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July 15th, 2009
06:20 AM ET

Analysis: Sotomayor a cautious, careful liberal

[cnn-photo-caption image= http://i2.cdn.turner.com/cnn/2009/images/07/15/art.toobin.cnn.jpg caption="CNN Legal Analyst Jeffrey Toobin calls Judge Sonia Sotomayor 'a cautious, careful liberal.'"]

By Jeffrey Toobin
CNN Senior Analyst

(CNN) - One of the enduring myths about Supreme Court justices is that they often turn out to "surprise" the presidents who appoint them. Sure-thing conservatives, it is said, turn out to be liberals, ­and vice versa. In fact, the evidence is almost entirely the opposite: that with justices, as in life, what you see is what you get.

The question, then, is this: What do you see when you look at Sonia Sotomayor, who begins her confirmation hearings as a strong favorite for confirmation?

She is, above all, a veteran judge ­who has 18 years on the federal bench: six as a trial judge (appointed by President George H.W. Bush) and the rest on the court of appeals (appointed by President Clinton). The question of competence is closed. Sotomayor can do the job. It's no surprise that she received a unanimous rating of well-qualified from the American Bar Association screening committee.

But what would she stand for as a Supreme Court justice? She is, it seems, a liberal,­ but a liberal in the cautious and careful mode of her likely future colleagues Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Stephen Breyer.

Her leanings are clearest in the case of affirmative action. As a political and constitutional matter, she believes government can take steps to assure a diverse work force or student body.

This view was on display in the most famous (or infamous) decision of her career.

Keep reading this story »


Filed under: Supreme Court
July 15th, 2009
06:10 AM ET

Sotomayor back on the hot seat today

Supreme Court nominee Judge Sonia Sotomayor testifies during the second day of her confirmation hearings on Capitol Hill July 14, 2009 in Washington, DC. (Getty Images)
Supreme Court nominee Judge Sonia Sotomayor testifies during the second day of her confirmation hearings on Capitol Hill July 14, 2009 in Washington, DC. (Getty Images)

WASHINGTON (CNN) - Sonia Sotomayor faced tough questioning Tuesday on political issues and controversial statements from her past, with both Democrats and Republicans saying she responded well and appeared certain to win confirmation as the nation's first Hispanic Supreme Court justice.

The 55-year-old federal appeals judge conceded she made a bad play on words in saying in 2001 that a "wise Latina woman" could reach a better conclusion than a white man.

Otherwise, her calm answers to questions by the Senate Judiciary Committee on a wide range of issues - abortion, gun control, presidential powers, the death penalty - displayed a command of legal concepts that impressed her harshest interrogators.

Do you accept Sotomayor's "wise Latina" explanation? Tell us your thoughts.


Filed under: Supreme Court
July 15th, 2009
06:00 AM ET

What’s on Tap – Wednesday July 15, 2009

Here are the big stories on the agenda today:

  • Race, abortion, gun control – all on the table as Republicans fired question after question at Judge Sonia Sotomayor.  Her answers were very careful ones.  The Supreme Court nominee will likely get more of the same later today.  We're looking at day two's heated exchanges – and what Sotomayor can expect in a few hours.
  • Is the secretary of state being sidelined?  She's supposed to be America’s top ambassador, but Hillary Clinton’s been out of the limelight since she broke her elbow last month.  Now some inside the beltway say the president's inner circle is keeping Clinton out.
  • Democrats on the hill have a few questions for former Vice President Dick Cheney.  The former VP’s now connected to a secret CIA program and Democrats are clamoring for President Obama to launch new investigations into the Bush administration.  But the White House is still saying it wants to look forward, not back.
  • An update to a story we’ve been following here on AM.  A day camp is now suing a Pennsylvania swim club over allegations of racism.  Parents say kids were kicked out of the pool, after they overheard things like “what are all these black kids doing here?”  The camp director joins us live.  Why she says “the children are permanently scarred.”

Filed under: What's On Tap
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