
Guides for past Supreme Court nominees say the key to success in the Senate is for the court pick to make a personal connection with senators -- whether it be a common bond over baseball or an alma mater. Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn, who joined Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., as one of only two women on the Senate Judiciary Committee this year, said in an interview with NationalJournal.com that she's already identified just such a bond with Sonia Sotomayor: an encyclopedia set.
At his Tuesday announcement of Sotomayor's nomination, President Obama noted that the Bronx native's mom "bought the only set of encyclopedias in the neighborhood" to help educate her daughter. That detail struck Klobuchar, who grew up in middle-class Minneapolis suburb. "I love that part," the first-term senator said this week. "The encyclopedia, that was in a hallowed place in our house."
Like Sotomayor, Klobuchar is also a former local prosecutor, so she said she's looking forward to talking about criminal law and sentencing guidelines with the Supreme Court nominee. "The fact that she's been a prosecutor is very helpful," Klobuchar said. "When you've been in that kind of job, the law to you is not just a dusty book in your mom's basement."
Klobuchar said she prefers to focus on "common sense" questions that reflect her prosecutorial background -- on issues like victim rights, for example. But she said that if Republicans on the committee don't give Sotomayor enough of a chance to defend herself, she's not afraid to step in. "If it gets into a partisan circus, then we're into a different land," she said. As an example, Klobuchar cited a recent appellate court nominee who she thought was not given enough time by a Republican questioner to explain his decisions. Klobuchar used her turn on the dais to give him a chance to clarify his reasoning.
That said, Klobuchar added that she's not just going to play defense; she's got her own questions for the nominee. "How she views executive power -- I think that's going to be a key issue," Klobuchar said.
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