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Call for Kagan Recusal on Obamacare
by Bob Beauprez
November 21, 2011
The
call for Congress to hold hearings
on the need for Justice Elena Kagan to recuse herself from the
ObamaCare case
now on the docket of the Supreme Court has exploded.
The number of organizations signing on to a
letter to House Judiciary Chairman Lamar Smith has more than tripled in
just 48
hours since our original blog post calling for her to stand aside. Following is a link to the
final draft of the
letter signed by the leaders of 85 citizens organizations and related
other
articles and documents.
Leader’s
Letter to House Judiciary
Chairman Lamar Smith
Judicial
Action Group’s Press Release
Judicial
Crisis Network brief: Elena
Kagan, The Justice Who Knew Too Much
Judicial
Watch November 10, 2011
background article
Leaders
of two dozen citizen
organizations are urging the House Judiciary Committee to hold hearings
on the
need for Elena Kagan to recuse herself from the ObamaCare case now
scheduled to
be heard by the Supreme Court. In
a
letter to Judiciary Chairman Lamar
Smith
(full text here), and copied to House Republican Leadership, the group
concludes that “a reasonable person would certainly have sufficient
basis to
question the impartiality of Justice Kagan if she were permitted to
prepare the
defense of a case as an advocate and then switch roles and judge the
defense of
the same case as a justice.”
The
effort is spearheaded by Phillip
Jauregui, President of Judicial Action Group, a Washington based
organization
dedicated to “judicial renewal” by returning “the judiciary to its
proper role
of deciding cases and not legislating from the bench.”
The
letter from the distinguished
group of leaders outlines five essential grievances and questions that
they
feel should be explored regarding the need for Kagan to recuse herself
from the
ObamaCare case, as follows:
During
her Supreme Court Confirmation
hearing, Kagan admitted she was present for “at least one” meeting in
which the
PPACA (ObamaCare) litigation was discussed.
Solicitor
General Kagan made the
unusual, but not unprecedented, decision for The Solicitor General’s
office to
coordinate with the Department of Justice (“DOJ”) while preparing the
earliest
defenses of PPACA rather than following standard practice of waiting
until the
act reached the appellate courts.
Kagan
personally appointed the
over-sight of the PPACA defense to her top deputy – a political
appointee – who
zealously stated his desire to “crush” those challenging the
constitutionality
of PPACA.
Kagan
both received and responded to
emails about the PPACA litigation.
The
Department of Justice now refuses
to produce in whole in response to the aforementioned FOIA requests,
claiming
that such documents are “privileged” under an exemption traditionally
reserved
for those participating in their role as attorneys in a case.
The
final grievance above is in
reference to the DOJ’s continued refusal to provide documents as
originally
requested by Chairman Smith last July such that the Judiciary Committee
might
“properly understand any involvement by Justice Kagan in matters
relating to
health care legislation or litigation while she was Solicitor General.” More than just a stiff-arm
refusal, the DOJ
called the Judiciary Committee’s reasonable request “unseemly.”
Elena
Kagan’s fingerprints and DNA are
all over the White House’s efforts to muscle through passage of
ObamaCare and
anticipate the legal defense of the legislation.
The Leader’s Group raises the obvious
question of how can the same person be both advocate and impartial
jurist on
the same issue. Imagine
for a moment if
the shoe was on the other foot – if we were talking about a
conservative judge
and a conservative issue? Say
Henry
Hyde, the great pro-life champion and author of the Hyde Amendment, was
a
member of the SCOTUS and a pro-life question was before the Court? The liberal media and the
left would be
incensed, animated, and outraged at even a slight consideration that
Hyde might
not recuse himself. Yet,
all we hear
about the obvious need for Kagan to recuse herself from the ObamaCare
case is
silence, and charges that to even raise the question is “unseemly.”
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