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Judge Sonia Sotomayor |
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Judge
Sonia Sotomayor Girds for Senate
Showdown
LOS ANGELES (By
Robert Barnes, Michael D. Shear and
Perry Bacon Jr., Washington Post)
July 11, 2009 —
White House officials spent hours
this week preparing Supreme Court
nominee Sonia Sotomayor for what
they anticipate will be a concerted
Republican effort to portray her as
an "activist" jurist and will
counter that her 17 years on the
bench are a display of judicial
restraint.
Slated to become the country's first
Hispanic justice, Sotomayor has
spent long hours in a cramped
conference room on the third floor
of the Old Executive Office
Building, her fractured ankle
propped on a trash can as lawyers
took turns peppering her with
questions.
Outnumbered Senate Republicans have
found the 55-year-old Sotomayor an
elusive target in the six weeks
since President Obama made her his
first nominee for the court and are
hard-pressed to offer a scenario
that would lead to her defeat in a
chamber where their party claims
only 40 members.
But Republican lawmakers and
conservative strategists say the
seven GOP members of the Judiciary
Committee will press Sotomayor on
issues that appeal to their
conservative base -- such as gun
owners' rights, property rights, the
use of international law in deciding
cases -- while trying to build a
case that Sotomayor's political
views influence her decision-making
on the bench.
Republicans will not launch "a
personal attack," Sen. Jeff Sessions
(R-Ala.), the ranking minority
member of the committee, told
reporters Friday. "It will be
focused on her views and writings. I
will ask her if she agrees with the
opinions of the organizations she
supported."
He said the judge will be challenged
to defend remarks she has made in
speeches and her leadership role
with the Puerto Rican Legal Defense
and Education Fund. She resigned
from that group's board when she
became a federal judge in 1992.
Susan Davies and Cassandra Butts,
two senior lawyers in the White
House counsel's office, have led
much of the questioning during
lengthy preparation sessions that
will continue into the weekend. Ron
Klain, Biden's chief of staff, and
Gregory B. Craig, Obama's counsel,
were in and out of the room, sources
said.
The goal of the briefings, according
to several Democratic and
administration sources, is to ready
Sotomayor for her first public
response to Republican charges of
bias in her legal philosophy and to
defend the president's vision of a
judiciary that leavens the rule of
law with an empathy for real-life
consequences.
"She's approached judging from the
real world, not ivory towers," said
one Democratic source, describing
how Democrats intend to steer the
theme of the hearings. "Instead of
big theories, she's applied the rule
of law."
White House officials who are
shepherding Sotomayor through the
process said they have paid close
attention to the questions she
received during meetings with 89
senators, including each of the
members of the judiciary committee.
They have also watched the public
comments and floor speeches by
Republican senators in an attempt to
divine GOP strategy.
One theory among Congressional
Democrats is that Republican
senators will "run out of gas" very
quickly and have little appetite for
a continued attack on her
qualifications as the week wears on.
Others believe Republicans will try
to portray Sotomayor as a judge
whose writings and court decisions
suggest a bias. Either way, one
congressional source said, Democrats
are "preparing for the worst case."
Republican questions will be aimed
primarily at Sotomayor. But the
hearings may also be used to debate
Obama's intention for reshaping a
court that may well see more
vacancies during his tenure.
Sessions said he expected his
Republican colleagues to offer
questions on specifics, such as her
decision in the Ricci v. DeStefano
case involving discrimination
against a group of white
firefighters, but also said she
would be probed about her view on
the proper role of judges. He hinted
that this nomination would set the
framework for how Republicans would
view other judges nominated by
Obama.
"This has the potential to change
the nature of the judiciary in a way
that I think is wrong," he said of a
Sotomayor confirmation.
Obama's remarks about judicial
empathy -- in nominating Sotomayor,
he mentioned as a "necessary
ingredient" for a judge "experience
that can give a person a common
touch and a sense of compassion" --
has been controversial with
conservatives, and even worrisome
for some liberals who believe it is
a phrase too easily misconstrued by
the public.
"In a political sense, President
Obama's emphasis on empathy had made
the Sotomayor confirmation process
harder than it needs to be," said
Doug Kendall, of the liberal
Constitutional Accountability
Center.
The White House and Sotomayor's
supporters in the Senate and
elsewhere say charges that she has
let her feelings influence her
rulings has not registered with the
public in an environment roiled by
the still-faltering economy and a
showdown on health-care reform.
The allegation has also been refuted
by a series of studies that show
Sotomayor's decisions in 17 years as
a district judge and on the U.S.
Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit
fit comfortably in the mainstream,
if on the liberal edge of it. One
recent study said that on matters of
constitutional interpretation, she
has sided with the majority 98
percent of the time.
Sotomayor received the highest
rating from the American Bar
Association, and even an endorsement
from former Clinton special
prosecutor Kenneth W. Starr, a
favorite among conservative legal
activists. She would also be only
the third woman among the 111
justices who have served on the
court, in addition to being its
first Hispanic.
"Judge Sotomayor understands the law
is not some dusty book in your
basement, but it has a real impact
on people's lives," said Sen. Amy
Klobuchar (D-Minn.), a member of the
judiciary committee.
Republicans say the hearings still
hold potential peril for the
nominee, as they will mark the first
time the public will hear Sotomayor
speak at length and respond to tough
questions.
"None of this matters until the
nominee comes to the table," said Ed
Gillespie, the strategist and former
National Republican Committee
chairman who played key roles in the
confirmations of Chief Justice John
G. Roberts Jr. and Justice Samuel A.
Alito Jr.
Some Republicans believe the
hearings could elicit sharp retorts
from Sotomayor -- who has described
herself as a "bear" on the bench --
or a statement on a hot-button issue
such as gun rights that could
motivate the base or a powerful
interest group. The National Rifle
Association has said it has "serious
concerns" about Sotomayor but has
not yet called on the Senate to
reject her.
"I was a state court judge myself,
and . . . sometimes judges aren't
exactly used to answering tough
questions," said committee member
Sen. John Cornyn (R-Tex.). "They're
used to asking them, so it will be a
little bit of a role reversal for
Judge Sotomayor."
Cornyn worried about excessive
expectations from the conservative
base. "Some of them will not be
happy unless Republicans filibuster
Judge Sotomayor, but obviously the
numbers are not there to do that
even if we were so inclined," he
said.
Sotomayor's injured ankle will play
a bit part in the hearings, adding
to the political theater. The foot
remains in a cast and must be kept
elevated to prevent it from
swelling, particularly late in the
afternoon, a White House source
said. As a result, the committee is
preparing a special table for the
hearings that will allow her foot to
be raised during the questioning.
"She's ready for this. But she's
still suffering a little bit of pain
for her broken foot," one White
House adviser said. "She is a little
uncomfortable."
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