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Posts Tagged ‘Judge Sotomayor’

Barry Schwartz: Partial Justice

The mark of a wise judge is the ability to balance. To deny empathy or detachment its proper place is to cut wisdom off at the knees. One without the other would give us only partial justice.

Bob Cesca: Crazy Wingnut Healthcare Attacks Exposed

The other day, I overheard a random “Republican analyst” on MSNBC’s The Ed Show suggest that the public option should never be implemented because of…

Judge H. Lee Sarokin: Republican Senators Play the Affirmative Action Card

Having disgruntled persons testify at a judicial confirmation hearing serves no useful purpose. The real reason of having Mr. Ricci testify was to inflame the public on this controversial topic.

Karl Frisch: Forget Being “Borked,” She’s Been “Sotomayored”

Long before the pundit-driven 24-hour news cycle began poisoning the media landscape, the 1987 confirmation hearings of Reagan Supreme Court nominee Robert Bork played out…

Stephen Kaus: John King Should Ask Sen. Jefferson B. Sessions a Few Questions About Race (UPDATED)

UPDATE King asked Sessions no such questions and in agreed with both Leahy and Sessions that the hearings were excellent. King told Leahy and Sessions…

Judge H. Lee Sarokin: Reflections on the Senate Confirmation Hearings, Part II – Duck, Duck, Goose

When asked what the Senate hearings revealed about Judge Sotomayor’s legal views, the distinguished law scholar, Prof. Laurence Tribe responded: “Nothing”. That is because the…

Arlene M. Roberts: Judging Sonia: In Defense of Judicial Activism and a Wise Latina

Today concludes week one of confirmation hearings for Supreme Court nominee, Judge Sonia Sotomayor. One salient issue that dominated the hearings was judicial activism….

Judge H. Lee Sarokin: Reflections on the Senate Confirmation Hearings

With all of the pontificating about the need for judges and justices to be fair and impartial and leave their biases at the door, the senators do just the opposite.

Damp squib

Sonia Sotomayor gives testimony to the US Senate Judiciary Committee during her confirmation hearing, 16 July, 2009

By Kevin Connolly
BBC News, Washington

This is the story of what happened when Barack Obama’s first nominee for the Supreme Court appeared before the judiciary committee of the United States Senate, but first an apology.

You may have formed the impression from the media last week that we were poised for an extraordinary piece of political theatre in which Sonia Sotomayor would pit her wits against a succession of star Senators and that the sunlight of democracy would flood into the very recesses of her soul. Sorry.

Rarely can a squib have been damper, a confrontation less confrontational or a piece of political theatre less theatrical.

The full panoply of instant punditry, live blogging and gavel-to-gavel TV coverage was duly brought to bear on the hearings, of course.

Shoo-in

One cable news station prepared a teaser advertisement for its coverage which asked: "What Surprises Will be Revealed"

Well now we know. The answer was none. Not a single one.

The real question is why anyone ever thought the hearings might provide any drama or tension.

Judge Sotomayor is, after all, the nominee of a Democratic president and the Democrats have comfortable majorities both in the Senate as a whole and therefore on the Judiciary Committee that has been conducting these hearings.

There was never any serious doubt that, politically, she was something of a shoo-in.

And separately from that, in the course of the last two decades a kind of precedent has been emerging in which judges nominated to the Supreme Court are allowed to avoid engaging with any questioning at their confirmation hearings that touches on the hot-button issues in American politics like abortion or gun control.

"If you were applying for a job as an airline pilot the people interviewing you would probably be a little taken aback if you declined to answer questions about the best way to fly a plane"

The convention is relatively recent – and goes back only to the confirmation hearings of Ruth Bader Ginsburg nominated to the Supreme Court by Bill Clinton in 1993.

She famously vowed to provide "no hints, no forecasts and no previews" of the sorts of verdicts she might return if she were to be confirmed (she was).

