Guess Who Will Receive the Presidential Medal of Freedom?
How a Black Man Reacted When a White Pro-Hamas Supporter Told Him He...
Why Pierre Poilievre Got Ejected from the Canadian House of Commons This Week
Top Biden DOJ Official Busted for Lying About Past Arrest
Can the Current Universities Be Saved?
Joe Biden, Dearborn Shahid, Commits Political Suicide via Hamas Appeasement
The Public Doesn't Trust the 'Democracy-Saving' Media
Radical Leftists Claim Oil Companies Are Committing Climate Murder
Oh Look: A New, Ludicrous 'Demand' From the Spoiled Brats at Columbia
JD Vance Schools CNN on 'Bogus' Case Against Trump
Inflation Reduction Act's Dirty Little Secret: Largest Premium Increase Ever for Medicare...
Biden Administration Continues to Misdiagnose and Mistreat the Violent Crime Problem
Democrat Unity on Border Crisis Showing Signs of Cracking
Did the House of Representatives Just Outlaw Quoting Parts of the New Testament?
Blinken, the Terminator
Tipsheet

Elena Kagan's Paper Trail

Byron York rightly points out that Elena Kagan does have a paper trail from her tenure as a lawyer in the Clinton White House.  If Democrats in the Senate or The White House stonewall efforts at full disclosure of Kagan's record, it's eminently fair for the rest of the country to wonder what they're trying to hide.
Advertisement


In addition, one other paper trail that might illumine Kagan's intellectual development awaits anyone willing to head up to Princeton to examine the archives of the The Daily Princetonian, where Kagan served as Editorial Chairman (some years before I held the same post).  Here is one article from the Prince that suggests that careful perusal of those records might be of interest to any journalist located in the northeast with a curious turn of mind (online archives begin only in 1998, but there are bound copies of the Prince from many, many years gone by).

Did Elena Kagan have a weekly column in the paper?  That might be of interest -- as would the "staff editorials" frequently penned by the editorial chairman (as part of a collaborative effort with the rest of the paper's leadership team).

Obviously, people's thinking evolves over time, and obtaining the more recent records of Kagan's White House tenure is more important.  But earlier writings might help us understand why someone as far left as Barack Obama is willing to take a chance on a nominee like Kagan, who has had so little to say, publicly, about her views -- at least in recent years.  At the very least, they  might help Americans come to an informed decision about whether Kagan's thesis (about the history of socialism) was part of an integrated political commitment, or just an intellectual interest (as her thesis adviser insists in the linked article).
Advertisement



Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement