46
46
Jul 19, 2015
07/15
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CSPAN2
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prior to justice kennedy o'connor the nominee hearings were described as a free-for-all. senators may or may not show up to ask questions. the only people who witnessed what went on to the orders to shut up to take notes and write a story the next day. by at march, people knew what was going on unless they went and read the transcripts. that changed with sandra day o'connor and all of them since then have been televised. they gave senators a nationwide audience to ask questions and they could then speak to their constituents interests with those questions. what that did was give them a platform for picking issues and speak to those issues as well and senators by and large when television comes to play it becomes near perfect. they all want to ask questions. they all want the camera time. there are several examples that make the study of this memorable. thurgood marshall was a good example of a hearing and an outlier in a sense he was asked a tremendously large number of question relative to those nominees around him and by and large what my co-author and i like to say the
prior to justice kennedy o'connor the nominee hearings were described as a free-for-all. senators may or may not show up to ask questions. the only people who witnessed what went on to the orders to shut up to take notes and write a story the next day. by at march, people knew what was going on unless they went and read the transcripts. that changed with sandra day o'connor and all of them since then have been televised. they gave senators a nationwide audience to ask questions and they could...
27
27
Jul 10, 2015
07/15
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CSPAN2
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eye 27
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o'connor and kennedy did not join it. we refer to the most specific level at which are relevant tradition protecting or and i am protection to the right can be identified. obviously to get you would have had to have a very specific tradition of same-sex marriage. in washington versus bloomsburg the physician-assisted suicide case which kind of set the standard. and it emphasized how important it is to tie it to the political practice to make sure that due process can be steadily transformed. and they said there are two primary features of the analysis, the due process clause specifically protects fundamental rights and liberties which are deeply rooted in the nation's history and tradition and implicit. this took a this took a big step back. however you pronounce it the case took a big step back. this is not unusual for kennedy opinions. he does opinions. it does not explicitly overrule. frequently they would ignore conflict or try to paint them as consistent with the prior case law. but law. but here they said sometimes
o'connor and kennedy did not join it. we refer to the most specific level at which are relevant tradition protecting or and i am protection to the right can be identified. obviously to get you would have had to have a very specific tradition of same-sex marriage. in washington versus bloomsburg the physician-assisted suicide case which kind of set the standard. and it emphasized how important it is to tie it to the political practice to make sure that due process can be steadily transformed....
73
73
Jul 18, 2015
07/15
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FBC
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eye 73
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[laughter] kennedy: even more questionable ethics. coming up next, sinead o'connor.hing compares to this panel and they will be back. later on. >> for no particular reason i decided to go for a little run. so i ran to the end of the road and when i got there, i thought maybe i would run more. kennedy: i will talk to someone from the heartland of america. how long did forrest gump run for? we have that next. the answer and the realize ♪ i built my business with passion. but i keep it growing by making every dollar count. that's why i have the spark cash card from capital one. i earn unlimited 2% cash back on everything i buy for my studio. ♪ and that unlimited 2% cash back from spark means thousands of dollars each year going back into my business... that's huge for my bottom line. what's in your wallet? to breathe with copd?ow hard it can be it can feel like this. copd includes chronic bronchitis and emphysema. spiriva is a once-daily inhaled copd maintenance treatment that helps open my airways for a full 24 hours. spiriva helps me breathe easier. spiriva respimat d
[laughter] kennedy: even more questionable ethics. coming up next, sinead o'connor.hing compares to this panel and they will be back. later on. >> for no particular reason i decided to go for a little run. so i ran to the end of the road and when i got there, i thought maybe i would run more. kennedy: i will talk to someone from the heartland of america. how long did forrest gump run for? we have that next. the answer and the realize ♪ i built my business with passion. but i keep it...