And in her opening statement to the senators, she made it pretty clear that she would not be engaging with them on anything that actually mattered, with the words: "It would be wrong for me to say or preview in this legislative chamber how I would cast my vote on questions the Supreme Court may be called on to decide."

Lawyers and judges love precedents, of course, so subsequent nominees (including the current Chief Justice, John Roberts, a Bush nominee in 2005) have generally taken the same view, thus robbing the process of any drama or serious content.

Justice Roberts was smooth and polished in his hearings, but like many things which are smooth and polished he was also rather slippery and elusive.

Grotesque

It is curious that the Ginsburg Rule has been so tamely accepted by senators, since it makes a nonsense of the idea that they are there to provide a final level of scrutiny for jurists who are about to be placed in a position where they can shape life in America for many years to come. (Justices on the Supreme Court are appointed for life.)

The rule is based on a rather odd proposition, after all.

If you were applying for a job as an airline pilot the people interviewing you would probably be a little taken aback if you declined to answer questions about the best way to fly a plane on the grounds that the information would be relevant to your daily work.

Given that the Senators probably assumed that Judge Sotomayor would not engage with them on abortion or gun control in any depth, you can see why they kept returning over and over again to her most controversial and best-known public pronouncement.

This – in case you have not seen the news from America in the last week – was a line that used to crop up in her speeches to the effect that because of the richness of her life experiences, a wise Latina would more often than not make better judgements than a white man.

To those of us who are not lawyers, the meaning of that statement seems pretty unambiguous whether you agree with the sentiment or not.

Anita Hill gives testimony before the US Senate Judiciary Committee in a confirmation hearing for Clarence Thomas

But Mrs Sotomayor IS a lawyer, of course, and was able to argue that those words also sustain an interpretation other than their ordinary natural meaning and that she was merely trying to inspire law students from minority backgrounds and in doing so had reached for a rhetorical flourish that failed.

Asked about it repeatedly, she merely said that she did not hold the view that those words would appear to imply that she does hold – and the senators, however hard they tried, were not able to lay a glove on her.

Frustratingly, such proceedings were not always so anodyne.

The confirmation hearings for Clarence Thomas (nominated by George Bush Sr in 1991) produced some of the most grotesque and compelling political theatre seen in Washington for years when a former colleague of his emerged to testify that he had sexually harassed her when they worked together. (Justice Thomas denied it).

Those hearings really were full of surprises – including claims that the judge engaged in graphic sexual conversations – but no other confirmation process since has matched it for drama.

‘Borked’

And not everyone has declined to discuss their views with the judiciary.

Ronald Reagan’s nominee Robert Bork talked legal philosophy with the senators – and even criticised the legal underpinning of Roe v Wade, the case which enshrines the right to abortion – and his reward, predictably, was to have his candidacy for the Supreme Court rejected.

It should be pointed out, though, that Mr Bork’s failure was not entirely down to the proceedings of the judiciary committee.

He was something of a hate figure on the left of American politics – Ted Kennedy accused him of wanting to create an America in which women would be forced into back-alley abortions and blacks would be forced to eat at segregated lunch counters – and a successful campaign was mounted to create an atmosphere in which his nomination would not be confirmed.

It is probably not much consolation for him, but one side effect of this was that his name entered the language as a verb.

To "bork" is to render impossible someone’s appointment to public office.

Ms Sotomayor will not end up sharing Robert Bork’s fate in either sense.

Even conservative Senators like John Cornyn and Lindsey Graham – who seemed uncomfortable with Judge Sotomayor’s "wise Latina" speeches – acknowledged that her record as a judge was mainstream rather than radical.

She has been controlled, measured and articulate as well as reserved and there have been plenty of hints from Republicans that they will not try to block her progress (a few of them might even vote for her).

So this process never produced the dramas we were promised or the intellectual clashes that the cable channels so looked forward to.

But it will produce a new Supreme Court Justice – and it will do so in such a smooth manner that there is very little chance that the word "Sotomayor" will ever evolve into a verb.

And that is just how the judge would want it. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Monica Youn: Who’s Afraid of the Big Bad Activist?

