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U.S. Appeals Court Judge Sonia
Sotomayor |
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President
Obama Picks Sonia Sotomayor, Citing
Intellect, for U.S. Supreme Court
WASHINGTON (By Peter Baker and Jeff
Zeleny, NYT) May 26, 2009 —
President Obama announced today he will
nominate federal appeals judge Sonia
Sotomayor for the Supreme Court,
choosing a daughter of Puerto Rican
parents raised in a Bronx public housing
project to become the nation’s first
Hispanic justice.
Judge Sotomayor, who stood next to the
president during the announcement, was
described by Mr. Obama as “an inspiring
woman who I am confident will make a
great justice.”
The president said he had made his
decision after “deep reflection and
careful deliberation,” and he made it
clear the judge’s inspiring personal
story was crucial in his decision. Mr.
Obama praised his choice as someone
possessing “a rigorous intellect, a
mastery of the law.”
But those essential qualities are not
enough, the president said. Quoting
Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, Mr. Obama
said, “The life of the law has not been
logic, it has been experience.” It is
vitally important a justice know “how
the world works, and how ordinary people
live,” the president said.
Judge Sotomayor’s face tightened with
emotion as the president introduced her.
In the front row of the East Room, her
mother, Celina Sotomayor, wept. Her
stepfather, Omar Lopez, also was on hand
along with her brother, Juan Sotomayor,
sister-in-law, two nephews and a niece.
“My heart today is bursting with
gratitude for all you have done for me,"
she said to her family, describing her
selection as “the most humbling honor of
my life.”
“I stand on the shoulders of countless
people,” she said. But towering above
all, she said, is her mother, who raised
her alone after her father died. “I am
all I am because of her,” Judge
Sotomayor said, “and I am only half the
woman she is.”
Judge Sotomayor is Mr. Obama’s first
selection to the Supreme Court, and her
nomination could trigger a struggle with
Senate Republicans who have indicated
they may oppose the nomination. But
Democrats are within reach of the 60
votes necessary to choke off a
filibuster, and Republicans concede that
they have little hope of blocking
confirmation barring unforeseen
revelations.
Initial reaction to the selection
reflected party divisions and signaled
Judge Sotomayor’s confirmation hearing
before the Senate Judiciary Committee
would be spirited.
“Her record is exemplary,” said Senator
Patrick J. Leahy, the Vermont Democrat
who is chairman of the Judiciary
Committee. “Judge Sotomayor’s nomination
is an historic one, and when confirmed
she will become the first Hispanic
justice, and just the third woman to sit
on the nation’s highest court. Having a
Supreme Court that better reflects the
diversity of America helps ensure we
keep faith with the words engraved in
Vermont marble over the entrance of the
Supreme Court: ‘Equal justice under
law.’”
Another Democrat on the panel, Senator
Charles E. Schumer of New York, was also
enthusiastic. “Her outstanding legal
mind, and her compelling life
experience, is just the combination this
court needs in its next justice,” Mr.
Schumer said.
But early Republican reaction was
decidedly lukewarm. “Republicans will
reserve judgment on Sonia Sotomayor
until there has been a thorough and
thoughtful examination of her legal
views,” said Michael Steele, chairman of
the Republican National Committee.
And Senator John Cornyn of Texas, a
member of the Senate Judiciary
Committee, said, “Because Judge
Sotomayor would serve for life if she is
confirmed, it is essential the Senate
conducts this process thoroughly, and
the President has assured me we will
have ample time to give Ms. Sotomayor’s
record a full and fair review.”
Mr. Cornyn said the nominee “must prove
her commitment to impartially deciding
cases based on the law, rather than
based on her own personal politics,
feelings, and preferences.”
A more centrist Republican, Senator
Olympia J. Snowe of Maine, said she was
pleased President Obama had chosen a
well-qualified woman. “I share the view
the proper role of the judiciary is one
of interpreting the Constitution and
acts of Congress, not legislating from
the bench,” said Senator Snowe. “As
such, I will carefully evaluate Sonia
Sotomayor’s record and temperament in
making my determination.”
Judge Sotomayor, 54, who has served for
more than a decade on the Court of
Appeals for the Second Circuit, based in
New York City, would become the nation’s
111th justice, replacing David H.
Souter, who is retiring after 19 years
on the bench. Although Justice Souter
was appointed by the first President
George Bush, he became a mainstay of the
liberal faction on the court, and so his
replacement by Judge Sotomayor likely
would not shift the overall balance of
power.
But her appointment would add a second
woman to the nine-member court and give
Hispanics their first seat. Her life
story, mirroring in some ways Mr.
Obama’s own, would add a different
complexion to the panel, fulfilling the
president’s stated desire to add
diversity of background to the nation’s
highest tribunal.
Judge Sotomayor’s father died when she
was 9 years old, and her mother worked
six-day weeks to earn enough money to
send her and a brother to Catholic
school. She got into Princeton
University, where she once said she felt
like “a visitor landing in an alien
country,” but graduated summa cum laude.
Although she grew up in modest
circumstances, the judge said, “I
consider my life to be immeasurably
rich.”
After Yale Law School, where she was
editor of the Yale Law Journal, she
worked for Robert M. Morgenthau in the
district attorney’s office in New York
and later was in private practice. The
first President Bush nominated her in
1991 to the federal district court on
the recommendation of Senator Daniel
Patrick Moynihan, Democrat of New York,
and she was confirmed a year later.
President Bill Clinton decided to
elevate her to the appeals court in
1997, and she was confirmed a year
later.
Judge Sotomayor has said her ethnicity
and gender are important factors in
serving on the bench, a point that could
generate debate. “I would hope a wise
Hispanic 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,” she
said in a 2002 lecture.
She also once said at a conference a
“court of appeals is where policy is
made,” a statement that has drawn
criticism from conservatives who saw it
as a sign of judicial activism. Judge
Sotomayor seemed to understand at the
time she was making a controversial
statement, adding, “I know this is on
tape, and I should never say that,
because we don’t make law.”
Conservatives quickly pointed to such
statements after word of her selection
on Tuesday.
“Judge Sotomayor is a liberal activist
of the first order who thinks her own
personal political agenda is more
important than the law as written,” said
Wendy E. Long, counsel to the Judicial
Confirmation Network, an activist group.
“She thinks judges should dictate
policy, and one’s sex, race and
ethnicity ought to affect the decisions
one renders from the bench.”
White House officials concluded such
statements, while perhaps providing
fodder for opponents, would not be
problematic enough to hinder her
confirmation. Some officials have said
in recent days they relish the prospect
of Republicans standing up against a
Hispanic woman with her life story,
because it would only damage the G.O.P.
with a key voting bloc.
The president sought to defuse some of
those charges in advance, declaring his
confidence she has “a recognition of the
limits of the judicial role.”
Indeed, in nominating the first Hispanic
justice, Mr. Obama may appeal to a large
and growing constituency whose party
loyalty is still very much in play.
Hispanic groups have expressed
excitement about the idea of one of
their own serving on the high court.
Some scholars argue whether Benjamin
Cardozo was really the first Hispanic
justice, but with his Portuguese-Jewish
background, he never identified himself
as a Hispanic.
On the appeals court, Judge Sotomayor
has not been involved in many hotly
disputed decisions, but one she
participated in is before the Supreme
Court right now. As part of a panel, she
voted to uphold New Haven’s decision to
throw out a set of fire department
promotion tests because no minority
candidates made the top of the list.
White firefighters who scored high but
were denied promotion are appealing that
ruling.
As a district judge, she briefly earned
fame in 1995 by ending a Major League
Baseball strike, ruling in favor of
players and against the owners, who she
said were trying to subvert the labor
system.
At the White House announcement, the
East Room filled with members of the
legal community and several Hispanic
leaders, who received calls and e-mails
on Tuesday morning to attend the
ceremony and applauded enthusiastically
when Mr. Obama entered the room with the
nominee. To keep the decision secret,
outside groups were not notified until
about two hours before the event began.
The president conducted a face-to-face
interview of Judge Sotomayor on Thursday
at the White House, officials said. She
was the second finalist to be
interviewed, following Judge Diane P.
Wood of Chicago.
Mr. Obama called her at 9 p.m. on
Monday, officials said, to inform her
that she was his choice. She traveled to
Washington late Monday evening.
The president reached his decision over
the long Memorial Day weekend, aides
said, but it was not disclosed until
Tuesday morning when he informed his
advisers of his choice less than three
hours before the announcement was
scheduled to take place.
Mr. Obama telephoned Judge Sotomayor at
9 p.m. on Monday, officials said,
advising her she was his choice to fill
the Supreme Court vacancy.
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