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Entries in Sotomayor (23)

Tuesday
Jul142009

Sotomayor Confirmation Liveblog Day 2 PM

14:00: Chairman Leahy has gaveled the hearing back into session. Senator Grassley is up. Going into property rights again. He asks for Sotomayor’s views on the Takings Clause after Kelo v. New London. Sotomayor summarizes the Kelo decision, then mentions a case where she ruled in favor of a property owner wanting to challenge the state process. Grassley asks what she thinks about Kelo: did the Supreme Court go too far? Sotomayor says she has to accept as precedent the Court’s ruling. Grassley asks what the limit of “public use” for takings is. Another question she won’t answer, since it’s hypothetical and might come before her. Grassley asks about Didden, a case where the government threatened a man with eminent domain. Sotomayor said that was OK at the time. Sotomayor says that the problem there was that the man filed his case after the statute of limitations had run out. Moreover, the man’s claim was extortion, not an improper taking or challenge to the proposed use of the land. Sotomayor explains the law of extortion and why it didn’t apply in Didden. Grassley asks why she didn’t discuss Kelo and why the opinion was unpublished. Sotomayor sasy the issue was statute of limitations, not takings (like Kelo was).

14:23: Grassley asks about the Entergy case, which held the EPA could not use cost-benefit analysis. He says this was against precedent, and the case was reversed by the Supreme Court. Sotomayor goes into a lengthly discussion of agency deference.

14:32: Senator Feingold’s turn. Feingold jokingly says he’s enjoying this so much he hopes they put cameras in the Court so he can see more. Feingold asks if the 9/11 terrorist attacks changed Sotomayor’s views on civil rights and individual liberties. Sotomayor says 9/11 had an impact on her; she was living in New York at the time, near the WTC. Sotomayor says the Constitution protects rights. Did it change her view of the Constitution? No, “the Constitution is a timeless document.” Feingold asks for her understanding of the Guantanamo detainee cases. Sotomayor: the Court is doing its task. The Court looks at the actions and applies constitutional review.

14:39: Feingold says they discussed with previous nominees the process for examining the scope of executive power. Feingold points out in Youngstown the Court approved President Truman’s actions. Sotomayor says the framework still stands. Feingold asks if she knows of any time presidential action has been invalidated as against Congress’s mandate. Sotomayor doesn’t give an example. Feingold brings up the torture memos written by the Department of Justice Office of Legal Counsel. Feingold asks if she thinks it odd that those memos didn’t mention Youngstown.

14:45: Feingold says he was “elated” when the Supreme Court ruled the Second Amendment protected an individual right, and he thinks she did the right thing in holding the Second Amendment was not yet incorporated against the states. Sotomayor agrees that she would recuse herself if her lower court decision were heard by the Supreme Court. She would not, however, necessarily recuse herself if a related case came up. Sotomayor won’t even say what test she would apply for deciding whether Second Amendment applies to states, since litigants will argue about what the standard should be.

14:52: Feingold asking about secret laws, like FISA rulings and OLC memos. These documents have the effect of law, but they’re not public. Does this concern you? Sotomayor points out Congress designed FISA that way, with their opinions being secret. That’s a legislative decision, not a judicial one.

14:57: Feingold asks about empathy. He says it’s important for judges to understand the real world implications of their actions. What about people who don’t live in big cities? How can you empathize with them? Sotomayor says she has visited and vacationed on farms, mountain tops, and other places. When she travels, she tries to stay with friends. She likes to try to experience other things.

15:00: Feingold asks about Supreme Court approval of detention of Japanese Americans. Sotomayor agrees it was a bad decision. “A judge should never rule from fear,” she says. To resist pressure, a judge must have wisdom.

15:02: Senator Kyl is up. He asks if she would recuse herself if other state gun law challenges came up. Sotomayor says recusal is discretionary, and she’d decide recusals in discussion with colleagues. Kyl wants to know why she wouldn’t necessarily recuse herself in the other cases. Sotomayor says it depends on the circumstances. Sotomayor points out state statutes differ, however. Kyl says Alito and Roberts promised to recuse themselves in broader circumstances, but Sotomayor says she doesn’t think their promises were that broad.

15:10: Kyl asks about the role of “the heart” in making decisions. Sotomayor says it’s not the heart that decides the case, it’s the law. Kyl asks whether she’s been able to find a legal basis for every decision she’s made. Sotomayor describes how she decides cases.

