Will Sotomayor Be Better Than Souter on Civil Liberties?
In the July 1 New Republic, Jeffrey Rosen examines Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor's dissenting opinions and finds evidence of "a judge who can be both crusading and open-minded" and "who will likely move the Supreme Court marginally to the left on civil liberties issues." Some of the cases he cites are familiar from newspaper coverage of Sotomayor's nomination. In 2002, for instance, she disagreed with 2nd Circuit colleagues who upheld the firing of a New York City police officer who had mailed racist and anti-Semitic material to charitable groups that solicited donations from him. Sotomayor concluded that such private, off-the-job speech was protected by the First Amendment, which to my mind (and Rosen's) counts in her favor. (My colleague Radley Balko sees things differently, arguing that police departments have a legitimate interest in keeping badges and guns away from overt bigots.) Rosen concedes that Sotomayor's First Amendment credentials are tarnished by her support for a 2008 decision that upheld school administrators' retaliation against a student who had called them "douchebags" on her blog.
Regarding the Fourth Amendment, Rosen highlights a 2000 dissent in which Sotomayor said the Constitution does not allow police to search an apartment for drugs without a warrant simply because the residents have voluntarily opened the door for a food delivery. In that case, Sotomayor mocked the majority's description of the search as consensual, especially the part where the officers pointed guns at the suspects and "asked" them to step outside. Another Fourth Amendment dissent makes me wish Sotomayor had been on the Supreme Court for the oral arguments in Safford Unified School District v. Redding, the case involving a strip search of a 13-year-old girl by public school officials who were looking for ibuprofen. In a 2004 case where the 2nd Circuit upheld strip searches of two girls at a Connecticut juvenile detention facility, Sotomayor emphasized the "embarrassing and humiliating" nature of the searches, in which "the officials inspected the girls' naked bodies front to back, and had them lift their their breasts and spread out folds of fat." She said the majority gave insufficient attention to "the privacy interests of emotionally troubled children" who "have been victims of abuse or neglect, and may be more vulnerable mentally and emotionally than other youths their age." Rosen concludes that "Sotomayor's Fourth Amendment dissents suggest that she will be a more consistent search-and-seizure civil libertarian than Souter."
Then again, Rosen cites an estimate that, "of Sotomayor's 67 majority opinions involving criminal matters, 81 percent are pro-government and only 18 percent are pro-defendant." And whatever skepticism of government she has shown in Fourth Amendment and First Amendment cases, it inexplicably does not extend to Takings Clause cases. I say "inexplicably" even though that's the typical pattern among left-liberals because it never ceases to amaze me that people who purportedly empathize with the little guy and resist the capture of government by big business can approve eminent domain abuses as outrageous as the one Sotomayor and her colleagues upheld in the 2006 case Didden v. Village of Port Chester (which Radley Balko and Damon Root discuss here and here). The prospect that Sotomayor "may be less suspicious of 'regulation by litigation' than Souter or any of the other justices on the Roberts Court," though also troubling, makes more sense given her concern for "economic and social justice" (which Rosen welcomes).
Sotomayor is not only a mixed bag from a libertarian point of view; according to Rosen, she is all over the map methodologically. After six years as a trial judge and 11 years on the 2nd Circuit, Rosen writes, "Sotomayor still hasn't settled on a consistent judicial philosophy….She samples from different judicial philosophies in different cases. Sometimes Sotomayor sounds like a textualist in the Scalia style, and sometimes she sounds as enthusiastic as Justices Ginsburg and Breyer in her devotion to international law and the living constitution." This inconsistency is not exactly encouraging, but even if Sotomayor chooses sides by flipping a coin she might still turn out better (or at least no worse) than David Souter, and Obama easily could have chosen someone more consistently bad.
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She samples from different judicial philosophies in different cases.
IOW, she is a result-oriented judge, selecting the judicial philosophy that justifies whatever she wants to do anyway. Results-oriented judges tend to be legislators from the bench.
I'm paraphrasing badly here, but there's an old story about a first-year law student who goes to his professor about a troubling realization. "Professor, I hesitate to even bring this up, but in some of these cases, it appears the judge made up his mind and then rationalized his decision rather than applying the law to reach a conclusion".
"Good. You're finally starting to understand the practice of law."
Could it be Sotomayor reaches a verdict then searches for an approach to justify it?
a new study from the National Center for Public Policy Research showing that most African Americans are opposed to the Obama Energy Tax because of its the potential negative economic impact.
Some key findings from the NCPPR study:
* 76 percent of African American adults believe that securing America's economic recovery should be the top priority, even if it means delaying action in climate change.
* 56 percent of African American adults think our federal and state policy makers fail to adequately take into account economic and quality of life concerns when considering new anti-global warming laws.
* Only 15 percent of survey respondents said they would be willing to pay one dollar more for gasoline due to greenhouse gas legislation. The numbers dropped to 5, 3, and 4 percent if gas prices increased by two, three or four dollars a gallon.
* Only 11 percent of survey respondents said they would be willing to pay one hundred dollars more a year for electricity in an effort to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. The numbers dropped to 6, 4 and 1 percent when respondents were asked if they would be willing to pay an extra two hundred, three hundred, or six hundred dollars a year for electricity.
http://www.nationalcenter.org/NCPPR_National_Minority_Energy_Study_090623.pdf
IOW, she is a result-oriented judge, selecting the judicial philosophy that justifies whatever she wants to do anyway. Results-oriented jJudges tend to be legislators from the bench.
FTFY.
Obama easily could have chosen someone more consistently bad
Exactly. People reflexively opposing her simply because Obama chose her need to think this through.
Elemenope,
Yes, judges have a tendency to be results-oriented, but it's hardly fair to say that about all of them. In law school, the bad cases were usually the ones where the judge (or justice) was clearly aiming for a preferred result. But not all cases are badly decided, so someone is thinking about rule of law and proper process out there!
"In the major cases we read in law school", I should've said.
spot on
To read anything else into her decisions is a mistake to say the least.
Jacob, thank you for the informative, non-alarmist post. It was like the opposite of television.
Obama easily could have chosen someone more consistently bad
Maybe he couldn't. People reflexively saying that simply because Obama chose her need to think this through.
"even if Sotomayor chooses sides by flipping a coin she might still turn out better (or at least no worse) than David Souter"
I said this a month ago, and I'll say it again. A coin is going to be right far more often than any Obama appointee.
Pro L --
My point is that it is, and has always been, so incredibly rare that a judge would put process above preferred result that it is usually an argument in bad faith to harp on it as a particular failing of any given judge.
True believers are rare, and rarely get promoted in any case.
Maybe he couldn't. People reflexively saying that simply because Obama chose her need to think this through.
Are you honestly saying you don't think he could have chosen someone worse? Seriously?
I don't agree. It's an extreme case when a judge is always results oriented. I think a good number are in certain types of cases, but only the bad ones do it all the time.
If I may be so bold -
Sotomator will be confirmed. We'll find out what she really thinks about the law and the constitution after that.
Souter was the best member of the court for 'non-economic' civil liberties. His retirement will screw us.
Sotomayor proved to be a poor justice overall. She is remembered principally for her majority opinion acknowledging, once and for all, that the Third Amendment is incorporated into the Fourteenth, thus preventing the states from forcing their citizens to house state militia members. A common practice after 2014.