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So far no Republican senator has announced support for Kagan, who received seven GOP votes when she was confirmed as solicitor general last year. McConnell, who teaches law at Stanford University, agreed with Severino that Kagan's stand on military recruiters was a "dreadful decision." But he said that Harvard was like many other major law schools at that time in seeking to bar military recruiters over discrimination against gays. He said the episode was "not a serious black eye." He also said that Kagan will be a safe liberal vote in most cases that divide on ideological grounds. Yet, he said, "As I chat with other center-right law professors, she's got overwhelming affection and support."
He attributed some of that support to Kagan's openness to arguments across the political spectrum. "She's a bit unusual in this respect, particularly at this juncture when not just the Supreme Court but the country basically is divided into two camps that often cannot speak to each other," McConnell said. Kagan, who has known McConnell since their days as law professors at the University of Chicago in the early 1990s, wrote a letter of support for McConnell in 2002 urging Senate Democrats to confirm him. She and Estrada have been friends since they sat next to each other in several law school classes 25 years ago. And Starr held the same job as Kagan, when he was President George H.W. Bush's solicitor general.
[Associated
Press;
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