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Sonia Sotomayor: 10 Things You Should Know

The Huffington Post   First Posted: 06/26/09 06:12 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 02:25 PM ET

Obama Supreme Court

1. HER UPBRINGING: Judge Sonia Sotomayor has arguably lived the American dream. She was born to a Puerto Rican family and grew up in a public housing project in the South Bronx.

Her father was a factory worker with a third-grade education, and died when Sotomayor was nine years old. Her mother raised Sotomayor while working as a nurse. After her father's death, Sotomayor reportedly turned to books for solace, and she says it was her love of Nancy Drew books that ultimately led her to the law.

2. HER EDUCATION: Sotomayor graduated as valedictorian of her class at Blessed Sacrament and at Cardinal Spellman High School in New York. She won a scholarship to Princeton where she continued to excel, graduating summa cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa. She was a co-recipient of the M. Taylor Pyne Prize, the highest honor Princeton awards to an undergraduate. At Yale Law School, Judge Sotomayor served as an editor of the Yale Law Journal and as managing editor of the Yale Studies in World Public Order.

3. HER WORK OFF THE BENCH: After law school, Sotomayor spent five years as Assistant District Attorney in Manhattan, trying dozens of criminal cases. Robert Morgenthau, who chose her for the position, described her as a "fearless and effective prosecutor." She entered private practice in 1984, working as an international corporate litigator handling cases involving everything from intellectual property to banking, real estate and contract law.

4. HER JUDICIAL EXPERIENCE: As Tom Goldstein of SCOTUSBlog writes, "Almost all of her career has been in public service -- as a prosecutor, trial judge, and now appellate judge. She has almost no money to her name." The White House notes:

If confirmed for the Supreme Court, Judge Sotomayor would bring more federal judicial experience to the Supreme Court than any justice in 100 years, and more overall judicial experience than anyone confirmed for the Court in the past 70 years. ...


In 1998, Judge Sotomayor became the first Latina to serve on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, one of the most demanding circuits in the country. She has participated in over 3000 panel decisions and authored roughly 400 opinions, handling difficult issues of constitutional law, to complex procedural matters, to lawsuits involving complicated business organizations."

(The New York Times has summarized her most notable court opinions and articles.)

5. HER STRUGGLE WITH DIABETES: Sotomayor is a Type One diabetic. She has been open about her diabetes in the past, noting that when she was diagnosed at he age of eight, it foiled her hopes of becoming an investigative detective like her heroine, Nancy Drew. While hardly a debilitating disease -- indeed, recent medical advancements have made it quite manageable to live with -- there remain enough late-in-life health implications to have sparked debate in legal, political and medical circles over whether it should be a factor in her nomination.

6. SOTOMAYOR SUPPORTED BY REPUBLICANS: In 1992, Republican President George H. W. Bush appointed Sotomayor to the District Court for the Southern District of New York.

Later, in 1998, President Bill Clinton nominated her to the 2nd Circuit, and she was confirmed with bipartisan support in a 67-29 vote.

All Democrats voted in favor of Sotomayor (although three did not vote), while Republicans opposed her by a 29-25 majority. Among those Senators who are still in the chamber today, however, Sotomayor's margin of confirmation was a bit more comfortable: 35-11.

Indeed, five current Republican Senators voted in favor of her nomination then: Sens. Collins, Gregg, Hatch, Lugar, Snowe. Among the no votes were current Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, current Minority Whip John Kyl and Sen. Jeff Sessions, currently the ranking Republican on the Judiciary Committee.

Additionally, the White House points out, "Known as a moderate on the court, Sotomayor often forges consensus and agreeing with her more conservative nominees far more frequently than she disagrees with them. In cases where Sotomayor and at least one judge appointed by a Republican president were on the three-judge panel, Sotomayor and the Republican appointee(s) agreed on the outcome 95% of the time."

7. SOTOMAYOR ON ABORTION, GAY MARRIAGE: Sotomayor's record on two key hot button cultural issues is thin. But, quite notably, her sole opinion regarding abortion was in line with the anti-abortion movement's position. Some details from the anti-abortion site LifeNews.com:

"Despite 17 years on the bench, Judge Sotomayor has never directly decided whether a law regulating abortion was constitutional," the pro-life group Americans United for Life noted in a recent analysis of potential Supreme Court candidates.


Sotomayor participated in a decision concerning the Mexico City Policy, which President Obama recently overturned and which prohibits sending taxpayer dollars to groups that promote and perform abortions in other nations.

