Sotomayor
Endorsed by Senate Judiciary Committee as NRLC
Highlights Troubling Questions Left Unresolved
Part One of Two
By Dave Andrusko
Editor's note. Please send
you comments to
daveandrusko@gmail.
Part Two is
about the "Abortion Industry Bailout Act of
2009."
As most of you know, yesterday
the Senate Judiciary Committee endorsed the
nomination of Judge Sonia Sotomayor to replace
Justice David Souter on the Supreme Court. The
13-6 vote split along Democratic/Republican
lines with the sole exception of Senator Lindsey
Graham (R-SC), who voted in favor of Judge
Sotomayor.
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The Senate Judiciary Committee yesterday
endorsed Judge Sonia Sotomayor by a vote
of 13-6. If confirmed by the full
Senate,
Ms. Sotomayor would be the 111th
Justice of the Supreme Court. |
The full Senate is expected to
up take the nomination next week before it
adjourns for its August recess. As the New York
Times described it, if confirmed the 55-year-old
Sotomayor would "be the 111th justice to serve
on the Supreme Court, the first Hispanic and the
third woman."
On Monday National Right to
Life sent a letter to members of the Senate,
expressing its opposition to the confirmation of
Judge Sotomayor. You can read the correspondence
in its entirety at
www.stoptheabortionagenda.com.
Although Sotomayor seems
headed for easy confirmation next week, NRL's
objections are important to remember because
they raise fundamental issues. Let me just
briefly address three points made in this
thoughtful letter.
1. While Judge Sotomayor
"encountered little in the way of
abortion-related litigation, either at the
district court or the court of appeals,"
nonetheless "there are many troubling
indications that Ms. Sotomayor believes that it
is the proper role of the U.S. Supreme Court to
construct and enforce constitutional doctrines
on social policy questions, even where the text
and history of the Constitution provide no basis
for removing an issue from the realm of
lawmaking by the duly elected representatives of
the people." As dissenting Justice Byron White
wrote in 1973, Roe was "an exercise of raw
judicial power."
2. "The evidence indicates
that Ms. Sotomayor approves of the Roe ruling
and approves of the type of judicial activism
that produced it," write NRL Executive Director
David N. O'Steen, Ph.D., and NRL Federal
Legislative Director Douglas Johnson. They cite
her service on the governing board of the Puerto
Rican Legal Defense and Education Fund (PRLDEF).
"During her tenure on the board, the PRLDEF was
actively involved in litigation that attempted
to persuade the Supreme Court to expand the
judge-created 'right to abortion,' often beyond
what the Court was willing to embrace."
During this period, the fund
joined briefs at the U.S. Supreme Court in six
abortion-related cases. "These briefs urged the
Court to regard abortion as a 'fundamental
right' (a right on the level of freedom of
speech), to apply the strictest standard of
scrutiny when reviewing abortion-regulated laws,
and thereby to nullify informed consent
requirements (including those involving
ultrasound), waiting periods, parental
notification requirements, restrictions on
taxpayer funding of abortion, and even record
keeping requirements. The PRLDEF's own
'statement of interest' in three of these cases
said that the PRLDEF 'opposes any efforts to
overturn or in any way restrict the rights
recognized in Roe v. Wade.""
As the NRLC letter also
pointed out, "During her recent confirmation
hearings, Ms. Sotomayor suggested that she was
only aware of this litigation activity in the
most general terms, and had no responsibility
for or awareness of the substance of the
briefs." About this the letter concluded,
"Frankly, this testimony was not very
believable."
3. In her testimony Sotomayor
often talked of following Supreme Court
precedent, as an appeals court judge. But "If
confirmed to the U.S. Supreme Court, Ms.
Sotomayor will no longer be constrained by the
precedents of that Court, including the
precedents in which the Court upheld laws
requiring notification of a parent before
performing an abortion on a minor, requiring a
pre-abortion waiting period, barring public
funding of abortion, and – by a single vote, in
2007 – banning partial-birth abortion. Nor, it
appears, will she feel greatly constrained by
the text and history of the Constitution, in
which Roe v. Wade and its progeny find no
support."
Judge Sotomayor's defenders in
the Senate Judiciary Committee and beyond
positioned her as "within the mainstream." That,
too, I would argue, "was not very believable."
Part Two --
Abortion Industry Bailout Act of 2009 |