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Supreme Battle
Activists Were Ready for New High Court Pick
BY JOAN FRAWLEY DESMOND REGISTER CORRESPONDENT
June 7-13, 2009 Issue |
Posted 5/29/09 at 10:51 AM
WASHINGTON
— The nomination of Judge Sonia Sotomayor to the Supreme Court has recharged a
conservative campaign to educate voters about judicial activism.
In
his nomination remarks May 26, President Obama praised Sotomayor’s ability to
achieve the American dream over an impressive 30-year career as a leading
lawyer and judge. He also focused on her overcoming hardships.
During the presidential campaign and
in the months after his inauguration, President Obama highlighted his criteria
for choosing a Supreme Court justice. He sought a candidate with a stellar
academic and legal record, but also one who possessed the “empathy” necessary
to base his or her legal decisions not only on constitutional texts, but on
human experience.
Thus,
when he introduced Sotomayor, he said she will bring to the court “not only the
knowledge and experience acquired over a course of a brilliant legal career,
but the wisdom accumulated from an inspiring life’s journey.”
But
critics describe the nominee as a judicial activist more likely to impose
personal and political views than apply the Constitution. They worry that a
judge chosen for his or her capacity for empathy as well as command of the
Constitution might issue wrong decisions on issues such as “marriage” for
homosexuals or abortion.
Raised
in a South Bronx housing project by a determined single mother, Sotomayor
graduated from a Catholic high school, then Princeton and Yale. If confirmed,
she could become the sixth Catholic on the court.
NARAL
(National Abortion Rights Action League) Pro-Choice America issued a press
release that stopped short of endorsing the nomination. The New York Times reported on May 28 that some pro-abortion groups are wary of the
appointment.Pro-life Catholics concerned with rolling back Roe v. Wade
may conclude that Sotomayor poses little threat to their agenda. But Ed Whelan,
president of the Ethics and Public Policy Center, a Washington, D.C., think
tank, argues otherwise.
“Judicial
activism matters a lot,” said Whelan, a former staffer on the Senate Judiciary
Committee during the Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Stephen Breyer confirmation
hearings. “I could imagine someone who is passionately pro-abortion but who
still recognizes that there is not a constitutional right to abortion. On the
other hand, if you have a constitutional philosophy that invites you to indulge
your preferences, anything goes.”
Democrats
possess the votes necessary to confirm Sotomayor. Opponents don’t expect to
prevail, but they still hope to accomplish two important goals: deepen public
awareness regarding the proper role of the courts in the nation’s political
democracy and impose future penalties on liberal senators who misrepresent
their predilection.
What
the president calls “wisdom” and “empathy,” critics label as “judicial
activism” — a violation of “originalist” judicial philosophy that asks judges
to practice restraint and interpret the Constitution as intended by the
founders.
“Judge
Sotomayor is a liberal judicial activist of the first order who thinks her
own personal political agenda is more important that the law as written. She
thinks that judges should dictate policy, and that one’s sex, race and
ethnicity ought to affect the decisions one renders from the bench,” contended
Wendy Long, counsel for the Judicial Confirmation Network, a coalition of
opponents devoted to defending originalist principles and opposing judicial
activism.
Judge
Robert Bork, whose 1987 nomination to the Supreme Court was defeated, questions
whether the American public wants to grapple with the threat posed by judicial
activism.
“To
introduce empathy into the criteria for a Supreme Court justice is to disregard
the Constitution,” said Bork. Obama’s election victory suggests that a “large
number of American people don’t want law as much as feel-good politics.”
Battle Plan
The
Judicial Confirmation Network website contends that Sotomayor “has an extremely
high rate of her decisions being reversed, indicating that she is far more
of a liberal activist than even the current liberal activist Supreme
Court.”
At
present, Sotomayor’s decision on Ricci v.
DeStefano, a controversial
affirmative action case, is before the Supreme Court.
A
veteran of the last two Supreme Court confirmation fights, Long’s organization
began to outline a battle plan as soon as Obama won the 2008 election. During
the presidential campaign, Obama underscored his belief that jurists should
issue rulings that reflected their “empathy” for the disadvantaged.
“When
Obama uses the word ‘empathy,’ it’s a code word,” Long said. “Instead of judges
adopting a restrained, modest view of their role on the bench, as the founders
intended, Obama believes judges should bring their own values to the
table to make things better. This mission of change is aided by what Obama
describes as evolving ‘international norms.’”
A newly familiar presence on the Internet and in
television and radio ad campaigns, Long is perhaps the most public face of a
nationwide voter education campaign orchestrated by various activist groups.
Some activists are concerned with
property rights, rather than abortion or religious freedom. Some operate at the
grassroots level far from Capitol Hill. But all are united in their disdain for
activist judges “making policy” from the bench.
During confirmation hearings for
Chief Justice John Roberts, Whelan, at the Ethics and Public Policy Center,
became his defender and effectively
challenged partisan distortions of Roberts’ record on the National Review’s popular blog Bench Memos.
But there is one key difference this time
around for Whelan and his allies: “With Roberts and Alito, the goal was to
knock down distortions. This time it will likely be to generate responsible and
accurate criticism of a bad nominee.”
Whelan
began posting background information about Obama’s most likely choices before
the president actually announced his decision. Once Sotomayor emerged as the
nominee, Whelan and others had their arguments at the ready.
“President
Obama abided by his dismal and lawless ‘empathy’ standard and, in his selection
of Judge Sonia Sotomayor, picked a nominee whom he can count on to indulge her
own liberal biases,” contended Whelan in a posting on Bench Memos.
Pro-Life Vote?
Since
the Bork confirmation battle, nominees’ pro- or anti-abortion bona fides have
fueled most of the partisan skirmishes. This time, however, conservatives have
yet to produce a paper trail that documents, or even hints at, Sotomayor’s
views on Roe — or for that matter, same-sex “marriage” and human
cloning.
When
Pepperdine Law professor Doug Kmiec recently defended Sotomayor as a
“moderate,” he cited her ruling in a 2002 case that upheld the Mexico City
Policy. But her ruling against the pro-abortion Center for Reproductive Law and
Policy followed precedent and did not address the right to privacy, the
foundation for Roe.
The Senate is expected to vote on
Sotomayor’s nomination before the fall. Conservatives hope to use the long
summer months to full advantage. Though some activists have doubts about the
Republican National Committee’s willingness to join in their campaign, they
trust Sens. Jeff Sessions and Mitch McConnell to lead a vigorous review of the
nominee’s credentials in the Senate.
“This has always been a winning
issue for Republicans, because they are the party of judicial restraint,” said
Gary Marx, who manages the Judicial Confirmation Network’s media campaign and
grassroots strategy, which targets liberal
senators in conservative states. “President Bush used to call judicial activism
‘legislating from the bench.’ There is a huge supermajority of Americans who
get that, and we are going to capitalize on it.”
Joan Frawley Desmond writes
from Chevy Chase,
Maryland.
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