversify the bench for the sake of diversity. But I am sure there have been more than two minority and two female persons who had the qualifications for the bench. |
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From the American Bar Association. Taken from the 2000 Census: Statistics About Minorities in the Profession from the Census Links - ABA Commission on Racial & Ethnic Diversity |
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Obama will have his candidates, if he doesn't have them already. Even with Democratic control of the Senate, whoever he shoves out there is not going glide through the selection process without major scrutiny. Whoever that candidate is needs to get his or her shit in order before walking onto the floor of the Senate. So Obama has a sizeable window to play with; the most pragmatic decision would make full use of the window. It's like the Jets naming Mark Sanchez as their starting quarterback today, May 6, 2009. Why bother? |
At the risk of sounding PC or like a chauvinistic apologist, (neither of which I am, imo), I think the next SC candidate(s) should be female.
All of the other background req's are easily filled by a host of potential candidates. If my pick rings like righting the gender balance, blah blah blah, I guess it is; but, to have 1 female on the SC, in a country where more than half the pop is female, is absurd. :( I don't care if the woman chosen is white, pink, black, brown, green, or some kind of mixture, etc. :D BR,mD |
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