15:16: Going to her speeches, Kyl asks about the “wise Latina” parts of her speeches. Reading substantial portions of her speech, Kyl says the clear inference is that she’s saying the influence of her background is a good thing. Sotomayor says to look at her record: 17 years show that she doesn’t make decisions on the basis of her biases. Sotomayor says the intent and structure of her speeches was to inspire them “to believe that life experiences enrich the legal system.”

15:36: 10-minute break.

15:53: Senator Schumer is up. Schumer says empathy is the opposite of indifference, not of neutrality. Schumer asks about the case coming out of TWA crash off Long Island. Sotomayor wrote a dissent in that case, suggesting the court should have rejected their claims. The legislature, she said, made that policy choice to not allow such claims. She said she felt regret, but she had to decide the way she did. Congress afterward changed the law to allow the suits. Schumer also asks about a case brought by black corrections officers, asking if Sotomayor could understand how they felt. Sotomayor says the result was compelled by law, though. Schumer also asks about a case where a woman was denied a home loan. Schumer then asks about a case about a police officer fired for offensive, racist speech. Sotomayor dissented in that case, saying offensiveness and racism were not grounds for dismissal. “The employee’s right to speech had to be respected,” she wrote.

16:16: Schumer asking about use of foreign law. Says she’s been quoted out of context. Asking for clarification. Sotomayor says it’s improper to use foreign law to interpret the Constitution. Sotomayor says that, except when interpreting treaties or conflicts of law, she’s never cited foreign law. Schumer laughs at Justice Scalia’s common citation of dictionaries, asks Sotomayor if dictionaries are binding law.

16:23: Senator Graham is up. Graham says her cases make her sound like Roberts, but he doesn’t know how to reconcile that with her speeches. “Don’t become a speechwriter,” Graham tells Sotomayor. Sotomayor says she’s not a disciple of the legal realism school. Asked if she’s a strict constructionist, she says she doesn’t use labels. Graham asks her to define strict constructionism, originalism. She refuses to say whether she’s either. “The Constitution is a document that’s immutable in the sense that it’s last us 200 years,” Sotomayor says.Graham asks if she thinks Roe v. Wade changed society. Sotomayor doesn’t really respond. Graham asks if anything in the Constitution says that states can’t regulate abortion. Sotomayor starts saying the Court has interpreted something and is cut off. Graham: a lot of us feel that the best way to change society is a the ballot box; a lot of us are concerned that unelected judges are very quick to change society in a way that is disturbing. Graham brings up the temperament issue, reading some evaluations by lawyers of Judge Sotomayor. Sotomayor: 2nd Circuit only gives 10 minutes each, so they pepper attorneys with questions, and some attorneys find that difficult. Graham: They find you difficult and challenging.

16:35: Graham brings back the “wise Latina” comment. Graham says there is hope in the middle east that they will have a court system that will judge people by what they did not who they are. Graham says he hopes there will be more women in the law, but he is concerned about her speeches.

16:42: Sotomayor: 9/11 “The most horrific experience of my personal life.” Graham asks about the people behind the attacks, the role of women in their world. Graham asks if Sotomayor believes we are at war, and Sotomayor says that we are, having soldiers on battlefields. Graham asks if she knows about military law. Graham: Do you believe there are people out there right now plotting our destruction? Sotomayor: Based on the statements I’ve seen, yes. Graham asks if there is a requirement to release a member of the enemy force while there is still a threat. Sotomayor wavers, says she’s not an expert. Graham says she should go back and look at that before second round of questions.

16:46: Graham asks about Puerto Rican Legal Defense Fund. Sotomayor says she was a board member, not involved in litigation. Sotomayor says she never reviewed their briefs. Graham says they argued for taxpayer funds for abortion. Graham asks if she agrees with statements in briefs. Sotomayor offers to explain function of board members as opposed to staff. Sotomayor says board spent most of its time fundraising. Any review of legal work was to ensure it went along with broad mission of fund. Graham: did mission statement include taxpayer funded abortion? Sotomayor: mission statement was broad like the Constitution. Graham: would it bother you if they advocated for taxpayer funded abortion? Sotomayor: they lobbied for public health issues. Graham: is abortion a public health issue in your mind? Graham says PRLDF also tried to abolish death penalty, asks Sotomayor for her opinion of it. Sotomayor says SCOTUS has said death penalty appropriate under some circumstances.

