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She did call recent Supreme Court rulings upholding gun rights "binding precedent." She said the court's rulings require that in any law regulating abortion "the woman's life and the woman's health have to be protected." She said a 5-4 decision this year that corporations and unions were free to spend their own money on political activity was "settled law." A master of the deadpan quip, Kagan used humor to disarm some senators. She told the notoriously cranky Sen. Arlen Specter, D-Pa., that allowing television in the Supreme Court
-- something Specter objects to -- would mean "I'd have to get my hair done more often." That got a smile. "You have shown a really admirable sense of humor, and I think that is really important," Specter said. Kagan later endorsed a friend for a federal judgeship and maybe even a Supreme Court slot someday
-- despite the fact that Democrats filibustered his nomination to the federal bench by President George W. Bush. Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., called Miguel Estrada's not being a judge "one of the great tragedies for the country" and asked Kagan whether Estrada was qualified. "He's qualified to sit as an appellate judge. He's qualified to sit as a Supreme Court justice," said Kagan, who attended Harvard Law School with Estrada. That answer clearly surprised Graham, who asked Kagan to put it in writing. She agreed. "Well, your stock really went up with me," Graham said.
[Associated
Press;
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