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What the Republicans will ask Sonia Sotomayor

By: Byron York
Chief Political Correspondent
July 10, 2009

Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor shares a laugh with the Senate Judiciary Committee's ranking Republican, Sen. Jeff Sessions, R-Ala., during their meeting on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, June 2, 2009. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)

There's been a lot of discussion about Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor's views on affirmative action, quotas, and the role of federal judges. But with confirmation hearings set to begin Monday morning, Republicans on the Senate Judiciary Committee are becoming increasingly concerned about Sotomayor's positions on gun rights.

At issue is Sotomayor's opinion in a recent Second Amendment case in New York. Sotomayor held that even though the Supreme Court has ruled the federal government cannot deny the right to bear arms, state governments are still entitled to do so -- in other words, that the Second Amendment does not apply to the states.

"This is a huge issue, one of monumental importance," Sen. Jeff Sessions, the top Republican on the Judiciary Committee, told me during a wide-ranging discussion previewing the issues likely to come up at the hearings. "The Second Amendment case is troubling because there's no doubt that the Supreme Court will hear another important Second Amendment case soon, and it will turn on whether the Second Amendment applies to the states."

Sessions calls it "common sense" that the Constitution protects the right to keep and bear arms. But he notes that the federal gun case was decided by a 5-to-4 margin, and a Justice Sotomayor could change the mix. The National Rifle Association says Sotomayor's position raises "very serious concerns," and Republicans on the Judiciary Committee hope some red-state Democratic senators share those concerns.

Sessions says GOP senators will also press Sotomayor on the controversial issue of quotas and her now-reversed decision in the Ricci case. Her ruling against Connecticut firefighters who had passed a race-neutral promotion test raised "a hugely important constitutional issue," Sessions says, and the Supreme Court's decision to overturn Sotomayor "was a pretty serious reversal of her approach."

Republicans will also explore whether Sotomayor's Ricci position was the product of a long and deeply held belief in racial preferences. GOP lawyers have been looking through Sotomayor's work on the board of the Puerto Rican Legal Defense and Education Fund and note that the group, with Sotomayor's help, filed a number of lawsuits challenging promotions at various public service agencies.

By the way, Sessions is still not sure whether he has gotten all the relevant material relating to Sotomayor's time at the PRLDEF. "We were told that there were 300 boxes of material, and the documents we've received amounted to about 1,000 pages, or about one box, so I'm uneasy about that," Sessions says. But with Democrats rushing to get the hearings done, there's little time to check on the rest of the material.

Beyond quotas, Republicans intend to question Sotomayor extensively about her public statements on the larger issue of bias in judging. "Her speeches are really troubling," Sessions says. "She basically says that she willingly accepts that a judge can and should allow their opinions É to be affected by their experience." Such a stance, Sessions believes, "goes contrary to the concept that a judge should set aside his personal biases and prejudices and political views and religious views and try the parties before him fairly and justly."

Sotomayor's beliefs, Sessions says, extend far beyond the "wise Latina" speech that caused controversy shortly after she was nominated. "I think because some of these matters came out early, statements like how judges set policy and the 'wise Latina' comment, that people apparently thought that was all there was to it," Sessions says. "But the speeches go very deeply into those concepts, which are very much outside the traditional American legal approach to judges."

In recent days there has been a lot of commentary to the effect that Republicans have essentially given up on any effort to oppose Sotomayor and that her hearing will likely be smooth sailing. Sessions is not convinced.

He's fully aware that Democrats have 60 votes and are determined to notch a win for President Barack Obama. But the issues -- guns, quotas, judicial philosophy -- remain. "Some people may think that because we're not participating in the politics of personal destruction and mean-spirited attacks, that these issues are not serious," Sessions concludes. "I consider them very serious. If a judge is not committed to setting aside their sympathies and prejudices and background biases when they take the bench, then they shouldn't sit on any bench."

Byron York, The Examiner's chief political correspondent, can be contacted at byork@washingtonexaminer.com. His column appears on Tuesday and Friday, and his stories and blog posts appears on ExaminerPolitics.com.



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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.

Luis

Jul 10, 2009

Ay, check this article out...thought that it was very enlightening...it's not that I am against her but her speeches and prejudices that make me wonder; not her ethnic background.

Happy reading.
Chelo

 

Stump

Jul 10, 2009

what was it again that kept Sessions from sitting on the bench himself? Look that up...

 

Bill Carson

Jul 10, 2009

Hey, you gotta admit she's a "wise Latina." That's a great idea to say that states can take your guns away if the feds can't. Wonder what other tricks she has up her sleeve. Oh, well, this country wanted to worship Obama and now we all have to pay the price, which only get bigger every day that passes. Maybe the American people will get sick of Obama once unemployment reaches 12% or so.

 

States Rights

Jul 10, 2009

I thought Republicans were all for state's rights. I guess not when a state wants to allow marijuana or to ban guns.

 

Richard Helfrich

Jul 11, 2009

If Judge Sotomayor believes a state can deprive you of your Second Amendment rights, does she also believe the states can deprive you of other rights?

 

Abby

Jul 11, 2009

'"Some people may think that because we're not participating in the politics of personal destruction and mean-spirited attacks, that these issues are not serious," Sessions concludes.'

Ha ha ha. Who thinks that the Republican Party is not engaging in the politics of personal destruction and mean-spirited attacks? Cute, Senator. Nice try.

 

Novanglian

Jul 11, 2009

ABBY: Republican "politics of personal destruction and mean-spirited attacks"?
Do the names Robert Bork and Clarence Thomas strike a familiar note?


 

Matchbox

Jul 11, 2009

Abby, Stealing elections and destroying the opposition is all your party has left to carry out your socilaist agenda. Ask Sara Palin and I read today they are after the New Haven Fireman Ricci.
As for States Rights since when did liberals support those. You lefties want us unarmed when your President-for-Life Obama has the America people outraged and shouting from roof tops Death to the Dictator as the people of Iran were doing this week concerning.
Thomas Jefferson said " Freedom is watered by the blood of patriots and TYRANTS." It ain't about hunting rights, it about protecting us from a socialist dictatorship like the many we saw in the last century that was responsibly for 100 million murders of people who did not agree with them. Just like our current Democrat party will do if they can over throw our Constitutional Republic and as the Former President of Honduras tried to do, while getting the support from the dictators in Nicaragua, Venezuela and soon to be U.S.

 

Ruth

Jul 11, 2009

Posters don't know or care that firefighter Ricci is being harrassed by her supporters. I am sure that isn't in the MSM.

 

Sep 8, 2009

She is truly the hottest Supreme Court Justice ever! She could be on Mad Men. She is without question the only Supreme Court Justice that I have ever had a crush on (except for that brief moment with Rehenquist).

 


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