16:54: Durbin up. Describing the number of speeches, cases in Sotomayor’s record. Durbin discusses Justice Blackmun’s change of mind on the death penalty, saying it had been mishandled. Sotomayor says she’s hesitant to express a view. Durbin reads some statistics about the disparate racial impact of the death penalty. Sotomayor had a case before her where defendant challenged application of death penalty. She rejected the challenge. Sotomayor said questions about applications of the death penalty are a legislative policy concern. Durbin asks about the recent Supreme Court case regarding access to DNA evidence, asking if the Court can use Due Process to make changes to death penalty policy. Sotomayor says the Court doesn’t make broad policies. Durbin says an unnamed Justice told him to look into our corrections system, saying it has to be the worst in the world. Durbin speaking about the racial differences in incarceration rates and the impact that has on what people think of the court system. Sotomayor says she knows these issues are important to Durbin, and she knows it must be frustrating when nominees don’t engage. But, Sotomayor says, that’s not her role as a judge. She has to follow the law as passed by Congress.

17:18: Finally, Durbin asks about immigration courts, referring to a “scathing” opinion by Judge Posner. Sotomayor says some things have changed with immigration courts since Judge Posner’s 2005 opinion. Sotomayor refers to Ashcroft’s “streamlining” of immigration courts, saying it was imperfect. Sotomayor says there is more cooperation b/t courts and immigration authorities on process. Durbin asks if Sotomayor thinks it has changed since 2005. She says in last 2-3 years, the number of cases questioning the processes has decreased.

17:24: Leahy announces we’re about to break for today and will return at 9:30 tomorrow. Will finish first round, then go to closed session.
Tuesday
Jul142009

Sotomayor Confirmation Liveblog Day 2 AM

The Senate Judiciary Committee is set to begin the second day of hearings at 9:30 AM EDT. Today each senator will have a turn to ask Judge Sotomayor questions. Each senator will have 30 minutes.

9:31: Senator Leahy has gaveled the hearing into session. He is introducing Sotomayor again. His first question: what qualities should a judge possess? Sotomayor says the “process of judging is the process of keeping an open mind.” She says it’s important not to prejudge, to understand what the parties are arguing, examining the facts as proven or not, and making a decision.

9:36: Leahy asks about a prosecution she made. How did her experience as a prosecutor affect her? Sotomayor says law schools teach you legal theory, but she became a lawyer working as a prosecutor. She realized “the law is not legal theory, it’s facts.” Sotomayor, talking about the “Tarzan Murderer,” a case she prosecuted, wherein a man broke into houses by swinging in on ropes and killing people. Sotomayor says the murderer destroyed families. She says she learned prosecutors must be sensitive to the price crimes place on society. Sotomayor says she used a novel legal theory to try the different murders as one case.

9:42: Leahy asks, as a judge, how she handles new legal theories. Sotomayor says she considers whether the law, as it exists, applies. Leahy asks about Ricci case. Asks Sotomayor for her reaction to Supreme Court reversal in firefighters case. She says she was following precedent. She points out this was a challenge to a test which everyone agreed had a great disparity in passage rates of different groups, and the city was reacting to the threat that there would be a legal challenge had it kept the test. Sotomayor said she was following 2nd Circuit precedent, but Supreme Court put out new standard when it reversed her. Sotomayor confirms to Leahy prompt that the new standard, supported by 5 members of Supreme Court, is the standard now to be applied by lower courts.

9:51: Leahy brings up “wise Latina” comments, compares it Alito talking about his parents being immigrants. Offers to let Sotomayor respond. Sotomayor says she gave variations of that speech to lots of groups, and she says she was trying “to inspire them to believe that their life experiences would enrich the legal system.” Sotomayor: “I do not believe that any ethnic, racial, or gender group has an advantage in sound judgment.”

9:57: Leahy asks about guns. Sotomayor confirms that she believes DC v. Heller establishes 2nd Amendment as individual right. Leahy points out Scalia opinion in Heller expressly didn’t answer whether 2nd Amendment applies to states. Sotomayor decision had said it doesn’t. Leahy points to some other Bill of Rights rights that don’t apply to states. e.g. right to jury trial. Sotomayor says she understands how important guns are to many Americans. “I have friends who hunt.” She says she has an open mind on question of applicability to states.

