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By Deborah Tate
Capitol Hill
31 January 2006
Judge Samuel Alito
The U.S. Senate has confirmed Judge Samuel Alito to the Supreme1 Court in a largely party-line vote. He is poised2 to become the 110th justice on the high court, succeeding Justice Sandra Day O'Connor.
Senator Ted3 Stevens, an Alaska Republican, announced the vote as he presided over the Senate.
STEVENS: "On this vote, the ayes are 58, the nays4 are 42. The president's nomination5 of Samuel A. Alito, Jr. of New Jersey6 to be an associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States is confirmed."
The vote fell generally along party lines, with all but one of the Senate's majority Republicans voting in favor of Judge Samuel Alito. All but four of the Democrats8 voted against the nomination.
The lone9 Republican who opposed Alito was Senator Lincoln Chafee of Rhode Island, who is facing a tough reelection battle this year in the Democrat7-leaning state.
The confirmation10 vote culminated11 weeks of often bitter, partisan12 debate over the nomination at the start of the mid-term election year.
Democrats expressed concerns that Judge Samuel Alito, a conservative, would tilt13 the ideological14 balance of the court, noting that as he is succeeding Sandra Day O'Connor, a moderate, who often cast the deciding vote in five-to-four rulings in controversial cases.
"The president continues to choose confrontation15 over consensus16, and to be a divider rather than the 'uniter' that he promised Americans he would be," said Senator Patrick Leahy, a Vermont Democrat. "Rather than send us a nominee17 for all Americans, the president chose a divisive nominee who raises grave concerns about whether he would be a check on presidential power."
Still, an effort by prominent Democrats to block the nomination from coming to a vote failed on Monday.
Republicans praised Alito as well qualified18, and took aim at Democratic critics for misrepresenting his record.
"It has been most distressing19 to me to have this nominee, the epitome20 of a restrained and principled, highly respected judge, be portrayed21 as some sort of extremist," said Senator Jeff Sessions of Alabama. "It is above my comprehension, frankly22."
Alito, son of an Italian immigrant, has worked as a lawyer and prosecutor23 before becoming an appeals court judge 15 years ago. During Senate confirmation hearings, he sought to assure lawmakers that once on the high court he would not have an agenda.
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