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Hung Up on Race

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Posted on May 28, 2009

By Eugene Robinson

    President Obama’s nominee for the Supreme Court, Judge Sonia Sotomayor, is a proud and accomplished Latina. This fact apparently drives some prominent Republicans to a state resembling incoherent, sputtering rage.

    “White man racist nominee would be forced to withdraw. Latina woman racist should also withdraw,” former House Speaker Newt Gingrich ranted Wednesday on Twitter. My first reaction was that politicians above a certain age should never be left alone in the danger-strewn landscape of social networking. My second thought was: Whoa, Newt, what’s that about?

    Rush Limbaugh also—predictably—bellowed endlessly about how Sotomayor was a “reverse racist,” and how Obama was one too. But unlike Gingrich, Limbaugh doesn’t ask to be taken seriously. He just asks to be paid.

    Gingrich’s outburst was in reaction to a widely publicized, out-of-context quote from a 2001 speech in which Sotomayor mused about how her identity might or might not affect her decisions as a federal judge. Far from being some kind of “racist” screed, the speech was actually a meditation on Sotomayor’s personal experience of a universal truth: Who we are inevitably influences what we do.

    Each of us carries through life a unique set of experiences. Sotomayor’s happen to be the experiences of a brilliant, high-powered Latina—a Nuyorican who was raised in the projects of the Bronx, graduated summa cum laude from Princeton, edited the Yale Law Journal, worked as a Manhattan prosecutor and a corporate lawyer, and served for 17 years as a federal trial and appellate judge.

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    Given that kind of sterling résumé—and given that she has, according to presidential adviser David Axelrod, more experience on the federal bench than any other Supreme Court nominee in at least 100 years—it’s understandable that Republican critics would have to grasp at straws.

    The charge that she’s a “judicial activist” finds no basis in her voluminous record. Critics have seized on a ruling she joined in a case called Ricci v. DeStefano, involving a reverse-discrimination claim by a group of white firefighters in New Haven, Conn. But Sotomayor’s action in that case is more properly seen as an example of judicial restraint.

    What happened was that the city gave a promotion exam to firefighters and no African-Americans—and only one Hispanic—passed. Fearing that it would lose ground in its effort to diversify the leadership of the fire department, and fearing a civil rights lawsuit, the city canceled the exam. The firefighters who passed did not get the promotions they had expected. A U.S. District Court judge ruled that the city government had acted within the law, and a panel of the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals—including Sotomayor—agreed.

    What Sotomayor’s attackers either don’t understand or won’t acknowledge is that the issue before the court wasn’t whether the city of New Haven had acted fairly in canceling the exam, but whether it had acted legally. There was ample precedent indicating that the action was, in fact, legal. I thought the whole theory of judicial restraint was that we didn’t want unelected judges telling our elected officials what to do. I thought the conservative idea was that judges were just supposed to “call balls and strikes”—which is just what Sotomayor and her colleagues did.

    Ah, but there’s always a subtext. Like Sotomayor’s 2001 speech, the New Haven case was really about identity—and about power. In both instances, as Sotomayor’s critics saw it, minorities were either claiming or obtaining some kind of advantage over white males. Never mind whether this perception has any basis in fact. The very concept seemed to be enough to light a thermonuclear fuse.

    Despite the best efforts of Gingrich, Limbaugh and others, Sotomayor’s confirmation process isn’t likely to be about race. Her qualifications are impeccable, her record is moderate and her personality, according to colleagues, is winning. At her confirmation hearings, she’ll have the opportunity to supply the missing context for any quote they throw at her. Absent some 11th-hour surprise, I can’t imagine that her opponents in the Senate will be able to lay a glove on her.

    I also can’t imagine that she’ll pretend to be anyone other than who she is. Sonia Sotomayor has made clear that she is proud of her identity, and she offers that pride not as an affront but as an example—not white, not male, not Anglo, not inclined to apologize. She is the new face of America, and she has a dazzling smile.
   
    Eugene Robinson’s e-mail address is eugenerobinson(at)washpost.com.
   
    © 2009, Washington Post Writers Group


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By M Currey, June 1, 2009 at 5:17 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

There are some who would not want any women in government. 

The racist statement is taken out of context and two of the most racist and sexist person is Limbaugh and he is a discrase to manhood.

This woman should be on the court because she not only represents women but the Latino race as well.

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By "G"utless "W"itless Hitler, June 1, 2009 at 11:47 am Link to this comment

I say keep douche bags like Newt and Cheney in front of the cameras as much as possible.  They’re driving more nails in the Republican Party coffin than coverage of the Dems would.

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By anaman, May 31, 2009 at 11:18 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

What I have trouble understanding is why people like Newt Gingrich and that idiot Cheney are still in the news. Both have already been shown to support only the Republican agenda and nothing else. Their standpoints are well established. Why bother asking them anything at this point? They will only respond with the classic Republican lies and innuendos, and we’ve heard it all before.

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By ecw, May 30, 2009 at 7:31 am Link to this comment

I almost hope that the Senate does not confirm as I’m not sure she’s liberal enough for me. I think she represents at best a moderate; at worst a pro-prosecutorial view of the world.  She was, after-all, a prosecutor after law-school and there must have been a reason why Bush appointed her. What we really need is someone who has the intellectual capacity and personality to give Scalia a battle. How about Hillary?

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By USMC SAM, May 30, 2009 at 6:00 am Link to this comment

The best person for the job means little, only that the playing field is level. So the one who sacrifices to study, time from his family, works hard to prove he/she has earned the right, means nothing as long as it’s fair. That’s the dumbest argument I have heard to date. Let’s see if the avg people can keep this country from going under.

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By samosamo, May 29, 2009 at 7:48 pm Link to this comment

Perfect obfuscation of ostensible distraction

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By Jason!!, May 29, 2009 at 10:00 am Link to this comment

please. if any of the male justices on the bench today made the comments she made, you would be singing a different tune.

read a couple of her judicial opinions and then compare them to some of the other contenders. Then make the case why she should be on the bench and not one of the others.

You will find it impossible unless you bring in affirmative action quotas.

btw: What happened to all you making the case that we should be gender / color blind? Your nothing more then a blind ObamaBot.

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By AbuMubarak, May 29, 2009 at 5:09 am Link to this comment

Colorado,

Do you think anyone who is promoted within the ranks is anything but a suck-up?  That’s just the way the political and corporate world work.  You play the game, you get ahead.  You buck the system, you get left behind.

Independent thinking and being a true maverick are punished, not rewarded.

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By coloradokarl, May 29, 2009 at 4:56 am Link to this comment

something is wrong emotionally with this woman. I have known a few women in my 49 years and every one that flutters their eye lids has a screw loose. The “glowing” statements from all the lawyers reeks of suck up. I truly hope the Senators grill this woman and see if she can acheive some smart composure. A tough hearing proves character or shows a FRAUD. Is OBAMA sacrificing this woman for a larger adgenda?? THAT would be a little TOO devious…

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By Inherit The Wind, May 29, 2009 at 4:13 am Link to this comment

How about this? Newt, Rush, Sean, and all the other pinheads who claim to represent Republican and Conservative ideas will say ANYTHING AND EVERYTHING just to see what seems to stick.

I’m surprised they aren’t accusing her of being a Gay man, a Flat-Earther, a Scientologist, a Moslem, and a Lesbian all at the same time.  Whatever will stick.

I’m more concerned that she is or was Catholic—there are something like 5 Catholics on the Court.  At least she’s divorced so she cannot be a practicing Catholic.

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By AbuMubarak, May 29, 2009 at 12:02 am Link to this comment

Reverse racist? