Wednesday round-up

For all round-up coverage of Elena Kagan since her nomination, see our collection of past links on SCOTUSwiki. Staff picks are marked by asterisks.

As journalists and commentators continue to mull over recent action at the Court, a letter of support from sixty-nine law school deans emerged as the latest development in Elena Kagan’s nomination and confirmation proceedings. The letter, addressed to the ranking Democrat and Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee, describes Kagan as someone who “excels along all relevant dimensions desired in a Supreme Court Justice.” The group of deans, led by Stanford’s Larry Kramer, represents over a third of the country’s law school deans. The Washington Post, CNN, the Christian Science Monitor, the New York Times’s The Caucus blog, and the Associated Press (via the Washington Post) all have coverage of the letter. Meanwhile, the Washington Independent has a video from an Aspen Institute panel evaluating Kagan’s chances of confirmation and what viewers can expect from her confirmation hearings. SCOTUSblog has also started a series of “issue briefings” that will analyze the issues most likely to attract significant attention during the hearings.

The gradually emerging debate over Justice Souter’s Harvard commencement address has drawn in a few more participants. At the Volokh Conspiracy, David Bernstein examines the social and political context of Plessy v. Ferguson and contends that “Souter’s history of the case is off.” And in an op-ed for USA Today, David Rivkin and Lee Casey write that “Souter’s candor [in the speech] is commendable but also genuinely troubling—the practical equivalent of a retired cardinal announcing that religion is an opiate for the masses.” Rivkin and Casey look to Plessy themselves to make the point that “bad constitutional decisions, far from being the result of the Constitution’s frailty, are caused by the frailties of judges who depart from it.”

Briefly:

Posted in: Round-up

CLICK HERE FOR FULL VERSION OF THIS STORY