83
83
Jul 16, 2015
07/15
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FBC
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eye 83
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[laughter] kennedy: even more questionable ethics. coming up next, sinead o'connor.hing compares to this panel and they will be back. later on. >> for no particular reason i decided to go for a little run. so i ran to the end of the road and when i got there, i thought maybe i would run more. kennedy: i will talk to someone from the heartland of america. how long did forrest gump run for? we have that next. the answer and the realize forrest gump is coming up a little bit later kennedy: hello, welcome back. the rolling stone latest cover featuring kim kardashian's best assets. take a look at those white preservers from her top half. and sinead o'connor announcing that she took from facebook to her undisclosed location. this is sure to fly off the shelves and it has as much to do with it music as will rollingstone inviting controversy with their covers. coming up next we have more. here is our party chemo. >> well, i think that she has been consistent. but that has gone to making her a cranky middle-aged person. and she started off and now she's onto something else. a
[laughter] kennedy: even more questionable ethics. coming up next, sinead o'connor.hing compares to this panel and they will be back. later on. >> for no particular reason i decided to go for a little run. so i ran to the end of the road and when i got there, i thought maybe i would run more. kennedy: i will talk to someone from the heartland of america. how long did forrest gump run for? we have that next. the answer and the realize forrest gump is coming up a little bit later kennedy:...
59
59
Jul 15, 2015
07/15
by
CSPAN3
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eye 59
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kennedy i'm sure he feels like this is you know, moored enough. he's not worried about what this will be used for. justice o'connor, famously a fan of lucy goosy standards has not been happy with what has happened with the application of her lucy goosy standards and she left the court. justice kennedy i don't say this through any insider information but just my reaction to what he's written in cases has been displeased with the casey standard and its application that it was applied more liberally than he would have liked when he was working on that joint opinion in that case. so, it's a very interesting opinion. i think that it is significant and the future will be less for its immediate holding because the same-sex marriage advocates had the wind at their backs previously. >> you might want to add anything to that? >> well i would just say a couple of things. i don't know it may not be a coincidence that i'm on the left end of the panel. i do think it sort of -- i totally agree with john that i think the treatment of gluxberg and the paragraph you read are the important parts of the opinion. i think the boldest s
kennedy i'm sure he feels like this is you know, moored enough. he's not worried about what this will be used for. justice o'connor, famously a fan of lucy goosy standards has not been happy with what has happened with the application of her lucy goosy standards and she left the court. justice kennedy i don't say this through any insider information but just my reaction to what he's written in cases has been displeased with the casey standard and its application that it was applied more...
38
38
Jul 14, 2015
07/15
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CSPAN2
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eye 38
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interesting to see what happens even though justice kennedy feels it is more than enough he is not worried what this would be used for. justice o'connor a fan of the lucy doozies standards has not been happy for the application and i think justice kennedy just my reaction to what he has written in cases was displeased with the application was applied more liberally than he would have liked when he was working on that joint opinion in that case. it is a very interesting opinion with the significance of the media holding in the implication for the process going forward. >> i would gsa a couple of things. and may not be a coincidence i am on the left of the panel. [laughter] i do think i totally agree the treatment in space he read is important parts of the opinion and the boldest step justice kennedy has taken in that direction but what is interesting is in that paragraph and the parts that preceded it, he does try to rouge that it regionalism and it has amplified it in the world of scholarship. what was the original intent ? that what were the framers views of t
interesting to see what happens even though justice kennedy feels it is more than enough he is not worried what this would be used for. justice o'connor a fan of the lucy doozies standards has not been happy for the application and i think justice kennedy just my reaction to what he has written in cases was displeased with the application was applied more liberally than he would have liked when he was working on that joint opinion in that case. it is a very interesting opinion with the...
44
44
Jul 4, 2015
07/15
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eye 44
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she is the author of biographies of justices kennedy, scalia and friends as they o'connor. -- france's day o'conncis day o'connor. this year, she was a finalist for the pulitzer prize in explanatory journalism. i will ask her to tell us about that later. on her left is robert barnes who joined the washington post as a reporter in 1987. since then, he has been deputy national editor, national political editor and the metropolitan editor, but he decided to return to reporting in 2000 five and began covering the supreme court in he realized he did not need three years in law school to not practice law. [laughter] >> on my far right adam, who took over the new york times supreme court beat seven years ago, but he has a much longer history with the times when she first joined as a copy boy in 1984 after graduating from college. he then went back for a law degree in. in 1988 in 1992, joined the legal department advising the paper and representing it in litigation. a decade later, he became a reporter covering legal issues. his work has also appeared in the new yorker, vanity fair, rolling st
she is the author of biographies of justices kennedy, scalia and friends as they o'connor. -- france's day o'conncis day o'connor. this year, she was a finalist for the pulitzer prize in explanatory journalism. i will ask her to tell us about that later. on her left is robert barnes who joined the washington post as a reporter in 1987. since then, he has been deputy national editor, national political editor and the metropolitan editor, but he decided to return to reporting in 2000 five and...