Posts Tagged Sotomayor

BILL O’REILLY ALERT: Sotomayor, Bork, And ACORN

We’re beginning to learn some very interesting tidbits from Sonia Sotomayor’s background.  The Washington Times today has a report on discoveries in the documents of the Puerto Rican Legal Defense and Education Fund, where Sotomayor worked for twelve years.

 

A legal advocacy group advised by Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor in the 1980s actively opposed conservative Robert H. Bork’s nomination to the high court calling him a “threat” to the “civil rights of the Latino community.”

The documents, which the group’s lawyers have said include relevant information about Judge Sotomayor’s time there, also show the fund did legal work for the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now, known as ACORN.  

None of these should disqualify someone from serving on the bench, but talk radio and Fox News will no doubt have a field day.

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Time To Go After Sotomayor

A Rasmussen poll out today indicates public support for Sonia Sotomayor’s nomination may be faltering.  Most of the drop is likely a result of the Ricci v. DeStefano decision.

 

A heavily publicized U.S. Supreme Court reversal of an appeals court ruling by Judge Sonia Sotomayor has at least temporarily diminished public support for President Obama’s first Supreme Court nominee.

 

The latest Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey, conducted on the two nights following the Supreme Court decision, finds that 37% now believe Sotomayor should be confirmed while 39% disagree.

 

Two weeks ago, the numbers were much brighter for the nominee. At that time, 42% favored confirmation, and 34% were opposed.

 

The most interesting part of the survey is the opposition from independents.

 

Democrats now favor confirmation by a four-to-one margin while Republicans are opposed by a three-to-one margin. Among those not affiliated with either major party, 23% favor confirmation, and 49% are opposed.

 

If the support for Sotomayor was strictly on partisan lines, we could feel fairly safe in predicting she will sail through the Senate.  But that is clearly not the case anymore.  This poll gives a green light to Republicans who were not sure whether they should challenge the nomination. 

 

On this blog in the past, I have recommended Republicans focus on more important issues than Sotomayor because it looked like a losing battle.  I’m no longer sure that is the case.  A full-throated attack may be in order, and it’s time for the outside interests on both sides to ramp up spending.

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Ricci v. Sotomayor

The news today is filled with discussions of how the case of Ricci v. DeStefano will affect Judge Sonia Sotomayor’s nomination to the Supreme Court.  I blogged about the subject yesterday, saying, while unlikely, it could impact her confirmation.  Both the New York Times and Washington Post today offer analyses that see it similarly.  Republicans will trumpet the Ricci case in the coming weeks, but Sotomayor will still sail through her confirmation.

 

Even though it will be difficult to derail Sotomayor, Republicans jumped on the Ricci ruling quickly:

 

“Every citizen has a right to have his or her case heard by a judge who will rule on the laws, the facts and the Constitution — and not play favorites,” said Sen. Jeff Sessions (Ala.), the ranking Republican on the Judiciary Committee. “This case sharpens our focus on Judge Sotomayor’s troubling speeches and writings, which indicate the opposite belief: that personal experiences and political views should influence a judge’s decision.”

 

Democrats immediately countered:

 

In a conference call with reporters, Sen. Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) — a member of the Judiciary Committee — argued the Supreme Court’s ruling in Ricci v. DeStefano should not be seen as a rebuke of Sotomayor’s judicial temperament, but rather an indication that she is a moderate jurist who was simply following precedent.

 

Schumer argued that while Republicans have warned “she will be an activist judge, this case clearly shows she won’t. She’ll be a moderate … her whole career on the 2nd Circuit is one of modesty,” Schumer argued.

 

Conservatives should be frightened of a jurisprudence of doubt.  In that sense, Sotomayor’s ruling in Ricci was the correct one.  Linda Greenhouse’s op-ed in the New York Times today is a must-read. 

 

Like that decision or hate it, cheer Monday’s ruling or deplore it, one thing that is clear from reading the Supreme Court’s 89 pages of opinions in the case is that Judge Sotomayor and her colleagues played by the old rules, and the court changed them. Although “Sotomayor Reversed” was a frequent headline on the posts that spread quickly across the Web, it was actually the Supreme Court itself that shifted course.

 

Most people are unlikely to view the case from the perspective of precedence, so it remains to be seen whether this issue will gain traction building opposition to Sotomayor.  Conservatives will be making an issue of the case, but this is hardly something we should put energy into when more pressing matters of healthcare and climate change confront us.  Few would deny that Ricci and the other firefighters who passed the exam were unfairly discriminated against, but conservatives must pick their battles.  Sotomayor did not simply decide her ruling on her personal preferences.  Conservatives should not block her confirmation because of personal preferences.

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