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GUN RIGHTS While working for Marshall, Kagan wrote a memo in which she called on him not to hear a man's appeal of his conviction for having an unlicensed gun. The defendant's "sole contention is that the District of Columbia's firearms statutes violate his constitutional right to
'keep and bear arms,' " Kagan wrote. "I'm not sympathetic." But during her confirmation hearing as solicitor general, Kagan told senators that there "is no question" that the Second Amendment guarantees individuals the right to keep and bear arms. She also said that right "like others in the Constitution, provides strong, although not unlimited, protection against governmental regulation." ___ CAMERAS IN THE COURTROOM Allowing video and audio coverage of the Supreme Court, she said last year, would let people "see an amazing and extraordinary event ... debate of really extraordinary intellectual depth and richness." "I think if you put those cameras in the courtroom, people would say,
'Wow,'" Kagan said at a judicial conference. ___ CAMPAIGN FINANCE As solicitor general, Kagan unsuccessfully argued against a Supreme Court decision upholding the First Amendment rights of corporations and labor unions to spend money on campaign ads. She's likely to tell senators that she was bound to represent her client, the government, regardless of her own views. But when Obama announced Kagan's nomination, he made sure to point out that she chose that campaign finance case as her first to argue before the high court, indicating that Kagan may agree with the president's contention that case was wrongly decided. Specter has said that Kagan has criticized the decision in terms of the principle that the Supreme Court should defer to Congress. While working for Clinton, she and other White House aides wrote: "It is unfortunately true that almost any meaningful campaign finance reform proposal raises constitutional issues and will provoke legal challenge. This is inevitable in light of the Supreme Court's view
-- which we believe to be mistaken in many cases -- that money is speech and that attempts to limit the influence of money on our political system therefore raise First Amendment problems." ___ JUDICIAL CONFIRMATIONS Kagan has criticized the Senate's ability to get Supreme Court nominees to share their opinions on the important legal issues of the day. "When the Senate ceases to engage nominees in meaningful discussion of legal issues, the confirmation process takes on an air of vacuity and farce, and the Senate becomes incapable of either properly evaluating nominees or appropriately educating the public," she said in a book review. Look for a possible backtrack from that view. ___ Online: Senate Judiciary Committee: http://judiciary.senate.gov/
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