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Judge Sonia Sotomayor |
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Hispanic News
Endorses Sotomayor to U.S. Supreme Court
WASHINGTON (By
Robert Barnes and Michael D. Shear,
Washington Post)
May 12, 2009
Justice David H. Souter's
departure from the Supreme Court
gives the first African American
president a historic opportunity to
break another barrier by appointing
the first Hispanic to the nation's
highest court.
Those involved in the process inside
the White House and those advising
from outside say President Obama
would relish such a choice. He
studiously and successfully courted
Hispanic support during the campaign
and has maintained close ties to
Hispanic leaders since coming to
office.
But the White House is constructing
its appointment strategy on the
belief that this will not be his
only appointment to the court and
that he need not reach his goal of
changing the racial, ethnic and
gender balance on the court with
just one pick.
Whatever selection Obama makes will
emerge from a complicated political
and legal calculation that pulls at
competing elements of his
presidency. The political landscape
may never be more favorable for
Obama to appoint whomever he most
wants. His popularity is high and
Democrats have firm control of the
Senate, which considers the
president's appointment.
But such conditions can be fleeting,
and there is never a guarantee that
more openings will materialize.
White House officials believe that
Obama may get at least two more
appointments. Justices John Paul
Stevens, 89, and Ruth Bader
Ginsburg, 76, are most often
mentioned as possibilities to leave,
though neither has given such an
indication.
That would give Obama more freedom
if he decided Judge Sonia Sotomayor
or another Hispanic is not the right
choice in the short term. He could
appoint a woman this time, the
thinking goes, and appoint a
Hispanic
or Hispanic later.
The pressure to name a Hispanic
justice is building, with Hispanic
legal groups calling
ever so gently
for the court's first Hispanic member.
That call was backed up by the
Congressional Hispanic Caucus, which
told Obama that "appointing our
nation's first Hispanic justice
would undoubtedly be welcomed by our
community and bring greater
diversity of thought, perspective
and experience to the nation's legal
system."
Congressional aides said Obama's
administration has been reaching out
to Hispanic members in recent days
to get their input on the
president's choice. Obama aides have
talked with the leaders of the
Congressional Hispanic Caucus,
Chairwoman Nydia M. Velแzquez and
Vice Chair Charles A. Gonzalez.
But both the White House and the groups
are taking pains to avoid the perception
that putting a Hispanic on the bench
would be either a demand or a reward,
and Obama advisers warned that pressure
campaigns can caricature potential
jurists as purely ethnic choices.
"Public lobbying campaigns might be more
unhelpful than helpful," said one White
House official who asked for anonymity
to talk about the selection process. "At
the end of the day, the president will
decide based on the qualities that he
outlined the day that Justice Souter
announced his retirement."
The most prominent Hispanic candidate is
Sotomayor of the U.S. Court of Appeals
for the 2nd Circuit in New York. She is
under serious consideration by the White
House and would not only become the
court's first Hispanic member, she would
also meet Obama's goal of naming a
woman.
It is unclear whether Obama has a
relationship with her or knowledge about
her jurisprudence. But she already has
felt the glare that comes with being
identified as a front-runner, with
several unflattering profiles about her
temperament and judicial
accomplishments.
The Hispanic groups yesterday defended
Sotomayor against what one called
stories "assailing" her character.
"We are talking here about a woman who
graduated from Princeton summa cum
laude, went to Yale Law School, is an
outstanding scholar," said Ramona
Romero, president of the Hispanic
National Bar Association. "We don't
believe Judge Sotomayor requires any
defense; we believe her record speaks
for itself. We think she's one and I
want to emphasize, one of many
excellent candidates."
But the groups yesterday went out of
their way to give the White House a wide
berth, saying the philosophy and
jurisprudence of the nominee matter
most.
"It's not solely the mission of
Hispanics for a Fair Judiciary that the
next nominee be of Hispanic descent,"
said Estuardo Rodriguez, a founding
member of the group. Foremost, he said,
is whether someone who has "the
understanding that civil rights is a
given right."
"Would there be a disappointment in the
community" if Obama does not choose a
Hispanic, asked Gabriela Lemus of the
National Hispanic Leadership Agenda. "I
would say so."
But she added: "We're politically mature
enough to know there's going to be
another chance."
Romero disputed the notion that Obama
might not enjoy the luxury of a wide
array of Hispanics qualified for the
job. "If this argument ever had any
merit, it does not any longer," she
said.
The groups said there was a list of 82
Hispanic judges on the federal bench and
state courts of last resort that the
president could draw from if choosing
from the traditional venues for a
nominee all of the justices on the
current court are former federal appeals
judges.
But the pool is shallower than that. The
list produced by the groups yesterday is
bipartisan, and because it has been
eight years since a Democratic president
appointed judges, the appellate bench is
also thin for potential Democratic
nominees.
Of the seven Hispanic appeals court
judges appointed by Democrats, only
Sotomayor and Judge Kim McLane Wardlaw
of the 9th Circuit in California are
younger than 60. There are only 15
Hispanics at the district court level
appointed by Democratic presidents,
compared with 33 appointed by
Republicans.
Judge Ruben Castillo of the Northern
District of Illinois, a member of the
U.S. Sentencing Commission, is also
mentioned as a possibility. New York's
Democratic senators, Charles E. Schumer
and Kirsten Gillibrand, sent Obama a
letter recommending either Sotomayor or
Interior Secretary Ken Salazar, the
former senator from Colorado. Salazar
would be a wild card who would change
the makeup of the court by adding an
experienced politician to the mix.
Administration officials say other names
that have not been mentioned publicly
are also on their list.
Sotomayor, with a compelling life story
of growing up poor in public housing in
the Bronx, has long been thought to be a
front-runner for the job. Former Yale
classmates, law firm colleagues and
former clerks say she is the embodiment
of the characteristics Obama has said he
is looking for: a qualified nominee with
legal and real-world experience, as well
as an appreciation for the impact of
court decisions on everyday life.
But detractors have said she can be
short-tempered and tough on the bench.
The remarks about Sotomayor in the
Almanac of the Federal Judiciary, where
lawyers are quoted without name, are
tougher than those about two other
appeals court judges who are mentioned
among those Obama might consider for the
job, Diane P. Wood and Ann C. Williams
of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 7th
Circuit, and some who are advising Obama
on the choice say the perception that
she does not work well with others is
one Sotomayor would have to overcome.