Wondering How Justice Elena Kagan Will Vote On Obamacare?
Think She Should Recuse?
Think She Will?
By Dell Hill via CNS
Now
that you’re done laughing, check out the investigation done by CNSNews
regarding Justice Kagan’s direct involvement with Obamacare.
Then-Solicitor
General Elena Kagan appearing in the Senate Judiciary Committee in June
2010 during a confirmation hearing for her nomination to the Supreme
Court. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)
(CNSNews.com)
- On Sunday, March 21, 2010, the day the House of Representatives
passed President Barack Obama’s Patient Protection and Affordable Care
Act, then-Solicitor General Elena Kagan and famed Supreme Court
litigator and Harvard Law Prof. Laurence Tribe, who was then serving in
the Justice Department, had an email exchange
in which they discussed the pending health-care vote, according to
documents the Department of Justice released late Wednesday to the Media
Research Center, CNSNews.com's parent organization, and to Judicial
Watch.
“I hear they have the votes, Larry!! Simply amazing,” Kagan said to Tribe in one of the emails.
The
Justice Department released a new batch of emails on Wednesday evening
as its latest response to Freedom of Information Act requests filed by
CNSNews.com and Judicial Watch. Both organizations filed federal
lawsuits against DOJ after the department did not initially respond to
the requests. CNSNews.com originally filed its FOIA request on May 25,
2010--before Elena Kagan's June 2010 Supreme Court confirmation
hearings.
The
March 2010 email exchange between Kagan and Tribe raises new questions
about whether Kagan must recuse herself from judging cases involving the
health-care law that Obama signed--and which became the target of legal
challenges--while Kagan was serving as Obama's solicitor general and
was responsible for defending his administration’s positions in court
disputes.
According
to 28 USC 455, a Supreme Court justice must recuse from “any proceeding
in which his impartiality might reasonably be questioned.” The law also
says a justice must recuse anytime he has “expressed an opinion
concerning the merits of the particular case in controversy” while he
“served in governmental employment.”
In
response to questions from CNSNews.com, Prof. Tribe said on Thursday
that other than the references in his email exchange with Kagan on March
21, 2010, he never had any communications with Elena Kagan while she
was solicitor general relating to pending or enacted health-care
legislation or actual or anticipated health-care related litigation.
Tribe also said he sees no reason to believe 28 USC 455 would require
Kagan’s recusal from cases involving PPACA.
The
March 21, 2010 email exchange between Kagan and Tribe was started by
Tribe who addressed an email to Kagan at her Justice Department email
account. Tribe also copied this message to another individual, whose
name has been redacted from the version of the document DOJ released to the MRC.
The
subject line on Tribe’s email reads: “fingers and toes crossed
today!”—an apparent reference to the unusual Sunday vote on the
health-care bill that would occur later that day in the House. In the
email, Tribe reminded Kagan of a dinner meeting they had to postpone and
suggested they reschedule it.
Kagan
responded to the message in a return email that is addressed solely to
Tribe. The subject line on this Kagan-to-Tribe email is: “Re: fingers
and toes crossed today!”
Kagan
punctuated the first sentence of this email to Tribe with two
exclamation marks: “I hear they have the votes, Larry!! Simply amazing.”
She
then proposed they reschedule their dinner meeting sometime after March
31: “Let’s go wherever you want: I think you mentioned a place in the
Mandarin, which would be great. Give me any dates you want after March
31.” Kagan then mentions another person (whose name is redacted) who
“expressed an interest in joining as well.”
Tribe
responded by return email, carbon copying an individual or individuals
whose names have been redacted by the Justice Department. This message
was sent at 5:06 p.m.
“So
health care is basically done!” Tribe wrote to Kagan in this message.
“Remarkable. And with the Stupak group accepting the magic of what
amounts to a signing statement on steroids!”
The
“Stupak group” is a reference to then-Rep. Bart Stupak (D-Mich.), who
led a group of House Democrats who had indicated they would not vote for
the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act if it permitted federal
funds to pay for abortions. Stupak and his allies decided to vote for
the bill, even though no additional language would be added to it
prohibiting abortion funding, after President Obama agreed to sign an
executive order the administration said would prevent federal funding
from going to abortions.
Tribe’s
email then goes on to discuss the proposed dinner. “Re dinner, I now
remember the place you’d suggested back in December: Founding Farmers. I
still like the name and don’t recall why I’d thought the place in the
Mandarin would be worth trying. So how about our going to Founding
Farmers with you and [name redacted]?”
The
next email, marked as sent at 11:00 p.m. (23:00:58) is from someone
whose name is redacted. This person says he or she “would be available
on April 7 or 13.”
At
11:04 p.m., Elena Kagan sends an email to herself Tribe, an assistant
at the Justice Department and someone whose name is redacted. “I can do
April 12,” she said.
