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BREAKING: Obama Nominates Former Harvard Law School Dean Kagan To Supreme Court

Alan C. Chiu

President Obama is said to be preparing to nominate former Harvard Law School Dean Elena Kagan to replace retiring Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens.

Updated 10:39 a.m.

Former Dean of Harvard Law School and Solicitor General Elena Kagan has been nominated to replace Justice John Paul Stevens on the Supreme Court by President Barack Obama this morning.

Obama announced his appointment at 10 a.m. this morning with Kagan by his side.

Kagan, who is 50 years old, would be the youngest Justice on the Court. She would also be the first Justice since William H. Rehnquist without any prior judicial experience.

Kagan clerked for Justice Thurgood Marshall, who previously served as Solicitor General.

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Law School Professor Mark V. Tushnet ’67, who also clerked for Marshall, noted that experience as Solicitor General will have exposed Kagan to a wide variety of legal issues.

Kagan is considered a relative moderate, but is expected to be challenged by Republicans for her opposition to military recruiting at the Law School in response to “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell.” The Law School no longer bans military recruiting on its campus.

But speaking yesterday before the announcement was made, Law School Professor Alan Dershowitz said that the recruitment issue was “very center to moderate” and that he does not believe that it will bar her from the Court.

“She is a very strong person and she is a strong advocate,” said Professor William P. Alford before the announcement was made.

Kagan was confirmed as Solicitor General in 2009 by a vote of 61-31 in the Senate.

At the Law School, Kagan was known for bridging gaps between liberals and conservatives.

“I think she was appreciated by the faculty of the right, the center, and the left,” Dershowitz said.

“I think she would be a welcome presence on the Supreme Court.”

If confirmed, Kagan, who is Jewish, will replace the Court’s only Protestant, and the court will be made up of six Catholics and three Jews.

But Dershowitz said he did not think religion would figure in her potential confirmation. “It’s long past the time that we will care about religion,” Dershowitz said. “That’s an issue of the 20th century.”

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