Writing for the Second Circuit, Judge Sotomayor upheld the Mexico City Policy, but AUL says the significance of the decision "may be minimal because the issue was largely controlled by the Second Circuit's earlier opinion in a similar challenge to the policy."

AUL notes that Judge Sotomayor also upheld the pro-life policy by rejecting claims from a pro-abortion legal group that it violated the Equal Protection Clause.

That said, pro-choice groups hailed her nomination, with Planned Parenthood declaring that she "understands the importance of ensuring that our Supreme Court justices respect precedent while also protecting our civil liberties."

Sotomayor has also not ruled on any cases involving gay civil rights, but gay legal activists described her positively:

Long-time gay legal activist Paula Ettelbrick said she met Sotomayor in about 1991 when they both served on then-New York Governor Mario Cuomo's advisory committee on fighting bias.


"Nobody wanted to talk to the queer person at that time," said Ettelbrick, who represented Lambda Legal Defense and Education Fund. "She was the only one [on the advisory committee] who made a point to come over and introduce herself. She was totally interested [in gay civil rights issues] and supportive."

"From everything I know, Judge Sotomayor is an outstanding choice - fair and aware, open and judicious," said Evan Wolfson, head of the national Freedom to Marry organization. "I believe she has the demonstrated commitment to principles of equal protection and inclusion that defines a good nominee to the Supreme Court. In choosing Judge Sotomayor, the first Latino candidate for the Supreme Court, President Obama has made a strong and appealing nomination that should and will receive the supportof those committed to equality for lesbians and gay men."

8. SOTOMAYOR WOULD BE FIRST HISPANIC JUSTICE: If confirmed, Sotomayor would be the first Hispanic to ever serve on the Supreme Court. Tom Goldstein notes:

To Hispanics, the nomination would be an absolutely historic landmark. It really is impossible to overstate its significance. The achievement of a lifetime appointment at the absolute highest levels of the government is a profound event for that community, which in turn is a vital electoral group now and in the future.

9. SOTOMAYOR "SAVED BASEBALL": "During a brief period in 1995," the New York Times reported, "Judge Sonia Sotomayor became revered, at least in those cities with major league baseball teams. She ended a long baseball strike that year, briskly ruling against the owners in favor of the players." A bit more:

The owners were trying to subvert the labor system, she said, and the strike had "placed the entire concept of collective bargaining on trial."


After play resumed, The Philadelphia Inquirer wrote that by saving the season, Judge Sotomayor joined forever the ranks of Joe DiMaggio, Willie Mays, Jackie Robinson and Ted Williams. The Chicago Sun-Times said she "delivered a wicked fastball" to baseball owners and emerged as one of the most inspiring figures in the history of the sport.

10. SOTOMAYOR ON THE CONSTITUTION AND "JUDICIAL ACTIVISM": The ubiquitous conservative attack on Sotomayor stems from a 2005 statement she made describing the role appellate justices have in forming policy, which they claim is akin to an endorsement of "judicial activism."

"All of the legal defense funds out there, they are looking for people with court of appeals experience because the court of appeals is where policy is made," she said, laughing a bit through the next part: "And I know this is on tape and I should never say that because we don't make law. I know. Okay, I know. I'm not promoting it. I'm not advocating it. I know."

But as legal scholars have noted, Sotomayor's statement is entirely factual:

"She's not wrong," said Jeffrey Segal, a professor of law at Stony Brook University. "Of course they make policy... You can, on one hand, say Congress makes the law and the court interprets it. But on the other hand the law is not always clear. And in clarifying those laws, the courts make policy."


Eric Freedman, a law professor at Hofstra University, was equally dismissive of this emerging conservative talking point. "She was saying something which is the absolute judicial equivalent of saying the sun rises each morning. It is not a controversial proposition at all that the overwhelming quantity of law making work in the federal system is done by the court of appeals... It is thoroughly uncontroversial to anyone other than a determined demagogue."

Indeed, during her 1997 confirmation hearing, Sotomayor spoke of her judicial philosophy, saying "I don't believe we should bend the Constitution under any circumstance. It says what it says. We should do honor to it."


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1. HER UPBRINGING: Judge Sonia Sotomayor has arguably lived the American dream. She was born to a Puerto Rican family and grew up in a public housing project in the South Bronx. Her father was a fac...
1. HER UPBRINGING: Judge Sonia Sotomayor has arguably lived the American dream. She was born to a Puerto Rican family and grew up in a public housing project in the South Bronx. Her father was a fac...
 
