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Republican: Sotomayor had ties to extreme group

By: Julie Hirschfeld Davis
The Associated Press
July 5, 2009

(AP)

The top Republican on the Senate committee that will consider Sonia Sotomayor’s Supreme Court nomination says a Puerto Rican civil rights group’s papers could shed light on her judicial approach, particularly her view of racial preferences in hiring.

White House Counsel Greg Craig, however, told Sen. Jeff Sessions, R-Ala., in a letter that board meeting minutes and other papers detailing the Puerto Rican Legal Defense and Education Fund’s activities while Sotomayor was an outside adviser shouldn’t affect her nomination because she had no role in writing or approving them.

“During her time there, the organization took extreme positions on legal issues ranging from the death penalty to abortion to racial quotas,” Sessions said in a statement. He said it was “absurd” for the White House to call the documents irrelevant.

The battle over the papers isn’t likely to damage Sotomayor’s chances of confirmation as since Democrats have more than enough votes in favor of President Barack Obama’s first high court nominee, and Republicans have shown little appetite for trying to block her.

Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, which will begin confirmation hearings July 13, shrugged off the GOP concerns being raised about Sotomayor, saying some in the GOP were going to oppose any Obama pick — “even if the president had nominated Moses.”

Republicans “were going to object no matter who it was. And several of them have told me that privately” Leahy told the Associated Press in an interview at his Vermont farmhouse.

Republicans did not respond to requests for comment about Leahy’s remarks.

Early last month, Sotomayor  gave the Judiciary panel documents she contributed to or helped write while she was a board member of the group from 1980 to 1992, but Leahy joined Sessions recently in asking for more information about the group’s activities and policy positions while she was involved.

The organization, now know as LatinoJustice PRLDEF, began sending some of that material to the committee Wednesday, but Sessions’ office said Sotomayor’s backers were delaying the release of the information to prevent a thorough investigation.

Cesar Perales, PRLDEF’s president and general counsel, told the AP earlier this week that he planned to send the documents on a rolling basis, and all of them would arrive on Capitol Hill by week’s end.

In his letter to Sessions, Craig said the Judiciary panel already has all pertinent documents on Sotomayor. He said the judge never served on PRLDEF’s staff or supervised its employees, and noted that Republicans have in years past refused to release similar documents on their own Supreme Court nominees.

“Perhaps there is confusion about Judge Sotomayor’s role with PRLDEF, and that confusion may account for your unusual interest,” Craig wrote. “Let me be clear: On Judge Sotomayor’s behalf, we submitted all documents the committee requested of her, and we did so in record time.”



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