We're Proud of the first Hispanic Woman to be nominated to Supreme Court
We all puertoricans are highly
motivated by the nomination of
Sonia Sotomayor, "a daughter of Puerto Rican parents" to be confirmed by the senate of the United States as judge of the
Supreme Court.
Obama Hails Judge as ‘Inspiring’
Published: May 26, 2009 New York Times
WASHINGTON — President Obama announced Tuesday that he would nominate Sonia Sotomayor, a federal appeals judge in New York, to the Supreme Court, choosing a daughter of Puerto Rican parents who was raised in a Bronx public housing project to become the nation’s first Hispanic justice.
In making his first pick for the court, Mr. Obama emphasized Judge
Sotomayor’s “extraordinary journey” from modest beginnings to the Ivy League
and now the pinnacle of the judicial system. Casting her as the
embodiment of the American dream, he touched off a confirmation battle
that he hopes to wage over biography more than ideology.
Judge
Sotomayor’s past comments about how her sex and ethnicity shaped her
decisions, and the role of appeals courts in making policy, generated
instant conservative complaints that she is a judicial activist. Senate
Republicans vowed to scrutinize her record. But with Democrats in reach
of the 60 votes needed to break a filibuster,
the White House appeared eager to dare Republicans to stand against a
history-making nomination at a time when both parties are courting the
growing Hispanic vote.
“When Sonia Sotomayor ascends those marble
steps to assume her seat on the highest court of the land,” Mr. Obama
said as he introduced her in the East Room of the White House, “America
will have taken another important step towards realizing the ideal that
is etched above its entrance: Equal justice under the law.”
Ms.
Sotomayor, 54, a graduate of Princeton and Yale who served as a
prosecutor, corporate litigator and federal district judge before
joining the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, in
New York, a decade ago, would become the nation’s 111th justice.
She would be the third woman to hold a seat on the court and the sixth
person on the current nine-member panel with a Roman Catholic
background.
If confirmed to succeed Justice David H. Souter,
a mainstay of the liberal wing who is retiring, Judge Sotomayor would
probably not change the court’s broad philosophical balance. But her
views on same-sex marriage,
gun rights, financial and environmental regulation, executive power and
other polarizing issues could help shape judicial rulings for years, if
not decades, to come.
At the heart of the fight over her
nomination will be a debate over the role that a judge’s experience
should play in rendering decisions. Although Mr. Obama said on Tuesday
that “a judge’s job is to interpret, not make law,” his emphasis on a
nominee with “empathy” has generated criticism from Republicans, who
saw that as code for legislating personal views from the bench.
Judge
Sotomayor has said that “our experiences as women and people of color
affect our decisions.” In a lecture in 2001 on the role her background
played in her jurisprudence, she said, “I would hope that a wise Latina
woman with the richness of her experiences would more often than not
reach a better conclusion than a white male who hasn’t lived that life.”
She also said at a conference in 2005
that a “court of appeals is where policy is made,” a statement she
seemed to understand at the time would be controversial, because she
added, “I know this is on tape and I should never say that, because we
don’t make law.” The White House said she meant that appeals courts
play a greater role in interpreting laws than district courts, but
Republicans pointed to the comment as another sign that she would try
to impose her values in rendering decisions.
“Judge Sotomayor is
a liberal activist of the first order who thinks her own personal
political agenda is more important than the law as written,” said Wendy
E. Long, counsel to the Judicial Confirmation Network, a conservative
group. “She thinks that judges should dictate policy and that one’s
sex, race and ethnicity ought to affect the decisions one renders from
the bench.”
Other conservatives said they would focus on her ruling in a New
Haven affirmative action case or on how she might rule on same-sex
marriage. “Abortion is in some sense a stale issue that has been fought
over many times, but gay marriage is very much up for grabs,” said Curt
Levey, executive director of the Committee for Justice, a legal group. “Gay marriage will be bigger than abortion.”
As
she was nominated on Tuesday, Judge Sotomayor did not retreat from her
view that judges ought to look at the impact of their rulings. “I
strive never to forget the real-world consequences of my decisions on
individuals, businesses and government,” she said.
While
conservative groups took aim, Republican senators responded more
cautiously, weighing how aggressively they want to fight her
confirmation. Twenty-nine Senate Republicans voted against her
confirmation to the appellate bench in 1998, including Mitch McConnell
of Kentucky, now the party’s Senate leader, while 25 voted for her. Of
those still in the Senate, 11 voted against her and 9 for her.
Mr.
McConnell said on Tuesday that the Senate would not be a “rubber stamp”
and promised that Republicans would “examine her record to ensure she
understands that the role of a jurist in our democracy is to apply the
law even-handedly, despite their own feelings or personal or political
preferences.”