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Judge Sonia Sotomayor |
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True to Hispanic Beliefs, Sotomayor
is not a Liberal
WASHINGTON (By E.J. Dionne Jr.,
Washington Post) May 28, 2009
— Republicans would be foolish to
fight the nomination of Judge Sonia
Sotomayor to the U.S. Supreme Court
because she is the most conservative
choice President Obama could have
made.
And even though they should support
her confirmation, liberals would be
foolish to embrace Sotomayor as one
of their own because her record is
clearly that of a moderate. It is
highly unlikely she will push the
court to the left.
Indeed, on many issues of concern to
business, she is likely to make the
Chamber of Commerce perfectly happy.
In this battle, it's important to
separate Obama's reasons for choosing
Sotomayor from her actual record. He was
drawn to her not simply because the
politics of naming the first Hispanic
justice were irresistible, but also
because he saw her as the precise
opposite of Chief Justice John Roberts.
In his September 2005 speech explaining
his vote against Roberts, Obama argued
95 percent of court cases are easily
settled on the basis of the law and
precedent. But in "those 5 percent of
hard cases," Obama said, the "legal
process alone will not lead you to a
rule of decision" and "the critical
ingredient is supplied by what is in the
judge's heart."
And that is where Obama found Roberts
wanting. The young senator insisted
Roberts "far more often used his
formidable skills on behalf of the
strong in opposition to the weak" and
"seemed to have consistently sided with
those who were dismissive of efforts to
eradicate the remnants of racial
discrimination in our political
process."
Obama believes Roberts's subsequent
behavior on the court has justified his
initial suspicions. He hopes Sotomayor
will be the anti-Roberts, a person whose
experience growing up in the projects of
the South Bronx will allow her to see
life and the quest for justice in a way
Roberts never will.
Conservatives — particularly those who
run direct-mail outfits and want a big
court fight — would love the decision
over Sotomayor to hang on Obama's call
for judges who show "empathy."
They
would cast her as a dangerous activist
willing to bend the law to produce the
results she wants.
They want to turn Obama's argument on
its head and claim that Sotomayor would
show bias in favor of those who share
her background — and never mind they
dismiss such assertions when they are
raised with respect to white,
conservative, male nominees.
The problem is this approach is untrue
to who Sotomayor has been and has little
relationship to the decisions she has
actually rendered as a judge. News
accounts from the 1990s consistently
described her as a "centrist" in her
politics.
Her lead sponsor when she was
first named as a judge, the late Sen.
Daniel Patrick Moynihan, was hardly a
conventional liberal. Obama may have
found himself an empathetic judge, but
she practices her empathy from the
middle of the road.
A careful analysis of her record by
Business Week, for example, concluded
she is a "moderate on business issues"
and would fit the court's current
alignment on such questions.
She also upheld a ban on federal funds
going to family planning groups that
provided abortions overseas. Sotomayor
wrote "the Supreme Court has made clear
the government is free to favor the
anti-abortion position over the
pro-choice position, and can do so with
public funds."
Dan Gilgoff, on his excellent "God and
Country" blog, points out Sotomayor also
ruled in favor of a group of Connecticut
antiabortion protesters who asserted
police "used excessive force against
them at a demonstration."
He concludes
her "thin record on abortion is most
likely a relief" to pro-life groups. In
picking her, Obama sent another signal
he is serious about seeking common
ground on abortion.
Liberals should not take the bait of the
right-wingers by allowing the debate
over Sotomayor to be premised on the
idea she is a bold ideological choice.
She's not. But if conservatives succeed
in painting this moderate as a radical,
they will skew future arguments over the
court.
In fact, liberals should press
Sotomayor on her more conservative
decisions on business issues, an area in
which the current court already tilts
too far right.
As for Republican senators, they have to
ask if it's worth alienating Hispanic voters to wage a fierce battle against a woman who is, from their point of
view, the best nominee Obama was likely
to give them.