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U.S. Sen. John Kennedy delivers his remarks about Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh Wednesday, September 5, 2018.

Kennedy gives opening statement on SCOTUS nominee Judge Brett Kavanaugh

September 6, 2018

By Office of U.S. Sen. John Kennedy

WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Sen. John Kennedy (R-LA) delivered his opening statement on Supreme Court nominee Judge Brett Kavanaugh in the Senate Judiciary Committee Wednesday, September 5.

What Sen. Kennedy is seeking in a Supreme Court justice:

“I want a judge. I don’t want a politician. I am not looking for an ideologue. I’m not looking for a hater. What I am looking for is somebody who is whip smart, who is intellectually curious, who writes cleanly and crisply, who knows what a semicolon is for and who is willing to protect the United States Constitution and the Bill of Rights and understands that the Bill of Rights is not an a la carte menu.”

Anger is dividing this country:

“We’ve been divided before and we’ll be divided again. We will survive this, but I confess that the division in our country today seems to be especially sharp. And what concerns me so much about the division is the basis for it. It’s not honest disagreement. So much of it is anger.”

Judges aren’t there to bypass the ballot:

“It’s not the United States Supreme Court that’s supposed to fix this country culturally, economically, socially, spiritually. It’s almost become cliché, but the role of a judge is – or at least should be – to determine what the law is and not what the law ought to be. Judges are not put there to try to bypass the ballot. Courts should not try to fix problems that are within the province of the United States Congress.”

Leave politics out of it:

“So many Americans believe that the law, which I think all of us revere, has just become politics pursued in another way. That’s not the way it’s supposed to be. That’s not what I’m looking for.”

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Editorial

Blinded by bright spots: Kelley warns of trends we’re ignoring

By Chuck Kelley Southern Baptists tend to confuse Bright Spots with Trendlines. Statistical reports may yield some bright spots in any given year, even when the same reports indicate that the trends across the board are downward and a matter of concern. Rejoicing in bright spots so much that you fail to … Read More

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