First Lady Michelle Obama is the World’s Most Powerful Women, according to the latest ranking from Forbes Magazine. This year’s list of the Most Powerful Women on Earth brands singer Lady Gaga more powerful than the woman who is second-in-line to the US presidency, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. Mrs. O joins media moguls Oprah Winfrey [...]
Posts Tagged ‘Sonia Sotomayor’
Goodbye to that tie
Another chance for Barack Obama to shape the Supreme Court
ONE of the most effective ways for a president to put his mark on the future is to nominate judges to the Supreme Court. Because the nine justices are entitled to serve for life, and because something about life on the court appears to promote longevity, such opportunities are rare. Barack Obama got a first chance early in his presidency. Last summer he appointed Sonia Sotomayor, the court’s first Latina judge. Now he will get a second chance. John Paul Stevens, the present court’s longest-serving justice, turns 90 on April 20th. On April 9th he announced he would retire in the summer. …
Jennifer Lopez Allure January 2010
Pop diva Jennifer Lopez, once one of the most hotly sought after paparazzi magnets in Hollywood, is relieved that shutterbugs have lost interest in tracking her every movie.
“It’s a business,” Lopez, 40, reveals in the January issue of Allure Magazine. “Once they stop making money off of you they stop coming around.”
Not having to dodge [...]
Sonia Sotomayor Vogue Magazine Photo Spread By Annie Leibovitz
In an interview with Katie Couric during the California Women’s Conference on Tuesday, legendary shutterbug Annie Leibovitz revealed that she is about to photograph Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor for an upcoming pictorial in Vogue Magazine.
Leibovitz recently snapped the first official White House photograph of The Obama Family.
Rosie Perez Jennifer Lopez Battle For Rights To Sotomayor Story
Jennifer Lopez and Rosie Perez are in a race against time to secure the film rights to the life of Sonia Sotomayor, the first Latina appointed to the US Supreme Court.
The Puerto-Rican actresses became fast friends while appearing as high-energy hip-hop dancers “The Fly Girls” on the FOX sketch comedy hit In Living Color in [...]
David Doody: Watch: Franken and Klobuchar Speak Out at Senate Judiciary Committee Vote (Video)
Senate panel backs Sotomayor
<img src="http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/46123000/jpg/_46123319_007712390-1.jpg" align="left" width="226" height="170" alt="Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor appears before the Senate Judiciary Committee on 16 July 2009″ border=”0″ vspace=”4″ hspace=”4″>
A key Senate panel has voted in favour of Sonia Sotomayor’s nomination to the US Supreme Court.
The majority-Democrat Senate Judiciary Committee voted 13-6 to back Ms Sotomayor.
Her nomination will now go to the full Senate, where she is expected to be confirmed as the court’s first Hispanic justice next week.
Her nomination has been vocally opposed by a chorus of Republicans who believe she is too liberal.
But correspondents say Ms Sotomayor is unlikely to alter the ideological balance on the court as she would replace retiring Justice David Souter, a liberal.
The Supreme Court is the final arbiter of the US Constitution, and its nine members are given lifetime appointments, though they can voluntarily resign or retire.
It is called upon to rule on issues that spark some of the greatest controversy in US society – such as abortion, gun rights and national security issues.
Past probed
One Republican, Lindsey Graham, joined all 12 Democrats on the Committee in approving Ms Sotomayor’s nomination, which came after she and witnesses spent days testifying in front of the panel.
Ms Sotomayor, 55, responded cautiously to questions on these "hot-button issues" when questioned by the Committee – prompting some members to complain that they were unable to gauge fully her stance on them.
The powerful National Rifle Association has come out against Ms Sotomayor over her record on gun rights, though some commentators suggest she has made few definitive statements on the issue.
But her supporters say she has a reliable record – and they cite her "inspiring" rise from a New York public housing project to respected judicial scholar and justice.</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Sotomayor Confirmation: Senate Judiciary Committee Votes: WATCH LIVE
On Tuesday the Senate Judiciary Committee will convene to vote on the confirmation of Judge Sonia Sotomayor to the Supreme Court. Sotomayor is expected to win approval on a “near party line” vote.
Visit msnbc.com for Breaking News, World New…
Charles H. Green: Sotomayor Was Right the First Time: A Wise Latina Does Know More
Supreme court nominee Sonia Sotomayor now-famously said, in 2001, that she would hope she would hope a “wise Latina would make better decisions because of…
Nicholas Stephanopoulos: Do Conservatives Follow the Framers — or the French?
Who declared that the country’s legal system is “poorly organized if a judge enjoys the dangerous privilege of interpreting the law or adding to its…
Jason Daley: Dear Sonia: Sotomayor’s Lost Year
In 1980, Sotomayor was in Michigan, dishing out a distinctive brand of saucy advice for the Port Huron Tribune-Undertaker.
Amy Goodman: Henry Louis Gates, Troy Anthony Davis, and the 21st Century Color Line
W.E.B. Du Bois’ classic 1903 work “The Souls of Black Folk” opens with “The problem of the Twentieth Century is the problem of the color…
Sotomayor Vote Delayed One Week By Judiciary Committee Republicans
WASHINGTON — The Senate Judiciary Committee has put off its vote on Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor (SOHN’-ya soh-toh-my-YOR’) for one week after Republicans asked for a delay.
Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy says the v…
Andy Worthington: House Threatens Obama Over Chinese Interrogation Of Uighurs In Guantanamo
Last Thursday, while most U.S. media outlets were focused relentlessly on the marathon endurance test that was Sonia Sotomayor’s Supreme Court confirmation hearing, the House…
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.





Bloggingheads.tv: Defending “Wise Latina”
Dayo Olopade, of The Root, defends Sonia Sotomayor’s controversial comment about the relative judicial merit of a “wise Latina woman.” It’s a fact, Dayo argues,…