Con: Senators must contest Sotomayer’s view that empathy, ethnicity can overrule law

By ROBERT ALT   Thursday, May 28, 2009
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EDITOR’S NOTE: The writer is addressing the question, Did President Obama make a wise choice in nominating Sonia Sotomayor for the Supreme Court?

In choosing a Supreme Court justice, President Obama—like any president—should look for someone who will apply the Constitution and the laws as written, and interpret them consistent with their plain and original meaning.

Regrettably, in selecting Sonia Sotomayor, Obama has rejected this criterion. Instead, he has chosen a judge who has expressed both openness to judicial policymaking and a belief that judges probably cannot be, and perhaps should not be, impartial.

Judges’ proper roles are limited. Their job is not to choose the best policy or decide who they would like to win the case, but to apply the law evenly, as it is written, even if they happen to disagree with it or have greater affinity for one of the parties.

A majority of Americans agree. A November 2008 survey conducted by the polling company found 70 percent of voters want judges who “will interpret and apply the law as it is written and not take into account their own viewpoints and experiences” over judges who “will go beyond interpreting and applying the law as written and take into account their own viewpoints and experiences.”

But Obama says he wants a judge to take personal experiences into account. He has found just such a jurist in Sotomayor.

In a speech at the University of California at Berkeley law school, Judge Sotomayor questioned whether it is possible for judges to overcome personal sympathies or biases “in all or even in most cases.”

More troubling, she seems to think expressing these biases is a good thing.

“I wonder whether by ignoring our differences as women or men of color we do a disservice both to the law and society,” she has said.

Also troubling, Sotomayor has made several statements which are, at best, ethnically insensitive. Best, known, perhaps, is her assertion: “I would hope that a wise Latina woman with the richness of her experiences would more often than not reach a better conclusion (as a judge) than a white male who hasn’t lived that life.”

She also stated that physiological differences based on national origins “will make a difference in our judging,” and grants some credence to the idea that race or ethnicity may lead to “basic differences in logic and reasoning.”

U.S. Civil Rights Commissioner Todd Gaziano cuts to the heart of the matter: “Make no mistake, however: this is not a potential example of ‘reverse discrimination.’ At issue is the same, old, ugly racial discrimination and stereotypes as before—just in furtherance of different groups.”

These statements raise serious concerns about Obama’s use of “empathy” as the standard for choosing judges. Empathy is an empty standard, absent direction by some guiding philosophy, ideology or personal experiences.

If judges are nominated for their willingness to make decisions based upon empathy, senators must conduct a much more searching review of nominees.

Questions about personal beliefs, politics and background are virtually irrelevant for nominees who properly limit their jurisprudence to what Chief Justice Roberts called the umpire-like task of deciding cases based on the written law. But they must be asked if a senator is to understand when and how a judge will exercise empathy to supersede the law. Given Sotomayor’s public statements about the differences in judges and ethnicities, searching inquiry will be essential.

Supreme Court justices take an oath to “administer justice without respect to persons,” to “do equal right to the poor and to the rich” and to “faithfully and impartially discharge” their duties under the Constitution. Judge Sotomayor has stated impartiality is not possible in most cases.

The Senate has a duty to thoroughly question Judge Sotomayor to determine whether she can honestly uphold this oath of office, or whether she will seek to apply her own personal biases from the bench.

A former professor at Case Western University in Cleveland, Robert Alt is a senior legal fellow and deputy director of the Center for Legal and Judicial Studies at the Heritage Foundation (www.heritage.org). Readers may write him at Heritage, 214 Massachusetts Ave., NE, Washington, DC. 20005.

reader COMMENTS
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(3)
Professor
May 30, 2009 at 9:49 a.m.
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darwin--Here's why I think that IS important. In the 'ivory tower' of the Supreme Court, you have nine justices who really don't live in the world you and I do, yet they are making decisions about how the Constitution applies to us. Here are a couple of examples. Remember the 'soccer mom' case several years ago? Where this two-bit police officer made a custodial arrest of a middle-class mom, screaming at her--in front of her young children--, put her in handcuffs, and took her away to jail--because he saw her driving without a seatbelt. The case is from Texas, where the law specifically forbade people convicted of a seatbelt violation from going to jail as punishment for the offense. This 'soccer-mom' spent several hours in jail, though, waiting to see a judge. The Supremes, in a 5-4 ruling, upheld the authority of the officer to make a custodial arrest in such cases--even though it actually called out the cop for making such a crappy decision to do so. I think the case MIGHT have been different, had any of the justices ever had to deal with a cop that has an attitude--like this one--but, in their world, even the opportunity for such an interaction is rare. Or the recent California case where the cops executed a no-knock search warrant, based on evidence collected 4 months earlier, (and not updated), looking for several black guys allegedly operating a drug house. So, the cops crash in early one morning, find ONLY a white guy and a white girl, sleeping in bed, in the nude. The cops make the couple stand in the nude while they 'secure' the area. They realize that the guys they were looking for moved out about 3 months ago. The white couple sues; the Supremes dismiss the lawsuit, saying that sometimes law abiding citizens have to put up with a little embarassment in cases like this. WTF? I imagine it would have been different, if one of them, and their spouses had to stand naked in front of a bunch of strangers with guns! Sooooo, yes, I would like someone on the Court who maybe didn't get their with a silver spoon in their mouth, and who understands what REAL life is. THEN, they can apply the Constitution to life as it REALLY exists--not how it exists in their abstract view of the world.

darwin1
May 29, 2009 at 1:41 p.m.
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Hey why on earth would a judge want to be empathetic and see someones else point of view when interpreting the law.

Too often legislatures will intentionally pass a vague or unconstitutional law to appease their constituents knowing full well what the courts will do and then bash the courts for doing the right thing.

janesvillean
May 29, 2009 at 12:26 p.m.
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The idea that "applying the law as written" is not, itself, a policy choice is absurd, even if there were actual agreement on what THAT means, and Alt is smart enough to know it. If we did not wish judges to exercise their judgement we may as well turn over sentencing to the police.

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