10:02: Leahy asks about particular case regarding forced prostitution, brought against a mayor. Defendant claimed federal law violated Commerce Clause, since it wasn’t an interstate crime. Sotomayor says she had no problem reaching her conclusion.

10:04: Sessions is up. Brings up “wise Latina” comment, time when she said appellate court is where policy is made. Sotomayor says she, when made comment about policy, was talking about difference between district and appellate judges: district court decisions don’t bind anyone, but appellate decisions bind lower courts and therefore has policy implications.

10:10: Sotomayor: “Life experiences have to experience you. We’re not robots.” Sotomayor says judges have to be careful not to let experiences determine outcome, but there are times when the law requires examination in light of experiences. Sotomayor says judges must be conscious of experiences to ensure they don’t affect outcomes. Ignoring them runs the risk of letting them influence outcomes without noticing. Sotomayor says she thinks life experiences influence, but Sessions says past statements indicate she accepts that and thinks it’s OK.

10:17: Sessions reads Sotomayor quote about choosing to see some facts in light of personal views. Sotomayor says that’s why there are multiple appellate judges: each sees different things. Sessions: “You doubt the ability to be objective in your analysis.” How can you reconcile that with oath to impartiality? Sotomayor says her statement left impression that life experiences command a result in a case. Not what she meant to convey. Sessions points out she repeated that statement about 7 times over a period of years.

10:22: Sessions moves on to Ricci case regarding firefighters reverse discrimination. Sessions reads from SCOTUS opinion, reversing Sotomayor, finding city threw out test for racial reasons. Sotomayor points out Judge Posner, a conservative pragmatic judge, used the same methodology she did when looking at a similar case.

10:27: Sessions is asking about procedural issues: Ricci decision was short, didn’t discuss legal issues, and was unsigned. Sessions points out other judges on the circuit thought the precedent wasn’t binding and voted to rehear the case. Sessions doesn’t give Sotomayor a chance to respond. Sessions asks why Ricci opinion didn’t talk about Adarand case. Sotomayor says that was a different question. She also says the opinion was short because the district court decision was lengthy and discussed 2nd Circuit precedent.

10:36: Sessions asks if she thinks Ricci and other firefighters were satisfied with such a short decision. Sotomayor says they had the lower court decision, and in fact they were very sympathetic to the firefighters.

10:37: Leahy puts ABA unanimous “well qualified” rating into the record. Also NY Bar evaluation and CRS evaluation.

10:39: Kohl is up. Asks whether Ricci was a close case. Sotomayor says reasonable minds can differ. Kohl says Alito said to look at his record to determine what kind of Justice he’d be. Sotomayor’s record, Kohl says, shows infrequent reversal. Kohl brings up umpire analogy. “But analogies are always imperfect,” she says. She says open mind is what’s important. Kohl asks about her views on current Justices. She says she doesn’t want to pick one over another, each being valuable. Sotomayor instead offers Justice Cardozo as someone she admires.

10:46: Kohl getting into issues. Affirmative action: what does she think? Sotomayor pauses to think, then says scope of affirmative action is a legislative question. Sotomayor says Constitution requires equal protection of all, and race must sometimes be considered in some form. Sotomayor says that, as Justice O’Connor wrote, it’s her hope that in 25 years race won’t be needed to be considered. Kohl asks about Bush v. Gore. “That case took the attention of the nation, and there’s been so much discussion…” Sotomayor stalls. Then she refuses to take a position. Sotomayor says some good came out of Bush v. Gore in that there were changes to the electoral system in response to the problem.

10:53: Kohl asking about Kelo decision: what is an appropriate “public use” for condemning private property? Sotomayor says Kelo said there is a role for courts to play in examining whether taking serves a public use. Kohl points out Sotomayor is just summarizing the case, but he wants to know her opinion on it. Sotomayor says only “I don’t prejudge issues” and doesn’t give an opinion. Kohl lets her off the hook.

10:56: Moving on to abortion. Kohl asks about constitutional right to privacy, and where is it found? Sotomayor gives a list of amendments where the right has been found by the Court. She says Roe, Casey are settled law. Kohl moves on.

10:59: Cameras in the courtroom. Sotomayor had cameras in lower courtrooms. Kohl asks about term limits for federal judges. Sotomayor: that’s a policy question for Congress, but there is value in services of judges for long periods of time. Kohl asks about antitrust and price-fixing. Sotomayor says Court decisions are precedent. She says she’ll approach new cases with an open mind, considering the law.

