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Will Republicans expose the two Sotomayors?

By: Byron York
Chief Political Correspondent
July 14, 2009

Sonia Sotomayor's opening statement at her Supreme Court confirmation hearing was, to many ears, brief and boilerplate. But to Senate Judiciary Committee Republicans listening intently just a few feet away, Sotomayor drew a map for the questioning they hope will expose the fundamental flaws in her judicial views.

The theme Republicans will stress is this: Which is the real Sonia Sotomayor? The one testifying before the committee or the one who's been giving speeches and writing legal opinions for nearly two decades?

"If you look at her opening statement, there are places where she is attempting, on the eve of her confirmation, to do a 180 on things she has said over the years," says one senior Republican aide. "Should we believe what she's said repeatedly in the past -- long before she was nominated to the court -- or should we believe what she said on the opening day of her confirmation hearing?"

For example, Sotomayor told the committee that, "My personal and professional experiences help me listen and understand, with the law always commanding the result in every case."

As soon as the words came out of her mouth, GOP aides were checking back to a speech Sotomayor made at Seton Hall School of Law in October 2003. "My experiences will affect the facts I choose to see as a judge," Sotomayor said back then. "Our experiences as woman and people of color will in some way affect our decisions." That's a far different Sotomayor from the nominee who appeared on Monday.

Sotomayor also told the committee that her judicial philosophy is simple: "fidelity to the law." "The task of a judge is not to make the law," she said, "it is to apply the law."

As she spoke, Republicans re-read her speech at Duke University Law School in 2005 when she said the federal courts of appeals are "where policy is made." Acknowledging that she was speaking more candidly than judges usually do, she added, "I know this is on tape. And I should never say that because we don't make law, I know." Her words drew laughter, because everyone knew she was plainly saying that she does, in fact, make law. Again, the Sotomayor at Duke was quite different from the Sotomayor who appeared on Monday.

Sotomayor told the committee that she seeks "to strengthen both the rule of law and faith in the impartiality of our judicial system." At that, Republicans went back to her famous "wise Latina" speech at Berkeley in 2001, in which she said that, "The aspiration to impartiality is just that -- it's an aspiration because it denies the fact that we are by our experiences making different choices than others." Yet again, a different Sotomayor.

Sotomayor's professions of fidelity to the law and impartiality are the core of the argument that she has the right temperament and approach to serve on the Supreme Court. Yet her opening words just served to underscore the difference between what she says to win confirmation and what she has told friendly audiences over the years. "She wants us just to accept on its face that she has always followed the law," the GOP aide says, "but the things she's said outside the court run contrary to that."

Republicans will press hard on the issue of the two Sotomayors. "By and large, our themes are pretty well established," the GOP aide says. Their case against Sotomayor will be based on the issues we've been hearing about for weeks: following the law, equal treatment, gun rights, and a few other key topics. Sen. Jeff Sessions, the top Republican on the committee, says there will be no surprises from his side -- just a solid and strongly argued case against Sotomayor.

"If I must one day to go court, what kind of judge would I wish to hear my case?" Sessions asked in an opening statement that managed to be both gracious and tough. "Do I want a judge that allows his or her social, political or religious views to change the outcome? Or do I want a judge that impartially applies the law to the facts and fairly rules on the merits without bias or prejudice?"

The short version of that is: Would that judge be the old Sonia Sotomayor, or the new?

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.

Dave

Jul 14, 2009

Your analysis seems to have been copied and pasted from the Senate Republican email listserv. It is based solely upon carefully carved out quotes from speeches as opposed to actual legal opinions or judgements. And you speak nothing of the actual differences in judicial philosophy that Sessions and Sotomayor may have. But what am I to expect from The Examiner. This analysis speaks to your role as a Republican mouthpiece instead someone who has the ability to objectively evaluate Sotomayor's judicial record or how she may effect the court.

 

Rick T.

Jul 14, 2009

And we are supposed to be persuaded by your cut and paste from the Democratic talking points?

The old "quoted out of context" chestnut is the last refuge of someone who has no other valid argument to make.

 

redbourn

Jul 14, 2009

When it comes to the selection of Supreme Court nominees Obama disagreed with fellow Democrats over the selection of Justices Roberts and Alito and voted against their confirmation in spite of their excellent legal credentials. He would apparently use an entirely different yardstick to the tried and tested one and stated, “We need somebody who’s got the heart, the empathy, to recognize what it’s like to be a young teenage mom.

The empathy to understand what it’s like to be poor, or African-American, or gay, or disabled, or old. And that’s the criteria by which I’m going to be selecting my judges”.

