Gene Healy

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Sotomayor: A presidential power skeptic?

By: Gene Healy
Examiner Columnist
June 9, 2009

Most sane Americans are sick of identity politics. More's the pity, then, that race and gender will likely take center stage in the coming Supreme Court fight. If so, Sonia Sotomayor can hardly cry victim: She's fed the fire by repeatedly suggesting that women and minorities read the Constitution differently than white males.

That sentiment is an affront to the rule of law, but, surprisingly, it doesn't seem to be reflected in Sotomayor's own record. She's never been a reliable vote for pro-choice litigants, and, despite her "wise Latina" empathy, she rejected 80 percent of the race discrimination claims that came before her as an appellate judge.

It's a shame to watch another confirmation battle cover the same tired old territory. Far more important issues are at stake. Why do we have federal courts in the first place? According to James Madison, they were meant to serve as "an impenetrable bulwark against every assumption of power in the legislative or executive."

When it comes to checking government power, Sotomayor's record is pretty poor. Civil libertarians can't be happy with her pro-police orientation: The former prosecutor has backed law enforcement in more than two-thirds of criminal cases that she's heard.

Her record on property rights is no more promising: In 2006's Didden v. Village of Port Chester, she ratified an eminent domain abuse that makes the infamous Kelo case look mild.

The landowner in Didden, who wanted to build a CVS, refused to pay off a politically connected developer, so the town gave his property to the developer to build a Walgreen's. Sotomayor's panel saw no evil in this case of state-sponsored extortion.

In the years to come, though, an "impenetrable bulwark" will be especially vital in checking presidential power. Obama's rhetoric is kinder and gentler than his predecessor's, but, like Bush, he claims to be the sole "decider" on warrantless wiretapping and executive secrecy. Sotomayor's record here is thin, but it gives us reasons for cautious optimism.

The Second Circuit, Sotomayor's home for the last 11 years, gets few national security cases. But what we can glean from three key cases she's participated in suggests she agrees with former Justice Sandra O'Connor that the War on Terror "is not a blank check for the president." The Second Circuit, Sotomayor's home for the last 11 years, gets few national security cases. But what we can glean from three key cases she's participated in suggests she agrees with former Justice Sandra O'Connor that the War on Terror "is not a blank check for the president."

A Justice Sotomayor is unlikely to move in lockstep with the ACLU in this area. In Cassidy v. Chertoff (2006), she rejected a Fourth Amendment challenge to post-9/11 security searches conducted by a ferry operator acting at the behest of the Bush administration.

But in 2008's Doe v. Mukasey, she joined two colleagues to strike down provisions of the Patriot Act related to National Security Letters (NSL). NSLs allow the FBI to seize private customer information from ISPs and other businesses, and place the recipient under a "gag order," preventing disclosure of the demand.

Still before the Second Circuit is the case of Maher Arar, a Canadian citizen sent to Syria under the U.S. government's extraordinary rendition program and tortured there. At oral argument last December, Sotomayor questioned the administration's lawyer sharply: "So the minute the executive raises the specter of foreign policy, it is the government's position that that is a license to torture?"

Sotomayor is unlikely to participate in the final decision, but her line of questioning suggested skepticism toward broad claims of executive power. That record isn't much to go on, but it hints that Sotomayor won't be as pro-executive as recent GOP nominees.

As Pulitzer-Prize winning reporter Charlie Savage explains in his book Takeover, President Bush didn't pick Harriet Miers because he wanted to reward a friend; rather, Bush and Cheney saw her as someone who "could be counted on to embrace Bush's expansive view of presidential powers," their key criteria for judicial nominations. In that sense, in Roberts and Alito, the country got smarter versions of Harriet Miers.

For all her faults, it's unlikely that Sonia Sotomayor will be a pushover for any wartime president. Constitutionalists and civil libertarians should take comfort in the fact that it could have been worse.

Examiner columnist Gene Healy is a vice president at the Cato Institute and the author of "The Cult of the Presidency."




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Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

JT

Jun 9, 2009

Thank you for a hopeful and crucial article at such a vital time. With the departure of the renowned Justice Souter, we have been left with a terrifying prospect: will a president who claims to support an absurdly expansive view of the presidency pick a pro-unitary theory of the executive nominee to cement the recent 4/5 support for absurd and reckless presidential supremacy? Thank you for giving us the little hope that we have that this nominee will say no to presidential supremacy and yes to the limits set clearly by Constitution and precedent.

 

Mabuballah

Jun 11, 2009

Yes, Mr. Healy, the President does need to be reigned in, particularly this president. Any tendency of the proposed nominee, however, can in no way excuse her consistent failure to adhere strictly to equality under the law, as evidenced by the Ritchey case and numerous of her public statements. Euphemistically called, "reverse racism", it is nothing less than equal treatment under the law REQUIRED under the 14th Amendment of the Constitution. I have a brother in Portchester, NY. If Ms. Sotomayor can neither honor the concept of equality under the 14th Amendment, nor the protection of personal property rights under the 5th, (as in the Didden case), we don't need Sotomayor. With both feet I vote no!

 


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