11:27: Back from the break. Leahy says we’ll have 2 more senators and then break for lunch until 2 PM EDT.

11:28: Senator Hatch’s turn. He asks about Gonzales v. Carhart, saying partial-birth abortion ban is constitutional. Sotomayor says that’s precedent, so it’s settled law. Hatch moves on to gun rights. Hatch asks if it would be proper for her to cite Miller, an early gun case, since the DC v. Heller decision dismissed that case as not being a thorough examination of the Second Amendment. She points out that Justice Scalia in his Heller decision left open the question of application of the Second Amendment to the states. She refuses to give an opinion, since there are pending cases asking that question. Sotomayor points out that even without the 2nd Amendment, state gun regulations still have to have a rational basis for regulating. Sotomayor says her earlier rulings on guns were based on precedents, not reexamination of the Second Amendment. Hatch asks how she decides which rights are fundamental enough to apply to states, and she says that the Second Amendment hasn’t been applied to states, refusing to engage in the theoretical discussion.

11:39: Sotomayor and Hatch have a discussion about nun-chucks. Weird. Hatch moves on to Ricci. Hatch says Sotomayor opinion in Ricci case didn’t cite any precedent. Sotomayor says they adopted the lower court opinion, which did cite precedents. Hatch is challenging the precedents cited by the district court in the Ricci case. Sotomayor says the principles were the same in cited cases, even if the applications were different. Hatch asks why they adopted the lower court reasoning instead of doing their own analysis, but he doesn’t really give Sotomayor a change to respond. Hatch brings up criticism of Frank Ricci’s appearance. Sotomayor has nothing to do what that, Hatch says. But then why bring it up?

12:01: Feinstein says she’s confused about why Estrada keeps coming up, since his credentials weren’t as good as Sotomayor’s and he refused to answer questions while she’s being responsive. Feinstein corrects that Ginsburg’s dissent in Ricci case would have affirmed Sotomayor’s opinion in Ricci. Feinstein is complaining that Sotomayor is being cast as an activist because she applied precedent in Ricci, and then SCOTUS set a new standard.

12:05: Feinstein asks about abortion: says SCOTUS has said law cannot put woman’s health at risk. Feinstein asks what to do when there are multiple precedents. Sotomayor defers, saying cases depend on factual situation, and each case is different. Sotomayor says each precedent must be given deference. Feinstein reads criticism from Justice Scalia of Roberts overruling of precedent without explicitly saying so. Sotomayor says there are times to reexamine precedent, but it should be done “very, very cautiously.”

12:11: Feinstein asks about executive power. What does Sotomayor think about signing statements? Sotomayor says courts are grappling with question of signing statements and executive interpretation of constitutionality, so she’s hesitant to answer. Sotomayor brings up Justice Jackson’s three-level scheme in the Youngstown case. Sotomayor doesn’t really give an opinion, but discusses the framework. Feinstein questions National Security Letters forbidding recipients from talking about them. An opinion joined by Sotomayor cautioned against the judiciary being used to punish people for speaking about something just because the executive branch ordered them silenced. Sotomayor said that if the government were going to stop people from speaking, it had to get court approval, rather than forcing the individual to challenge the order.

12:22: Feinstein moves on to the Commerce Clause, listing some federal laws that claim constitutionality under the Commerce Clause. She asks Sotomayor if she agrees with recent striking down of some laws as exceeding Commerce Clause, but Sotomayor refuses to answer, saying that might come before Court. Feinstein asks specific case: law restricting distance guns have to be kept away from schools. That’s the case of US v. Lopez. Sotomayor discusses the factors the Court considered but doesn’t give an opinion. She did point out the Raich case, in which the Supreme Court upheld federal drug regulations against a challenge brought by a sick woman who wanted to use medicinal marijuana. “Congress has to legislate,” Feinstein says. “And in most cases” they need the Commerce Clause to do that.

12:30: Recess for lunch. We will return at 2 PM EDT, with Senator Grassley up first.
Monday
Jul132009

Senate Begins Grilling Of Sonia Sotomayor

Republican senators today began their attacks on Judge Sonia Sotomayor, nominated to replace Justice David Souter on the U.S. Supreme Court. On the first day of hearings before the Senate Judiciary Committee, Democratic senators praised Sotomayor’s record, saying it demonstrated “judicial modesty,” while Republicans expressed skepticism.

