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Reversals Raise Questions Regarding Sotomayor's Qualifications
By Thomas Sowell | 07/01/09 | 06:24 PM EDT | 5 Comments
For the fourth time in six cases, the Supreme Court of the United States has reversed a decision for which Judge Sonia Sotomayor voted on the 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals. If this nominee were a white male, would this not raise questions about whether he should be elevated to a court that has found his previous decisions wrong two-thirds of the times when those decisions have been reviewed?
Is no one supposed to ask questions about qualifications, simply because this nominee is Hispanic and a woman? Have we become that mindless?
Qualifications are not simply a question of how long you have been doing something, but how well you have done it. Judge Sotomayor has certainly been on the federal bench long enough, but is being reversed four out of six times a sign of a job well done?
Would longevity be equated with qualifications anywhere else? Some sergeants have been in the army longer than some generals but nobody thinks that is a reason to make those sergeants generals.
Performance matters. And Judge Sotomayor's performance provides no reason for putting her on the Supreme Court.
Longevity is not the only false argument for putting Sonia Sotomayor on the Supreme Court. Another is the argument that "elections have consequences," so that the fact that Barack Obama won last year's elections means that his choice for the Supreme Court should be confirmed. This is a political talking point rather than a serious argument.
Of course elections have consequences. But Senators were also elected, and the Constitution of the United States gives them both the right and the duty to say "yes" or "no" to any president's judicial nominees.
It is painfully appropriate that the case which finally took the Sotomayor nomination beyond the realm of personal biography is one where the key question is how far this country is going to go on the question of racial representation versus individual qualifications.
Within living memory, there was a time when someone who was black could not get certain jobs, regardless of how high that individual's qualifications might be. It outraged the conscience of a nation and aroused people of various races and social backgrounds to rise up against it, sometimes at the risk of their lives.
Many, if not most, thought that they were fighting for equal treatment for all. But, today, too many people seem to think it is just a question of whose ox is gored-- or for whom one has "empathy," which amounts to the same thing in practice.
Too much that Sonia Sotomayor has said and done over the years places her squarely in the camp of those supporting a racial spoils system instead of equal treatment for all. The organizations she has belonged to, as well as the statements she has made repeatedly -- not just an isolated slip of the tongue taken "out of context"-- as well as her dismissing the white firefighters' case that the Supreme Court heard and heeded, all point in the same direction.
Clever people say that none of this matters because Republican Senators don't have enough votes to stop this nominee from being confirmed. But that assumes that every Democrat will vote for her, regardless of what the public thinks. It also assumes that alerting the public doesn't matter, now or for the future.
The standards for judging the nomination of Sonia Sotomayor are not the standards of either the criminal law or the civil law. That is, nothing has to be proven against her "beyond a reasonable doubt" or even by "a preponderance of the evidence."
Judge Sotomayor is not in any jeopardy that would entitle her to the benefit of the doubt. It is 300 million Americans and their posterity who are entitled to the benefit of the doubt when the enormous power of determining what their rights are is put into anyone's hands as a Supreme Court justice for life.
The New Haven firefighters got their rights, despite Judge Sotomayor, because of a one-vote majority in the Supreme Court, where one vote counts big time. Making Sonia Sotomayor that one vote is a big gamble with the rights of all Americans.
5 Comments | Related Topics »National
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Comments
This nomination has nothing to do with qualifications. She's about as qualified to sit on the Supreme Court as Obama is to run this country.
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|Why aren't more people asking raising these questions?
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|When will you Republicans get over it? There is a reason you are out of power.....your ideas are old and out-dated. The American people don't mind bigger government.
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|I'm not a Republican... but Sotomayor's record is terrible. If I had an EMPLOYEE that I overruled two-thirds of the time, I would fire them. You don't have a problem with denying someone an otherwise deserved promotion because of RACE? Are you a bigot? Please explain to me your reasoning, I would love to understand a concept that is so foreign to me. As for bigger government, I don't think that's an issue where Sotomayor is concerned, but JUSTICE is. And quite frankly, her ability to dispense it is, at this case, fairly doubtful. All men are equal before the eyes of the law and NOTHING else should be the case. She doesn't seem to understand this. Not only should she not be a Supreme Court Justice, she probably shouldn't have her current gig either, and she was nominated for that position by a Republican. Jack, you're just some bizarre partisan hack... go climb back under your rock.
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|Mr. Sowell:
I am simply amazed that someone of your stature and (impressive) credentials could argue with a straight face that Sotomayor is not qualified because she was reversed four out of six times by the SCOTUS. If I follow your reasoning, the other Circuit judges who voted like her (the reversed judgments were either 2-1 or 3-0 decisions) or the four Supreme Court Justices in the minority who would have affirmed her rulings must also be unqualified. And what if Justice Kennedy instead voted with his four liberal colleagues in the relevant cases, would that make Sotomayor qualified?
It is OK if you disagree with Sotomayor's politics. However, if you want to attack her on the purpported ground of "qualification", please try at least to come up with some more compelling arguments.
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