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Clinton-Era Records Paint Elena Kagan As 'Pragmatist With Sometimes Unpredictable Views': AP

MARK SHERMAN   06/ 5/10 11:31 PM ET   AP

Elena Kagan Clinton

WASHINGTON — From welfare and assisted suicide to police rights, a few scribbled notes and brief e-mails offer an outline of Supreme Court nominee Elena Kagan as a pragmatist with sometimes unpredictable views on hot-button topics when she was domestic policy adviser to President Bill Clinton.

Discussing the effects of the 1996 welfare reform that Clinton signed into law, Kagan took an unsentimental approach in backing the filing of a legal brief saying that illegal immigrants aren't entitled to routine prenatal care.

"It looks pretty clear to me that the brief is right in saying that the welfare law forbids illegal aliens from receiving Medicaid coverage for non-emergency prenatal care," Kagan wrote in a 1997 e-mail.

A year later, she offered a more compassionate view in commenting on an administration debate about an Oregon law that allows doctors to prescribe fatal drugs to help terminally ill patients commit suicide. Kagan said a proposed federal ban on assisted suicide would be "a fairly terrible idea."

These snippets were among 46,500 pages of Kagan's records that the William J. Clinton Presidential Library in Little Rock, Ark., released Friday in response to a request from the Senate Judiciary Committee. Kagan's confirmation hearing before the committee is scheduled to begin June 28.

In all, the documents offer hints but little definition of President Barack Obama's choice to succeed Justice John Paul Stevens, who led a four-justice liberal bloc on the court. As with many faded or blurry pictures, there's just enough material for people to see what they want.

The White House cautioned against reading the files as an indication of Kagan's views.

"The documents reflect Elena Kagan's efforts to advance President Clinton's well-established policy agenda, and they should not be interpreted as an outline of her personal positions on specific policy issues," said Ben LaBolt, a White House spokesman.

Friday's release, which contained relatively few pages of material written by Kagan, was the first installment of some 160,000 pages the library has identified. Kagan was a domestic policy aide from 1997 to 1999, after spending two years as a lawyer in the White House counsel's office.

The material contained occasional frank assessments of the work of other administration officials, as when Kagan weighed in on internal "discussion points" about a Medicare lawsuit. "These are the most disingenuous 'discussion points' I can imagine. If anyone believes these, I have a bridge to sell. Elena," Kagan wrote to colleagues.

She displayed skepticism about medical uses for marijuana, suggesting that a paper by the Health and Human Services Department needs to "emphasize, more than it does here, that current research doesn't support medical uses of marijuana."

Kagan, and her boss, Bruce Reed, also were deeply involved in Clinton's decision to keep in place a ban on the use of federal money for needle-exchange programs to reduce the spread of HIV. She appears, from notes Reed sent her, to have been charged with drafting the memo that laid out options for the president and recommended the course he eventually chose.

Clinton acknowledged that the programs helped reduce the spread of HIV and did not contribute to drug abuse, yet he declined to lift the funding ban, a decision he later said he regretted. Congress repealed the ban last year and Obama signed it into law.

Kagan showed support for aggressive police work when she suggested in 1997 that the administration file a Supreme Court brief in support of a ruling that allowed police to enter a home without knocking and announcing their presence when they were in pursuit of evidence of illegal drug dealing.

The Supreme Court had previously ruled that police must generally knock and announce before entering a home. The high court said it would review a Wisconsin Supreme Court ruling that laid out a blanket exception to that rule to allow police to go after illegal drugs.

"Do you think it makes sense to ask DOJ to file an amicus brief supporting the decision?" Kagan wrote.

The court unanimously upheld the actions of the police officers in the case at hand but declined to endorse the broad reasoning of the Wisconsin court.

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WASHINGTON — From welfare and assisted suicide to police rights, a few scribbled notes and brief e-mails offer an outline of Supreme Court nominee Elena Kagan as a pragmatist with sometimes unpr...
WASHINGTON — From welfare and assisted suicide to police rights, a few scribbled notes and brief e-mails offer an outline of Supreme Court nominee Elena Kagan as a pragmatist with sometimes unpr...
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COMMUNITY PUNDITS
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GoDogGo 06:46 PM on 06/05/2010
A giant boulder of salt (not grain) should be taken with these: Much of "her opinion" represented here is her arguing on behalf of her "client", not necessarily her own view. As an attorney, it is her job to vigorously argue a position on her clients' behalf, regardless of her own personal view. It would be like saying that since a defense attorney argued his client is innocent he must believe that to be  Read More...
07:07 PM on 06/13/2010
Here's a timeline of Elena Kagan's life that I puled together (http://timelines.com/topics/elena-kagan). It will be interesting to see if Kagan gets confirmed by Senate...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
j0hnwi11iams
Liberal Computer Engineer
07:08 PM on 06/07/2010
A pragmatist is someone who considers the consequences of their decisions rather than acting out of ideological purity. It's about time. The narrow minded conservatives think there is only one way to interpret the constitution.
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Wolfwoman
11:12 AM on 06/07/2010
"Unpredictable" is whose judgment? Surely it is not a bad thing to not always have only an expected position.
09:29 AM on 06/07/2010
I found Kegan's college photo.....ha ha ha.