Yes, Obama said that!

http://tinyurl.com/nopapertrail

All this stuff was known about Obama a long while back but the media loved the either of 'change' and brushed the facts aside.

Mike

 

Dave

Jul 14, 2009

Response to Rick T.

How about addressing the rest of my concerns, including the lack of analysis of past court rulings, showing any kind of understanding of judicial philosophy etc. Polling consistently shows that the American public knows little about Supreme Court nominees, forget whether they are informed of how jurisprudence is conducted. The American public would be well served if publications provided informative well-balanced analysis.

 

Paul

Jul 14, 2009

Sotomayor is divided against herself on key issues in order to please whoever is before her. That reveals a serious deficiency in one of the most essential qualities of a judge: Integrity. A person with integrity will follow a consistent conviction no matter who is or isn't watching.

 

Laughing Liberal

Jul 14, 2009

So Jeff Sessions, who would have joined the Klan if its memebers didn't smoke pot, is worried about Sotomayor's 'racism'? Hilarious.

Remind me again why your party was reduced to rubble in the last two elections?

Repugnantones in Congress couldn't stop a watch right now. She'll sail through and she'll be a great justice.

 

James Davidson

Jul 14, 2009

Judge Sotomayor read the noble lie chapter in the liberal playbook, i.e. Lie to the people for their own good. She and her liberal backers know that if she affirmed what she said (and really meant) when the stakes were not a seat on the Supreme Court, the American people would not buy it. So fib about it.

There's little conservatives can do about it as a practical matter. The media will not let any efforts to expose the lie reverberate.

So it goes. But it could be worse. Liberal president appoints a liberal judge to replace a liberal justice. Not much there there.

 

Jack Davis

Jul 14, 2009

There are enough Dems in the Senate to push this through, so why bother writing about it?

 

Lawrence McLeroy

Jul 14, 2009

I hope everyone is not disappointed when the Republicans' don't make a big noise over this judge. They are much less than a good defender of the law just like their counter parts, Democrats.

 

Grok

Jul 14, 2009

The phrase "quoted out of context" is a very valid complaint -- particularly if it is true.

I'm very curious both about the "without those experiences" part of her controversial comment though I can't find it anywhere where republican talking points are covered.

I'm also amazed that with something like 17 years of judicial experience that republicans can't figure out that she follows the letter of the law.

In particular, the republicans are being hypocrites with respect to her decision concerning the firefighters... as she followed established precedent. Republicans would rather judges make up their own results rather than follow previous precedents?

Strange.

 

Neshobanakni

Jul 14, 2009

How did Puerto Ricans become "People of Color?" They're either black or white, or, in a few cases, Taino. She's white, and should maybe just shut up and judge according to the law - and only the law.

 

Craig

Jul 14, 2009

Tell me o' wise "dave" where do I go to find the truth? Or do I...(gasp) have to read throught divergent opinions and make up my own mind.

grow up dude.

 

dipsydoodle

Jul 15, 2009

If you would all wake up, you would see there is no difference between republicans or democrats. There is no other person picked; she is going to be picked whether we like it or not because that is what O wants.

 

FeralCat

Jul 15, 2009

Sotojekyll and Sotohyde?

 

Bob-Bob-Bob

Jul 15, 2009

The republicans don't have the GUTS or BRAINS to go after sotomayor the way the democrats would if she were a BUSH pick. So as far as the hearing goes , she is in, like it or not.

 

reasonable

Jul 15, 2009

Jeff Sessions called white Lawyers a 'Disgrace to their race' for representing black people. His attempts at moving up the judicial system never got off the ground. Think he might be a bit bitter? Oh well, let's be honest. Right wingers won't like Sonja, lefties will. Indpendents will split. As Senator Graham said, Obama won, so she will be confirmed. I don't mind Roberts as a judge, but Alito, Thomas, and Scalia offend me. Thomas rarely even asks a question. He has gone years without even asking a question...

 

Brent

Jul 16, 2009

Regretably Dave,I drank the Democrat's Kool-Aid when Robert Bork was being considered for the Supreme Court -all that "cut and paste" from liberals regarding his postion on the right to privacy,remember?Very effective at the time though.Humorous in retrospect ,given the graphic FBI audio tapes of the late Dr.Martin Luther King as he"ministered" to assorted lovelies in his motel room - authorized by Robert F.Kennedy while Attorney General.

 

jpeanut

Jul 16, 2009

A seventeen year record trumps the things said in speeches. She has years of rulings to back up her true judgement history. If people have a problem with her ability to judge farily then they should be capable of using specific cases where whe failed to be impartial to justify this argument. I see none of that here.

 

Jan 11, 2010

projeksiyon

 


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