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Wednesday, February 1, 2006 - Page updated at 12:00 AM

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Alito is sworn in as the 110th justice on the nation's highest court

Los Angeles Times

WASHINGTON — After the most partisan Supreme Court battle in more than a decade, Samuel A. Alito Jr., was sworn in Tuesday as the 110th justice on the nation's highest court, where he is expected to usher in a new era of judicial conservatism.

Alito took the oath minutes after the Senate voted 58-42 to confirm him to replace Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, a Republican nominee who became the court's pivotal swing vote on divisive issues such as abortion and gay rights.

Alito, 55, is the second justice to be confirmed in five months and is perhaps the linchpin of President Bush's plans to put a conservative imprint on the court. Alito, by most accounts, is politically to the right of O'Connor, while Chief Justice John Roberts, who succeeded former Chief Justice William Rehnquist in September, replaced a fellow conservative.

Bush, who watched the vote with Alito from the White House, hailed the newly minted justice as meeting the criteria he promised during both presidential campaigns: to name conservative justices in the mold of Justices Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas.

"Sam Alito is a brilliant and fair-minded judge who strictly interprets the Constitution and laws and does not legislate from the bench," Bush said in a statement. "He is a man of deep character and integrity, and he will make all Americans proud as a justice on our highest court."

The vote for Alito, who as a lawyer in the Reagan administration had championed his own political conservatism, was one of the most partisan since the Constitution gave the Senate the job of providing "advice and consent" to the appointment of federal judges. Just four Democrats voted for Alito and just one Republican voted against him.

Since the founding of the nation, only Thomas received more votes against his confirmation than Alito; Thomas was confirmed by a 52-48 vote, the closest in history.

Democrats said their vote was driven by Alito's 15 years on the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, where, they say, he compiled a record of ruling against individual rights and civil liberties in deference to executive authority, whether the police or the president.

"In replacing Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, President Bush had an opportunity to bring the country together. But sadly, by nominating Samuel Alito, he chose not to do so," said Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., who led an 11th-hour filibuster drive to block the confirmation. "As today's vote makes clear, there is no consensus in the Senate or the country that Alito, a strong believer in unrestrained presidential power, is the right person for the court at a time when it will clearly be facing major issues of abuse of executive power."

Democrats expressed particular concern over a 1985 job application to the Reagan Justice Department in which Alito vouched for his political conservatism and expressed pride in his efforts to abolish racial quotas in hiring and to overturn the Roe v. Wade Supreme Court decision that established a woman's right to an abortion.

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Republicans described the Democrats' opposition as motivated primarily by politics and the increasingly hostile relationship between the parties in Congress. They repeatedly noted that in 1993 and 1994, most Republicans voted to confirm President Clinton's more liberal nominees, Stephen Breyer and Ruth Bader Ginsburg, to the Supreme Court.

"There are some of my colleagues, I'm sure, who voted their conscience. But a lot of it is over politics," said Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah. "I have found that the confirmation of judges probably is at the root of this very bitter partisanship that is going on in the Senate."

The four Democrats who voted for Alito are all from so-called "red states" that voted for Bush in 2004: Sens. Robert Byrd of West Virginia, Kent Conrad of North Dakota, Ben Nelson of Nebraska and Tim Johnson of South Dakota. All except for Johnson face re-election in the fall.

The only Republican to vote against Alito faced a similar electoral calculation from the other side: Sen. Lincoln Chafee of Rhode Island faces a tough re-election battle this year in the Democratic-leaning state of Rhode Island.

At 55, Alito will be one of the youngest members of the Supreme Court, joining Roberts, 51, and Thomas, 57, on the court's conservative wing. The other conservative stalwart, Justice Antonin Scalia, is 69.

By contrast, the more liberal justices are all over 60: Justice John Paul Stevens, at 85, is the oldest member of the court, followed by Ginsburg, 72, Justice Anthony Kennedy, 69, Breyer, 67, and Justice David Souter, 66.

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