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Political leaders bid farewell to West Virginia’s favorite son
Charleston, West Virginia (CNN) — He was raised an orphan of the West Virginia coal mines years before the Great Depression.
On Friday — as his body made a final return to the state he loved — Sen. Robert C. Byrd was remembered as a political titan, champion of the poor, and defender of the Constitution.
Political leaders from both parties and every corner of the country came together at the start of the Independence Day weekend to pay homage to America’s longest serving member of Congress, who died Monday at the age of 92.
President Barack Obama, former President Bill Clinton, Vice President Joe Biden, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell were among the mourners who gathered at a memorial service in Charleston for the veteran legislator.
Byrd was “somebody who knew how to keep the faith with his state, with his family, with his country and his Constitution,” Obama said, standing before a packed, sun-splashed state capitol. “His life bent towards justice … (and) immeasurably improved the lives of West Virginians.”
Video: Pres. Obama: Byrd a ‘Senate icon’
Video: Sen. Robert Byrd remembered
He “possessed that quintessential American quality,” Obama said. “And that is a capacity to change, a capacity to learn … and a capacity to be made more perfect.”
Victoria Kennedy, the widow of Massachusetts Sen. Ted Kennedy, said her husband considered him “a modern incarnation of ancient virtues. A Roman of West Virginia.”
“Someone will take Robert Byrd’s seat,” she said. “But no one will ever take his place.”
Byrd, who first entered Congress at the end of the Truman administration, was known as a master of the Senate’s arcane rules and a staunch defender of congressional power.
His speeches often were laced with poetry and references to the Greek and Roman classics. He typically punctuated his remarks by the brandishing of a well-worn pocket copy of the Constitution.
Over the course of his long public career, Byrd came to be “seen as the very embodiment of the Senate,” Obama said. But “his passion for the Senate’s past … was not an obsession with the trivial or the obscure.” It was born of a recognition of the fact that “we are not a nation of men. We are a nation of laws.”
Byrd also was known as the “King of Pork,” using powerful positions in Congress to steer federal spending to his home state — one of the nation’s poorest. Much of that funding famously went toward infrastructure improvements, most notably road and bridge construction.
Clinton recalled an occasion when, soon after he became president, he told Byrd that “if you pave every single inch of West Virginia, it’s going to be much harder to mine coal.” Byrd, in response, said that “the Constitution does not prohibit humble servants from delivering whatever they can to their constituents.”
Byrd’s remains lay in repose in the Senate chamber on Thursday — a rare honor accorded to only two other senators since World War II. His casket was displayed on the same catafalque used for Abraham Lincoln, John F. Kennedy, Ronald Reagan and Thurgood Marshall, among others.
“The Senate was Robert C. Byrd’s cathedral (and) West Virginia was his heaven,” Biden said Friday. “There’s not a lot of hyperbole in that.”
Obama has ordered flags on federal buildings to fly at half-staff through Tuesday, except on Independence Day. A proclamation issued by the president said the order was given “as a mark of respect for (Byrd’s) memory and long-standing service.”
Byrd will be buried Tuesday after a funeral service in Arlington, Virginia.
CNN’s Alan Silverleib contributed to this report.
Political leaders bid farewell to West Virginia’s favorite son
Senators signal contentious hearing
Washington (CNN) — Leading senators on the Judiciary Committee signaled a contentious hearing starting Monday on Elena Kagan’s Supreme Court nomination, with some Republicans saying a GOP filibuster was possible.
Democrats countered that no nominee from President Barack Obama would have satisfied Republicans.
In an exchange on CNN’s “State of Union,” Democratic Sen. Robert Menendez of New Jersey chided Republican Sen. John Cornyn of Texas over what Menendez joked were unattainable GOP standards.
“I think if John and some of his colleagues in the Republican caucus had 10 angels coming from above swearing that this person was the most qualified … for the Supreme Court, was a centrist and would follow the rule of law and obey precedent, they would say ‘too extreme,’ ” Menendez said.
Cornyn, a Judiciary Committee member, said Kagan needed to prove in the hearings that she was a worthy candidate.
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“The burden is on the nominee, and the problem is that Ms. Kagan has a very sparse record,” Cornyn said. “She hasn’t been a judge, which isn’t a disqualifier, but that means we don’t have a judicial record … and her main record is that of a political strategist and adviser in the Clinton White House.”
According to Cornyn, the question is whether Kagan can “take off the mantle of political strategist, political adviser, and assume the role of a disinterested, impartial judge, calling balls and strikes.”
The ranking Republican on the panel, Sen. Jeff Sessions of Alabama, told the CBS program “Face the Nation” that he believes Kagan has “serious deficiencies” as a Supreme Court nominee.