As in every Supreme Court confirmation hearing, in Judge Sonia Sotomayor’s questioning before the Senate yesterday, accusations of “judicial activism” are flying thick and fast….

Peggy Drexler: Gender and the Judge: Sotomayor encounters a familiar bias

I’ve been following the Sotomayor hearings, and I’ve come to some conclusions. Her “wise Latina” comment was just an observation about the importance of life…

Michael Masklansky: Handling the “Whoopses”: Judge Sotomayor and The Art of Fixing a Misspeak.

But in today’s age of the media microscope, every judge, politician or CEO has at least one “whoops” that they wish they hadn’t said or done. And until time travel becomes an option, the challenge is in how well you handle your critics when these events come to light.

Ed Hayes: Sotomayor: Who Could Be More American?

I think of her as coming from the area covered by the Eight Homicide Squad in the Bronx.

Deepak Chopra: Can the Supreme Court Be Pure Again? (Was It Ever?)

The confirmation hearings for Judge Sotomayor are a foregone conclusion, with the dust raised by Republicans barely masking the bald fact that the Democratic majority…

Judge H. Lee Sarokin: Persons With Empathy Need Not Apply

I was watching television on the morning it was announced that Judge Sotomayor had been nominated to the Supreme Court. Tom Fitton, president of Judicial…

Allison Kilkenny: My Interview with the Man Who Spent 16 Years in Jail Because Sonia Sotomayor Denied His Appeal

Jeffrey Deskovic served 16 years in prison for a murder and rape he did not commit. At the age of 16, he was arrested based…

Phil Bronstein: Wise Latina, Meet Ricky Ricardo…

Ricky Ricardo always got blindsided, then hustled by his ditzy wife. All she needed to do was apologize and maybe cry a little. Neither Sotomayor nor Senator Coburn seem like they’ll be doing any weeping.

Sotomayor faces more questions

Sonia Sotomayor

US Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor has again been grilled over her comment that a "wise Latina" might make better rulings than a white male.

She was facing questions during the third day of her confirmation hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee.

Ms Sotomayor said she regretted that her remark several years ago had been misunderstood.

If, as expected, Ms Sotomayor is confirmed, she will be the first Hispanic Supreme Court judge.

Words ‘fell flat’

Judge Sotomayor, 55, was referring to this remark she made in 2001: "I would hope that a wise Latina woman with the richness of her experiences would more often than not reach a better conclusion than a white male who hasn’t lived that life."

Republican Senator John Cornyn of Texas, a former state judge and attorney general, asked her if she stood by the remark.

"I stand by the words ‘it fell flat’", she said, in reference to her response on Tuesday that the comment was a rhetorical flourish gone awry.

She added: "I understand that some people have understood them in a way that I never intended. And I would hope that, in the context of the speech, that they would be understood."

Sen Cornyn asked asking whether she would regret if her audience of students understood her to be saying that the quality of a judge depended on race, gender or ethnicity.

She said: "I would regret that."

Abortion

On a separate issue, Sen Cornyn asked her about a published report that administration officials have been seeking to reassure abortion rights groups concerned about her position on the issue.

Judge Sotomayor said neither President Barack Obama – who nominated her for the Supreme Court – nor anyone else in the administration asked her views on abortion rights before she was nominated for the Supreme Court.

"I was asked no question by anyone including the president about my views on any specific legal issue," she said.

Despite further questioning during the hearing, Ms Sotomayor refused to give her views on abortion rights.

On Thursday senators will question other witnesses about Ms Sotomayor’s record as a judge. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Sally Kohn: Race-Colored Glasses: Seeing What’s There

Even if it’s a fairly done deal that Judge Sotomayor will be confirmed to the Supreme Court, Republicans are explicitly using her nomination as a…

Dennis A. Henigan: What the “Gun Rights” People Really Want: A Heller Do-over

The “gun rights” community is in full-throated opposition to the nomination of Judge Sonia Sotomayor to the Supreme Court and the pressure is building on…