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"Those are all code words for an activist judge, who is going to, you know, be partisan on the bench," Hatch said. "We all know he's going to pick a more liberal justice. Their side will make sure that it's a pro-abortion justice. I don't think anybody has any illusions about that," he said. "The question is,
Are they qualified? Are they going to be people who will be fair to the rich, the poor, the weak, the strong, the sick, the disabled." Sen. Richard Shelby, an Alabama Republican who is not on the committee, said empathy should be only part of the criteria for a nominee and that a justice should follow the law, not make it. "But if he will appoint a pragmatist, someone who is not an ideologue ... I think that would be good for the country," Shelby said.
Although Shelby noted that Obama voted against the two most recent nominees to the court -- Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Samuel Alito, both conservatives picked by then-President George W. Bush -- he said he would not seek "payback" in considering Obama's nominee. Shelby spoke on CNN's "State of the Union" while Leahy and Hatch appeared on ABC's "This Week." Specter spoke on CBS' "Face the Nation."
[Associated
Press;
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