But that degree of foresight can’t have been at work when she wrote a book review (.pdf) that was published in a 1995 edition of the University of Chicago Law Review. In the process of commenting on Stephen Carter’s book on the sorry state of Supreme Court confirmation hearings, Kagan offered an analysis that lights up like neon now that she herself is a nominee.
At the time she wrote the article, Kagan was a visiting professor at the University of Chicago Law School, following a stint as special counsel for the Senate Judiciary Committee during Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s confirmation hearing.
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