That
same day—March 21, 2010—as PPACA was passing the House, Kagan had a
separate email exchange with her top deputy Neal Katyal.
This
email chain started At 6:11 p.m., when associate Attorney General Tom
Perrelli sent a message to a group of DOJ lawyers, including Katyal,
notifying them that there was going to be a meeting the next day to plan
for the litigation expected to challenge PPACA. DOJ released this email
to the Media Research Center earlier this year, after MRC sued seeking
to force DOJ to comply with CNSNews.com FOIA request seeking documents
related to Kagan and the issue of recusal and related to health-care
legislation and litigation.
The subject line on the of Perrelli’s 6:11 p.m email was: “Health care litigation meeting.”
“It
sounds like we can meet with some of the health care policy team
tomorrow at 4 to help us prepare for litigation,” Perelli wrote in this
email. “It has to be over there. Can folks send me the waves info (full
name, SSN, DOB) of everyone that should attend as soon as possible? WH
wants it tonight, if possible. I know we won’t get everyone’s in
tonight.
“Also,”
Perrelli continued, “we need to think about the key issues/question for
the agenda. [Language redacted] tops my list, but I know there are
others.”
At
6:18, Katyal forwarded this email to Kagan. “This is the first I’ve
heard of this,” Katyal told Kagan. “I think you should go, no? I will,
regardless, but feel like this is litigation of singular importance.”
One minute later—at 6:19 p.m.—Kagan responded to Katyal: “What’s your phone number?”
Three minutes after that, Katyal sent Kagan his phone number and the email chain ended.
On Wednesday, Nov. 10, 2011, CNSNews.com sent Prof. Larry Tribe the PDF
the Justice Department had provided to the Media Research Center with
the email exchange that Tribe had had with Kagan when they were both
serving in the Justice Department on March 21, 2010.
CNSNews.com
asked Tribe five questions, which he answered in writing. Here are
CNSNews.com’s questions with Prof. Tribe’s responses:
CNSNews.com:
“Did you ever verbally mention or discuss pending or enacted
health-care legislation, or actual or anticipated health-care related
litigation, with Elena Kagan when she was solicitor general or does this
March 21, 2010 email exchange represent the entirety of your
communications to her on those matters during her tenure in that
office?”
Tribe:
“No. I never ‘mention[ed] or discuss[ed] pending or enacted health-care
legislation, or actual or anticipated health-care related litigation,
with Elena Kagan when she was solicitor general,’ and ‘this March 21,
2010 email exchange represent[s] the entirety of [my] communications to
her on those matters during her tenure in that office.’”
CNSNews.com:
“Did she ever verbally mention or discuss pending or enacted
health-care legislation, or actual or anticipated health-care related
litigation, with you when she was solicitor general or does this March
21, 2010 email exchange represent the entirety of her communications to
you on those matters during her tenure in that office?”
Tribe:
“No. Elena Kagan never ‘mention[ed] or discuss[ed] pending or enacted
health-care legislation, or actual or anticipated health-care related
litigation, with [me] when she was solicitor general,’ and ‘this March
21, 2010 email exchange represent[s] the entirety of her communications
to [me] on those matters during her tenure in that office.’”
CNSNews.com:
“If you did verbally mention or discuss pending or enacted health-care
legislation, or actual or anticipated health-care related litigation,
with Elena Kagan when she was solicitor general, what specifically did
you say and what specifically did she say?”
Tribe:
“Not applicable. We had no other exchanges on those matters, and the
emails in question focused on a dinner engagement we were trying to set
up.”
CNSNews.com:
“If she did verbally mention or discuss pending or enacted health-care
legislation, or actual or anticipated health-care related litigation,
with you when she was solicitor general, what specifically did she say
and what specifically did you say?”
Tribe: “Not applicable. See answer to Question 3.”
CNSNews.com:
“Do you believe any of the provisions of 28 USC 455 require Justice
Elena Kagan to recuse herself from cases involving the Patient
Protection and Affordable Care Act?”
Tribe:
“No. I do not have any reason to believe that any of the provisions of
28 USC 455 require Justice Elena Kagan to recuse herself from cases
involving the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act.”
On
July 13, 2010, during her confirmation process, the Republicans on the
Senate Judiciary Committee sent Kagan a letter asking her a series of
questions probing her possible involvement in health care legislation or
litigation during her time as solicitor general. The senators asked:
“Have you ever been asked about your opinion regarding the underlying
legal or constitutional issues related to any proposed health care
legislation, including but not limited to Pub. L. No. 111-148, or the
underlying legal or constitutional issues related to potential
litigation resulting from such legislation?”
The
sentors also asked Kagan: “Have you ever offered any views or comments
regarding the underlying legal or constitutional issues related to any
proposed health care legislation, including but not limited to Pub. L.
No. 111-148, or the underlying legal or constitutional issues related to
potential litigation resulting from such legislation?”
Kagan’s written response to both questions was: “No.”
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