 
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06:35 PM on 05/31/2009
Here's an eleventh "thing you should know":

Sonia Sotomayor is not the wonderful progressive civil libertarian everybody seems to think she is. I'm on The Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law's email list, and they sent me a PDF detailing some of her past cases. One was the case of a woman with Down's Syndrome who the police took from her home and forced into a mental institution, where she was forcibly drugged. Sotomayor ruled that what they did to her was "not unconstitutional". After reading that, I understood that Sotomayor is completely worthless to me--as a Supreme Court judge, she is not going to protect my rights.
01:23 AM on 05/28/2009
The problem with a stealth cnadidate is that Obama may be more surprised than the GOP when she starts judging cases. HP itself has an article today, voicing concern about her abortion position.
02:57 PM on 05/27/2009
WE ARE APPOINTING A WOMAN WHO ADMITS TO RULING AGAINIST WHITE MALES DUE THEIR RACE! WHEN WE FIND A JUDGE WHO OPENLY ADMITS TO RULING AGAINIST AFRICAN AMERICANS,..NO ONE BETTER SAY A THING
07:19 PM on 05/27/2009
but is she gay?
10:57 PM on 05/27/2009
Can you show me a citation or court case where Sotomayor has ruled against White Males because of their race?
12:15 AM on 05/28/2009
the fire fighter case .....she was on the 3 judge panel
02:56 PM on 05/27/2009
Benjamin Cardozo was actually the first hispanic on the Supreme Court.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ms.understood
pro-choice | liberal | womanist
12:25 AM on 05/31/2009
Cardozo was a Jewish person whose family was from Portugal. Sorry, but that's not hispanic.
02:46 PM on 05/27/2009
SHE OPENLY ADMITS TO RULING AGAINIST PEOPLE DUE TO THEIR RACE, SHE DOESNT EVEN HIDE THE FACT SHE FEELS THAT WAY! NO ONE CAN ARGUE SHE IS NOT RACIST! IF SHE WAS A WHITE MAN WHO ON TV ADMITTED TO RULING AGAINIST PEOPLE DUE TO COLOR OF THEIR SKIN, THERE IS NO WAY IN THE WORLD BLACK PEOPLE WOULD STAND BY WITHOUT A FIGHT AN ALLOW HIM TO TAKE OFFICE. WHITE PEOPLE NEED TO STOP BEING SO SCARED OF PISSING BLACK PEOPLE OFF BECAUSE THEY MIGHT GO BURN DOWN HALF THE CITY AGAIN. WHAT IS FAIR IS FAIR. I WOULD LOVE HER TO BE APPOINTED BEING THAT SHE IS A WOMAN AND HISPANIC IF SHE WASNT ALSO VERY RACIST. HOW CAN SHE ALONE DECIDE THAT RACE HAS ANY ROLE IN HER DESICIONS. WHAT HAPPENED TO JUSTICE BEING BLIND!
10:59 PM on 05/27/2009
One more time can you show me what rulings you're talking about? I'm trying to research her decisions and haven't found anything close to what you're talking about.
12:32 AM on 05/28/2009
the fire fighter case .....she was on the 3 judge panel
09:58 AM on 05/27/2009
And here's one more thing: She's Catholic. There are already five Catholics on the court. So much for representing our nation's diversity. Seems to mee there are a couple of other religions in the US -- and at least 15 percent of us are nonbelivers. Sorry, no room at the inn for any of you other folks.
11:03 AM on 05/27/2009
Wow, that's actually really interesting. So we'd have 66% of SCOTUS judges on the bench belonging to a denomination that only 20% of US citizens claim allegiance to (with far fewer actually practicing). I really wouldn't have expected that.
11:31 AM on 05/27/2009
Most Hispanics are Catholic. Maybe he could have found a moderate female Hispanic Pentacostal with judicial experience. But that would have been tough to do.
09:04 AM on 05/27/2009
Four things you should know are enough:

1. Judge Sotomayor is a well educated and widely respected legal figure with extensive federal judicial experience, having been appointed to the federal bench by George H.W. Bush in 1992.
Spin? No – unbiased facts
Effect: positive

2. Judge Sotomayor has ruled in favor of unions, the First Amendment, civil rights and the environment; she has ruled against employers, churches, whites, males and power plants
Spin?: No – unbiased facts
Effect: depends which sides of her cases you supported