Senator Jeff Sessions (R-Ala.), now the ranking Republican on the committee, called Sotomayor’s comments on use of experience and background in judicial decisions “shocking and offensive” and distributed a thick stack of her past speeches to the media. The speeches were marked up to highlight passages where Sotomayor spoke about the differences her background would produce in her decisions. Sessions criticized the use of any factors outside of the facts and law of a case in making rulings.

Senators Sessions and John Cornyn (R-Texas) both said they planned to ask Sotomayor about her views on a range of issues, including abortion, property rights, the right to bear arms, and capital punishment. Senator Tom Coburn (R-Okla.) as well said he was “deeply concerned by [Sotomayor]’s assertion that the law is uncertain.”

Speaking more generally, Senators Orrin Hatch (R-Utah), Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) and Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) criticized President Obama’s “empathy” standard used to select Sotomayor as his nominee. Graham went so far as to say that he would have to vote against Sotomayor under that standard, which he called “absurd” and “dangerous,” since it would encourage voting on the basis of agreement on issues and would therefore discourage potential nominees from expressing their opinions. He did, however, worry about Sotomayor’s speeches made while she has been a sitting judge, since those might cast doubt on her objectivity when deciding cases. Graham did recognize that “unless [Sotomayor has] a complete meltdown,” she would be confirmed, bringing laughter from audience.

Democrats generally supported the nominee by describing her record as centrist and reserved, and repeating her personal story of being raised by a poor, single mother and working to raise herself up to a federal judgeship. By the time it was Sotomayor’s chance to speak, the audience had heard the story several times.

A couple of Democrats took the opportunity to criticize the previous administration. Senator Specter (D-Pa.), a recent defector from the Republican party, spoke of President Bush’s wiretapping program, saying that a split among circuit courts in different areas of the country has prevented adjudication of the legality of those programs. He expressed hope that a new Supreme Court would resolve this disagreement and generally agree to hear more cases. Senator Feingold (D-Wisc.) lauded the Supreme Court’s role as a check on the president, offering as examples the Court’s rulings that Guantanamo detainees have rights to U.S. courts, and saying that an important quality in justices is a willingness to stand up to the president.

In Sotomayor’s short opening statement, she said that her judicial philosophy was simple: “fidelity to the law.” She said that her record would show that she applies the law according to Congress’s intent, applying relevant precedents. She finished by saying she looks forward to answering the senators’ questions.
Monday
Jul132009

Sotomayor Confirmation Liveblog Day 1 PM

The Senate Judiciary Committee will return from lunch at approximately 2 PM EDT, at which time the hearing will resume. Click below for the full blog.

14:01: And we’re back in session. Senator Klobuchar is up first. Senator Klobuchar started by saying it was an honor to meet Sonia Sotomayor’s mother, who bought her a set of encyclopedias. Klobuchar focused on Sotomayor’s background, comparing it to the background of Justice Marshall. She also discussed the careers of Justices O’Connor and Ginsburg, and their perseverance against discrimination. Specifically, she mentioned Ginsburg’s comments in the Redding (strip-search of high-schooler) and Ledbetter (pay discrimination statute of limitations) cases. She said she would ask questions about the Confrontation Clause and sentencing laws and policy. Klobuchar said she agrees with the 4 dissenters in the recent Supreme Court case requiring cross examination of crime lab scientists.

14:11:Senator Kaufman (D-DE) is up now. Kaufman says vote on Supreme Court confirmation is second in importance only to vote to go to war. Kaufman gives high praise to Sotomayor, saying her record gives no hint of biases. Kaufman says he plans to ask Sotomayor about business litigation; he says it’s important in business cases that the judge be unbiased.

14:19: Senator Specter. He intends to ask about cases the Supreme Court chose not to hear. He expressed concern about splits among the federal circuits in different areas of the country, giving as an example the Terrorist Surveillance Program with regard to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act. The DC District said it was unconstitutional, but the 6th Circuit said the plaintiffs did not have standing. The Supreme Court refused to hear the case. Specter says he plans to ask Sotomayor about her standards for deciding which cases to hear. Specter also says he plans to ask about televising oral arguments.