http://media.photobucket.com/image/the%20pit%20of%20despair/cajunvegan/pit.jpg
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rakrobn
09:10 AM on 06/07/2010
Not shocked at all that we have no idea what her views are. That's the type of judge Obama wants, the "centrist" type. For those Obama apologists who will screech in response to this, hold your horses, I'm a liberal.
09:28 AM on 06/07/2010
I'm afraid that centrism is the "new left" as this counry swings wildly rightward......
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Matt Osborne
11:22 AM on 06/07/2010
This SCOTUS pick isn't going to swing the court anyway. He'll have to await the retirement or death of a conservative judge to get that opportunity.
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Pandaforum
01:00 AM on 06/07/2010
pragmatist is the new euphemism for marxist. it was the same when the liberals rebranded themselves as progressives.
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easterncharacter
12:21 AM on 06/07/2010
This is troubling, Kagan seems to have an authoritarian outlook
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Wolfwoman
11:14 AM on 06/07/2010
She does have quite a lot of legal authority. But looks can be deceiving and not a sole definition of a person.
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infodoc1
Remove corporate bribery from government
12:15 AM on 06/07/2010
I was hoping that she would have a more enlightened position regarding medical marijuana, then again, I suppose you don't get to be in her position without a lifetime of hyper-obedience.
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08:25 AM on 06/07/2010
maybe she just doesn't agree and she never will. sad.
11:55 PM on 06/06/2010
The court is already right-leaning, she is going to move it more to the right. I wouldn't have a problem with her if she was replacing someone like Scalia but she's replacing Stevens. So much for balance. So disappointed with this pick, especially since she would be on the court for life and have the chance to shape the court. The last thing we need right now is someone who is basically one big question mark.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
fireW
Don't believe everything you think.
01:34 AM on 06/07/2010
And the cons holler & bawl about judges "legislating" from the bench. They're not bothered by a considerable right-leaning SCOTUS doing it's worst to unravel this so-called democracy (e.g. 2000 election). The cons should be pleased that the court would, in actual fact, become even more unbalanced. You are right to point out this concern.
10:58 PM on 06/06/2010
With a 5-4 Supreme Court why should democrats supports someone who they are not sure about?

This reading of the tea leaves approach to divine her positions on the issues does not inspire confidence that this woman should have a job for life in the most powerful court in the land.

Kegan is the wrong pick and should be withdrawn!
10:25 PM on 06/06/2010
Pragmatic=which is code for center-right like Obama. God help us. No one to balance out Scalia, Thomas, Alito and Roberts. Republicans and Blue-Dogs should be trilled, more often than not she's be more favorable to them than any liberal or progressive
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libwingoflibwing
Leftist Christian, Non-Violent Revolutionary
09:57 PM on 06/06/2010
Kagan is one more reason I despair.

Others:

BP destroys the Oceans right after Obama agreed with Palin that we should drill, baby, drill.

Israel murders an American Citizen and Obama keeps the U.N. from really even condemning it.

The Supreme Court waters down Miranda even more, with Kagan arguing on behalf of Obama that is a good idea.

The D.C. insiders meet in an Obama commission to decide how to cut Social Security.

U.S. special forces carry out secret missions in Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia and Paraguay. What are they? Who knows. Well, Obama does.

Brazil and Turkey convince Iran to get rid of lots of its nuclear material, greatly reducing the possibility Iran will build a nuclear weapon. Obama lashes out at Turkey and Brazil.

I'm not quitting the Democratic Party. I'm starting to organize so my legislative district sends no Obama delegates to the Congressional Caucus in '12. They'll have to kick me out of the party.
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Wolfwoman
11:16 AM on 06/07/2010
Why does Kagan make you desperate?
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libwingoflibwing
Leftist Christian, Non-Violent Revolutionary
09:44 PM on 06/07/2010
Not desperate. Despair.

Read some of my comments in this thread to get an idea. Briefly, she's a Corporatist Clintonista who supports the unitary executive theory, supports indefinite detention of anyone we say is a terrorist without a trial, and thinks gutting Miranda is a good idea.
09:10 PM on 06/06/2010
Thumbs down on Kagan. If she is so stupid on medical marijuana there really is no hope she can grasp much. Plus just as Obama has been huge disappointment his best buddy here from Harvard with no experience like Obama had no experience will cost us dearly beyond a Presidental term.
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daylyly
09:00 PM on 06/06/2010
I think what she wrote on prenatal care for immigrants shows that she sees what the law says already. She is not likely to be an activist judge.
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08:51 PM on 06/06/2010
she is a friend of Obama. Period. That is why she was nominated
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08:27 AM on 06/07/2010
yup