Sessions cited Kagan’s lack of experience as a judge and what he called her liberal leanings.
“I think the first thing we need to decide is, is she committed to the rule of law even if she doesn’t like the law?” Sessions said.
Pressed about a possible Republican filibuster against the nomination, Sessions said: “It’s conceivable a filibuster might occur.”
Committee chairman Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vermont, responded on the same program by noting that other Supreme Court justices including William Rehnquist and Hugo Black also had no experience as judges before taking their high court seats.
Leahy called Kagan extremely qualified, noting she was the first woman to become dean of Harvard Law School and the first woman to be solicitor general in the U.S. Department of Justice.
Kagan is a “brilliant woman” with a “brilliant legal mind” and would become the 112th member of the Supreme Court, Leahy predicted. If confirmed, Kagan would be the fourth woman Supreme Court justice.
On “Fox News Sunday,” Judiciary Committee member Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-California, noted that Kagan has repeatedly achieved posts previously held only by men, including dean of Harvard Law School.
It was at Harvard where Kagan joined other colleges in trying to block military recruiters because of the “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy barring openly homosexual service members. Kagan supported the challenge to a federal law requiring that colleges give recruiters equal access or face the loss of federal funding. The Supreme Court unanimously upheld the law in 2006.
Several Republicans mentioned that topic Sunday as a possible reason to oppose Kagan’s nomination.
“One thing I’m disturbed about was her obvious steadfast and even zealous opposition to military recruiters, to the presence of military on the campus of the most prestigious university in the view of many in America,” Sen. John McCain, R-Arizona, said on NBC’s “Meet the Press.”
Cornyn said on CNN that in nominating Kagan, Obama was “trying to get somebody through who has a very sparse record and who he believes will be a reliable vote on the left wing of the United States Supreme Court.”
Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, another GOP committee member, said the question was whether Kagan could persuade him she would follow the law despite her liberal political views.
“We’re going to have a challenging hearing, and I think she’ll do well, but she’s going to have to earn her way onto the court,” Graham said on the Fox show, adding: “To my conservative friends, you should expect liberals to be picked by Obama, but you should expect us to our job, and that’s … to make sure she’s qualified and not an activist.”
To Feinstein, Republican opponents have been trying without success to find reasons to oppose Kagan.
“I believe the drift net has been out to find some disqualifying factor and it hasn’t been found,” Feinstein said told the Fox program.
She will bring, I think, a new breath into the court,” Feinstein said. “It will be a mainstream breath. It will not be far right. It will not be far left. It will be in the middle.”
Recovery head has business, government background
(CNN) — Navy Secretary Ray Mabus, who will develop a long-term plan for the restoration of the states affected by the massive oil leak in the Gulf of Mexico, is a former governor of Mississippi whom the White House has called a proven leader.
The 61-year-old Mabus was selected by President Obama on Tuesday to help draw up the government’s plan for recovery efforts in conjunction with officials in the Gulf Coast states.
“The plan will be designed by states, local communities, tribes, fishermen, businesses, conservationists, and other Gulf residents. And BP will pay for the impact this spill has had on the region,” Obama said in a nationwide address from the Oval Office.
Last year when Mabus was selected to lead the Navy, the Obama administration released a statement that said: “The president nominated Governor Mabus to be secretary of the Navy because he has the proven leadership and experience our nation needs to serve in this important position.”
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Mabus was born and raised in Mississippi, attending college at the University of Mississippi. He earned a master’s degree at Johns Hopkins University before enlisting in the Navy near the end of the Vietnam War. He served as a surface warfare officer on the USS Little Rock in 1971 and 1972. After the Navy he attended Harvard Law School.
The Democrat was elected to office for the first time in 1983, becoming Mississippi’s state auditor. Five years later, Mabus became governor at age 39, the youngest state leader in the nation at the time, according to the Mississippi Historical Society.
Mabus was named one of Fortune magazine’s Top 10 education governors in 1990, according to his biography on National Governors Association website. He was defeated in his re-election bid by Kirk Fordice.
In 1994, Mabus was appointed by then-President Bill Clinton as the ambassador to Saudi Arabia where he served for two years before returning to Mississippi to become a businessman.
His divorce in 2000 made national headlines because it involved secret recordings of conversations with an Episcopal priest and his first wife, Julie Hines. During the recordings, she revealed an affair, and the tapes helped Mabus win legal custody of the couple’s two daughters, according to the New York Times. They share physical custody.
Hines sued the priest and the church, citing privacy rights, but the suit was dismissed in 2006, the Times reported.
Mabus led Foamex, a maker of cushion products, out of Chapter 11 bankruptcy in 2007, according to his biography on the Defense department’s website.
He was chosen by Obama to be Secretary of the Navy in May 2009.