14:29: Senator Franken. Being new, Franken thanked the committee for his welcome and said he has a lot to learn. He said he enjoyed meeting with Sotomayor last week. He then pointed out he is the senator who most recently took the oath of office. Franken said he believes in judicial restraint and thinks the courts owe great deference to Congress, but he worries about recent trends. He gives as an example that during the Rehnquist Court, Justice Thomas voted to overturn federal laws more than Justices Stevens and Breyer combined. He said the Supreme Court is the last place a citizen can go to protect his rights, yet from what he has seen on a lot of fronts, the Court has made it harder to protect some rights.

14:39: Introduction of Judge Sotomayor by Senators Schumer and Gillibrand. Schumer said that Sotomayor’s story is one that could only happen in America. He said that her life shows that hard work and determination will pay off, no matter who you are or where you come from. Gillibrand said she always thought there would be two women on the Court, possibly more, and she thanked President Obama for recognizing the value of their perspective. Gillibrand then (again) summarized Judge Sotomayor’s record.








14:54: Sotomayor has been sworn in. She thanked the senators she has met with, and she thanked her mother. Said she is humbled and honored to be here as a nominee. She talked about her upbringing, with her mother’s hard work raising her and her brother. She talked about her experiences as a prosecutor, commercial litigator, nomination by President H.W. Bush to federal court (including the baseball strike), nomination to the Court of Appeals by President Clinton, and current nomination to the U.S. Supreme Court. She said she has witnessed the human consequences of her decisions, saying decisions were made not for the interests of individual litigants but for the larger justice. Her judicial philosophy, she said, is simple: “fidelity to the law.”


15:03: That’s it for today. Hearings will resume at 9:30 AM EDT tomorrow.
Monday
Jul132009

Sotomayor Confirmation Liveblog Day 1 AM

The confirmation hearings for Judge Sonia Sotomayor to the U.S. Supreme Court begin today in room 216 of the Hart Senate Office Building. Click through for the full post.

9:01: The room is full of media people, some doing liveshots. No senators or judges yet.

9:53: Judge Sotomayor’s mother is in the room. Senator Hatch is here. Press still milling about.

9:58: Senator Leahy has gaveled the hearing in and has begun talking about the logistics, welcoming Judge Sotomayor and offering to let her introducer her family.

10:03: Senator Leahy is talking about Sotomayor’s background. Stuff we all already know.


10:05: Leahy repeats the line about Sotomayor having more federal court experience than any other nominee in past 100 years.

10:07: Leahy says he hopes we’re past some of the confirmation battles of the past: e.g. Brandeis being asked about “the Jewish mind”.

10:08: Leahy says this is the most open confirmation hearing in history. Documents online, webcast of hearings.

10:12: Leahy wraps up, introduces Senator Sessions.

10:19:Senator Sessions statement calls Sotomayor statements on using experience “shocking and offensive to me”. Sessions calls Justice Ginsburg “one of the most activist judges in history”. Session says he will inquire into abortion, gun control, private property, and capital punishment. Sessions: “I will not vote for and no senator should vote for” nominee who allows personal background to sway their decisions. Sessions brings up Sotomayor statement saying court of appeals is where policy is made, even though it’s out of context.

10:21: Sotomayor has a look on her face somewhere between laughing and crying as sessions goes over a list of concerns.

10:23: I understand some of Sessions’s concerns, but in some of the cases he cites she really was following precedent. She had no real choice. For example, on the gun case, she was following precedent. Sessions quotes her as saying it is “settled law” that the Second Amendment doesn’t apply to states. Well, that’s true.

10:30: Sen. Kohl quotes Justice Thomas as saying at his confirmation hearing, it is important that a justice “can walk in the shoes of the people who are affected by what the Court does.”

10:31: Senator Hatch is up.

10:34: Hatch brings up Senator Obama opposition to nomination of Janice Rogers Brown. Obama said judges should set aside personal views and decide cases on the facts and law only. Hatch says the committee should consider nominee’s entire record, including decisions and speeches.

10:39: Senator Hatch is using his time to criticize Obama’s handling, as a Senator, of Miguel Estrada and Janice Rogers Brown nominations. Also talking about criticism of Mr. Ricci, plaintiff in New Haven firefighters case. He’s being very negative.

10:42: Senator Feinstein reading Sotomayor’s record, praising it. Lots of numbers: cases, years prosecuting, etc. “You have seen the law truly from all sides.” Feinstein points out, again, that Sotomayor would be only prosecutor, only trial judge on SCOTUS. It’s true that brings a unique perspective.

