Kagan's foreign law trumps
con-law
The disturbing 'transnationalist' perspective of Obama's
nominee
WashingtonTimes.com
Solicitor General Elena Kagan's nomination to the Supreme Court should
founder unless she adequately explains why she quite literally put
"International/ Comparative Law" ahead of the U.S. Constitution. Senators
should question Ms. Kagan in great depth about her views on the
applicability of foreign law in American courts.
Increasing references to international laws and norms in American courts
have become controversial in recent years, and deservedly so. During the
confirmation hearings for new Justice Sonia Sotomayor, Ms. Sotomayor tried
to weasel away from past support for judges using the "ideas" of foreign
law, and she made a rather categorical statement: "Foreign law cannot be
used as a holding or a precedent, or to bind or to influence the outcome of
a legal decision interpreting the Constitution or American law."
That's right: She said foreign law should not even "influence" a U.S.
court decision. That statement is correct, even if Justice Sotomayor's
actual record doesn't support it. Ms. Kagan should be held to the standard
set by Justice Sotomayor's testimony.
The available evidence suggests that Ms. Kagan's views don't comport with
that judicial principle. The first clue came during her confirmation
hearings for her current position of solicitor general. Here's what she
said: "At least some members of the court find foreign law relevant in at
least some contexts. When this is the case, I think the solicitor general's
office should offer reasonable foreign law arguments to attract these
justices' support for the positions that the office is taking."
Well, no. Even to win a case, it is wrong to argue in favor of something
on which it would be wrong to decide. Rather than playing into misguided
prejudices of current justices, the solicitor general should argue her
position based on the Constitution and laws of our own land, regardless.
The increasingly influential law-and-policy organization Americans United
for Life, meanwhile, has raised several other red flags with regard to Ms.
Kagan's views on the relative weight of foreign law and the U.S.
Constitution. It was under Ms. Kagan's leadership while dean of Harvard Law
School, for instance, that Harvard dropped constitutional law as a required
course for graduation, while adding a requirement for a course in
"International/Comparative Law." The de-emphasis on the Constitution itself
is part of a horribly misguided trend in liberal academia. To replace
con-law with international law is symbolic of a mindset that runs far afield
from the basics of American legal tradition.
In a New Hampshire speech on Oct. 6, 2008, then-Dean Kagan referred to "a
transnational perspective" as being "foundational" as "part of the core of
legal thought and activity in this new century." The academic jargon is
instructive: "Transnationalism" is, in the words of radical State Department
counsel Harold Koh, the idea that "domestic courts must play a key role in
coordinating U.S. domestic constitutional rules with rules of foreign and
international law." Another key supporter of transnationalism goes so far as
to argue that "international law is supreme over domestic law."
Senators must ask Ms. Kagan if that is what she means by "transnationalism"
being "part of the core" of modern legal thought. If it is, or if it is
anything close to it, then she should not be confirmed.
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