anita hill.jpgUPDATE, 1:40p: Vanity Fair is suggesting Obama pick Anita Hill to replace Souter. Funny, I think.
[HT: Matt Lewis]
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These have been gathered from Chattah Box, the Chicago Tribune, Fox News, the New York Times. The list includes men, although most think the new pick will be a woman. I’ve filled in bios where I’ve learned them:

  • Ruben Castillo, US District Court judge for the Northern District of IL…
  • Christine Gregoire, pro-abortion WA governor
  • Jennifer Granholm, rabidly pro-abortion MI governor
  • Elena Kagan, Obama’s new US Solicitor General (who has yet to argue a case), former Harvard (Obama’s alma mater) law professor, former Associate Counsel to Clinton and clerk to SC Justice Thurgood Marshall

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  • Pam Karlan, pro-abortion Stanford law professor, former clerk to SC Chief Justice Harry Blackmun (author of Roe v. Wade decision)
  • Harold Koh, pro-abortion Asian-American Dean of Yale Law School, nominee for legal advisor to State Dept.
  • Margaret McKeown, liberal judge at the infamous 9th US Circuit Court of Appeals, San Francisco
  • Deval Patrick, MA governor
  • Sonia Sotomayor, Hispanic liberal judge at 2nd US Court of Appeals, NY
  • Kathleen Sullivan, former dean of Stanford Law School
  • Cass Sunstein, Harvard law professor
  • Kim Wardlaw, liberal judge at the infamous 9th US Circuit Court of Appeals, San Francisco
  • Diane Pamela Wood, pro-abort liberal 7th US Circuit Court of Appeals judge, Chicago, appointed by Clinton
  • And now this, from Fox News:

    At first glance, with Democrats a hair away from a filibuster-proof majority in the Senate, one would expect President Obama to have no trouble hand-picking a replacement for retiring Supreme Court Justice David Souter.
    But in an ironic twist, PA Sen. Arlen Specter’s switch to the Democratic Party this week could give Republicans on the Senate Judiciary Committee the upper hand in rejecting a nominee they find unacceptable.

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    That’s because the Judiciary Committee, where Specter was the ranking minority member, requires the consent of at least one Republican to end debate and move a nominee to the full Senate for a vote.
    “I think, in narrow terms, it could present a procedural problem at the committee level, unless the Democrats are going to change the rules of the committee midstream,” William Jacobson, a professor of law at Cornell University, told FOXNews.com.
    “Most people presume in a controversial nomination that Arlen Specter would have been the one most likely to vote with Democrats, since he prides himself on being independent of Republicans. But now that he moves over to the Democratic side, the president and Democrats lost their most likely minority vote.”…
    Jacobson believes the most likely Republican to help Democrats on the committee is SC Sen. Lindsey Graham who was one of the Gang of 14, a group of 7 Democrats and 7 Republicans who averted a showdown on President Bush’s judicial nominees in 2005.
    “If Obama were to nominate someone clearly viewed as a political appointee … then I think Lindsey Graham would be subject to pressure,” Jacobson said. “On the other hand, if he were to nominate someone Republicans don’t like but is qualified, like (Solicitor General) Elena Kagan, would Lindsey Graham feel compelled to go along with the gang of 14? I think that is something that remains to be seen.”…
    Democrats aren’t powerless to stop a potential filibuster at the committee level. They could change the rules to allow the committee to vote on the nominee and send a recommendation to the full Senate without Republican consent.
    But Jacobson believes that’s unlikely to happen.
    “The senators, as political as they can be, they have tended to put value on the rules of conduct,” he said. “To change the rules to get a particular nominee confirmed would set a dangerous precedent. I doubt Democrats would want to do that.”
    He added that changing the rules might tick off the unpredictable Specter who has developed a strong respect for tradition.
    “If Democrats were to change the rule to force through a nominee, he might vote with Republicans,” Jacobson said.

    Verrrry interesting.
    Now, recall what sort of justice Obama is looking for, and it’s not an astute interpreter of the Constitution. Roll the tape from 3:55 and hear this, which has absolutely nothing to do with law but with feelings, which is frightening:

    And there the question is what’s in the person’s heart and their gut not just what’s in their head. And what I want are people on the bench who have enough empathy, enough feeling, for what ordinary people are going through….

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