10:45: Protestor yells out “Senator what about the unborn? Abortion is murder!”

10:49: Senator Feinstein says Justices are “not merely umpires” and gives a long list of cases where conservatives have overruled precedent.

10:52: Senator Grassley says the most important quality of a Supreme Court Justice is the “capacity to set aside one’s own feelings” and rule according to the law.

10:55: Grassley: “This empathy standard is troubling to me.”

11:01: Feingold: SCOTUS has played “crucial role” in checking previous administration’s “most egregious departures from rule of law.”

11:03: Feingold points out open-ended language in Constitution: “like ‘equal protection of the laws,’ ‘due process of law,’ ‘freedom of … the press,’ ‘unreasonable searches and seizures,’ and ‘the right to bear arms.’ These momentous decisions were not simply the result of an umpire calling balls and strikes.” Feingold on “judicial activism”: “That term really has lost all usefulness.”

11:15: Senator Kyl brings up use of foreign law. Sotomayor said we should use “good ideas” from foreign law “so that America does not ‘lose influence in the world’”; Kyl says foreign law is irrelevant.

11:16: Schumer says that New York is proud of Sotomayor. Going over her experience (again). She has “stellar credentials.” Has been twice confirmed. Schumer says her record shows “judicial modesty.” She “puts rule of law above” everything else.

11:21: Schumer brings up Chief Justice Roberts’s umpire analogy, questioning whether “he actually called pitches as they come.” Schumer says an objective review of Sotomayor’s record shows she simply called balls and strikes, more than Roberts’s record on the Supreme Court.

11:23: Senator Lindsay Graham says none of the Republicans would have picked her. They would have picked Miguel Estrada. But he says Estrada never got a hearing like this.

11:24: “Unless you have a complete meltdown, you’re gonna get confirmed.”

11:25: Senator Graham being smart about this. Sotomayor’s going to get confirmed, so he’s talking about the future, when a conservative president may nominate someone with views as zealous as Sotomayor’s, but on the other side.

11:28: Graham says he’d vote against Sotomayor if applying Obama standard. Calls it an “absurd, dangerous standard.” He says Scalia, Ginsburg confirmed with large number of votes, but no one was confused about the way they would vote on the Court.

11:30: Graham concerned that this kind of process will deter people from speaking their mind, but he’s concerned about Sotomayor’s speeches while a sitting judge. He says he doesn’t know how he’s going to vote on Sotomayor. Very thoughtful and polite.

11:35: Senator Cardin talking about history of discrimination, his personal experiences with discrimination against Jews. Society was changed by Brown v. Board. And then Justice Marshall was nominated.

11:56: Coming back from break now. Hearing should resume shortly.

12:01: Senator Cornyn up, talking about importance of Supreme Court. Cornyn says judges should have a modest role. He says the Supreme Court has often veered off course, such as when it has found new rights and “micromanaged” the death penalty.

12:05: Cornyn focusing on text of Constitution: he says SCOTUS has invented rights and ignored others (Takings Clause, Commerce Clause, 2nd Amendment). Cites DC v. Heller (DC gun case) as a good decision. To decide whether Sotomayor will return to written Constitution, Cornyn says, we need to know more about her legal reasoning, speeches.

12:09: Cornyn points out Sotomayor had said there is no objectivity in law. I’d love it if this hearing became a candid discussion of whether it’s really possible to be objective and free from bias.

12:12: Senator Whitehouse says activism complaints are code words from people seeking particular kinds of outcomes. He says the umpire analogy is improper: if judging were that mechanical, he says, we wouldn’t need 9 Justices. Whitehouse points to Jeffrey Toobin’s article showing Chief Justice Roberts’s voting patterns.

12:20: Coburn says Sotomayor will be treated with utmost respect, but they’ll be thorough.

12:23: Coburn:”I am deeply concerned about your assertion that the law is uncertain.” (Coburn should talk to a linguist sometime.) Coburn repeats the judicial oath, emphasizing “impartially,” and points out it says nothing about foreign law or losing influence in the foreign community.

12:28: Coburn: “You must prove to the Senate that you will adhere to the proper role of a judge.”

A second protester was escorted out. Video at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V85oQ9ifFUQ.

The hearing is now in recess for lunch. It will resume at 2 PM EDT.