Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Jenice Armstrong: Questions for Kagan

AS REPUBLICANS question Elena Kagan's lack of judicial experience, the latest Supreme Court nominee also faces speculation of a more personal nature.
Such as: Why isn't she married? And: Is Kagan a lesbian? One line of questioning is insulting because of the insinuation that there's something wrong with a woman who doesn't marry, but the latter could matter more because of cases that might come before the highest court in the land.
Let me tackle the why-isn't-she-married thing first, since this tired line is a pet peeve of mine that often comes up when a high-profile, single woman is nominated for an important position.
Why is it that no matter what a woman's accomplishments are or how involved in her career she is, a single female past a certain age automatically is regarded with suspicion? Why aren't you married? is the question on people's minds even if some folks don't say it out loud.
It's so predictable that unmarried women come to expect this type of impolite prodding into their intimate lives even from their families around the Thanksgiving dinner table.
But when the discussion is focused on the possible next member of the U.S. Supreme Court, the attorney who would replace retiring Justice John Paul Stevens, you'd think a woman could catch a break for the sake of dignity if nothing else.
I feel differently, though, about the lesbian rumors. I'd be lying if I said I don't really care whether Kagan, who was the first female U.S. solicitor general, is gay, as has been rumored. In fact, I'd secretly be thrilled since it's high time that the U.S. Supreme Court had a gay member. We've come to expect diversity on the nation's highest court and that includes a wider view than simply sex, ethnicity or religious background. It's also about having different lifestyles and sexual orientations represented. Kagan's touted ability to work across ideological lines indicates that she has no trouble brokering diverse opinions.
My only wish is that if Kagan is homosexual, that she would be open about it. While one's sexuality doesn't necessarily color one's world view, I would love to see a proud, self-avowed lesbian on the court who, hopefully, wouldn't shy away from advocating for gay rights.
Much already has been written about her opposition as dean of Harvard Law School to military recruitment on campus because of the military's discriminatory don't-ask-don't-tell policy.
If it turns out that Kagan is gay and closeted, that could potentially make a difference in her legal rulings, too - not to mention being a blow in terms of her personal credibility.
The rumor mill is buzzing with certain bloggers all but declaring Kagan a lesbian, which she hasn't confirmed or denied. A CBS News blog entry last month referred to her as being possibly the first "openly gay justice," but that post was later amended, reportedly at the request of the White House.
"My guess is that if she was [gay], given her status both as the first female dean at Harvard Law and solicitor general, that the fact would be well- known," pointed out Malcolm Lazin, executive director of Philadelphia's Equality Forum, which organizes the city's annual celebration of gay culture.
In the days ahead, we'll find out much more about Kagan, as people pore over her work and analyze her every word. In the end, it will be her respect for the law that matters - not her sexuality. here
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Aquino assembles team for new Philippine govt

Sen. Benigno Aquino III, set to become the next Philippine president based on an almost-complete vote count, began assembling his dream team of Cabinet members Wednesday as he braced to crack down on graft and some of Asia's most violent rebellions.
Aquino — whose father was assassinated while opposing Ferdinand Marcos' dictatorship and whose mother led the 1986 "people power" revolt that restored democracy — was leading Monday's nine-way presidential race with 41.8 percent of votes from about 88.56 percent of the precincts, according to a government-accredited watchdog.
His closest rival, ousted President Joseph Estrada, had 26.5 percent, the group said.
The Commission on Elections stopped updating the media on the result of the presidential race after lawyers of some candidates protested, saying a congressional count scheduled for May 24 could be pre-empted, Elections Commissioner Lucenito Tagle said.
Only Congress can proclaim the winner for president and vice president.
Aquino will inherit a Southeast Asian nation grappling with poverty — a third of about 90 million Filipinos lives on $1 a day — and debilitated by decades-long Marxist and Muslim insurgencies, military unrest, corruption, violent crimes and political strife.
"Our country badly needs this shot in the arm," said Corazon Soliman, the first to accept a Cabinet post from Aquino. "We have been given a second chance to do this right."
Soliman defected, along with several other Cabinet members, from President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo's administration in July 2005 amid a vote-rigging scandal that nearly forced her from power. Soliman and her colleagues have called for Arroyo's resignation and backed Aquino.
A committee will help Aquino form a Cabinet before he takes his oath June 30, selecting people "with integrity, honesty and no track record of corrupt practices," Soliman told The Associated Press.
Aquino announced Tuesday that Soliman accepted his offer to return to the Department of Social Welfare and Development. He repeated a campaign promise to use his first days in the presidency to wage a battle against corruption.
"I will not only not steal, but I'll have the corrupt arrested," Aquino, 50, told reporters in his first comments since Monday's polls. Massive corruption has long dogged the Philippines, tainting electoral politics and skimming billions of public funds in a country already struggling to pay off a huge foreign debt.
Bloated government contracts, epecially those signed in the final six months under Arroyo, "will be reviewed before honored," Soliman said.In a bid to save money, Aquino told The AP that he would avoid foreign trips and trim his Cabinet. During her nine years in power, Arroyo enlarged her Cabinet to more than 40 heads of departments and agencies.Aquino said his government will focus on combating smuggling and cleaning up the notoriously corrupt Bureau of Customs and other revenue-generating agencies.Teresita Deles, who also defected from Arroyo in 2005, said Aquino will immediately reconstitute a peace talks panel negotiating with communist New People's Army rebels, who have been waging a rural-based Marxist rebellion since the late 1960s, and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front, which is fighting for Muslim self-rule in the southern Philippines.
The negotiations have separately stalled under Arroyo.
Aquino campaigned on a strong anti-graft platform and promised to restore integrity to Congress and the judiciary. He told an AP interview last week that he will create a commission to look into allegations against Arroyo, his former economics professor.
Arroyo was accused of vote-rigging in 2004 and implicated in several scandals that led to coup attempts and moves to impeach her. Calls for her prosecution have been an important campaign issue. Nevertheless, she ran for a House seat on Monday, winning with more than 90 percent of the votes in her home province of Pampanga.
Still, Aquino's political appeal largely stems from that of his parents.It was only after former President Corazon Aquino died of cancer last August that her son, a quiet lawmaker and bachelor, decided to run, spurred by the massive outpouring of national grief for the leader who helped oust Marcos in 1986. She had inherited the mantle of her husband, Benigno Aquino Jr., an opposition senator gunned down by soldiers at Manila's airport in 1983 upon return from U.S. exile to challenge Marcos.
"My father's statement that 'the Filipinos are worth dying for,' just recently they were ridiculing that," Aquino said Tuesday, thanking Filipinos for supporting him.
With him as president, Aquino said, "we will finally finish the fight."sunshine
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