3. Judge Sotomayor worked her way up from a deprived home environment.
Spin: Little – relatively unbiased facts
Effect: Neutral (good for her! but it says nothing about her ability as a Supreme Court Justice)

4. Judge Sotomayor will be the very first person named Sotomayor to sit on the U.S. Supreme Court. in the entire history of the United States.
Spin: No – unbiased fact
Effect: Yawn… (though Hispanics will like it for racist/ethnocentric reasons)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
zanbama
09:12 AM on 05/27/2009
I'm black as heck and I LOVE IT!
02:40 PM on 05/27/2009
of course u like it because u are black but if that was a white man or woman up there talking all that smack,..u and NAACP, Jesse Jackson whoever the hell else u could get to go march and cry with you at the white house about pointing a RACIST judge!
09:27 AM on 05/27/2009
is she gay?
08:40 AM on 05/27/2009
As much as I will love to have a Hispanic on the supreme court, (I'm hispanic myself) I think it is crazy to nominate Sotomayor who is 54 and with diabetes tipe A. (Bush put in two conservative judges and one of them is very young and could sit there for another 50 yrs., at least he was smart about that)
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Monrocsol
Bible is a fairy tale book
09:13 AM on 05/27/2009
I am Cuban and I am also afraid of that.
09:32 AM on 05/27/2009
so maybe she will not last long..........ok maybe an upside
08:18 AM on 05/27/2009
I voted for Obama but I have become very tired of his spinelessness of late. I was wondering how he would botch this. And now it's clear... Only Obama would pick a diabetic for the Surpreme Court. And at 54 SotoMayor is living on borrowed time. The ignorant GOP unfortunately know something about wielding power unapologetically would never make a mistake like this. But the Dems always ruling apologetically botch it again. Patethic.

Now I hope her nomination can be derailed.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
IssuesInFocus
08:38 AM on 05/27/2009
Which is more appealing -- sending her congratulations or predicting a death sentence? I will go with the former. A truly, bold and meaningful appoinment by the President. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=43s9sJnMna8
11:37 AM on 05/27/2009
Yay, nothing but thoughtless boosterism and rainbows for Obama!!!

We know nothing almost nothing about Sotomayer. When she starts votign atniaortion, and anti-gay in line with her catholicism, I'll ask you where your support dissappeared to?

Please be a thinking liberal, instead of one that just drinks whatever Kool-ade is put in front of you.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cigi
12:12 PM on 05/27/2009
factotem, she has as much chance of making it to Ruth Bader Ginsberg's age as anyone else. The condition of type 1 diabetes is not an automatic death sentence. My own Grandmother had it and she lived to be 83.
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07:00 AM on 05/27/2009
Term limits for SC judges!
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06:55 AM on 05/27/2009
I didn't know she had diabeetus.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dsws
No owning ideas. Limit only commercial use.
06:53 AM on 05/27/2009
"I don't believe we should bend the Constitution under any circumstance. It says what it says. We should do honor to it."

That's "judicial activism" in a nutshell. According to Republicans, the Constitution means absolutely nothing and we should concede all power to the executive branch (at least when a Republican is in office).
12:05 AM on 05/27/2009
What do 1 5 U& 8 have to with with being a Supreme
11:04 PM on 05/26/2009
Nice pick, Mr. President.
Its nice to be back in a sane world, you know, picking someone
with hard-working character and intelligence.

Remember Harriet Miers?
oh, shudder, shudder, shudder...
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Monrocsol
Bible is a fairy tale book
09:16 AM on 05/27/2009
Why bring up Harriet Miers? Bush gave us the finger with Roberts & Alito.
10:36 PM on 05/26/2009
Sotomayor: Obama should replace entire administration with ‘Latina Women’

http://wineandexcrement.com/sotomayor-obama-should-replace-entire-administration-with-%E2%80%98latina-women%E2%80%99/1445/

WASHINGTON – Although her nomination to the nation’s highest court is barely 24 hours old, Supreme Court hopeful Sonia Sotomayor is loudly and publicly demanding that the president not stop with his assist in her historic rise to the threshold of judicial all-stardom. In a tearful yet defiant press conference today, Sotomayor called on President [...]
GonzoFactor
Rationality and rationalization are not the same
10:46 PM on 05/26/2009
They have the "excrement" part right, at least.
11:18 PM on 05/26/2009
Right... go back and get all your news on wineandexcrement . com.. And leave those of us reading the real news alone.
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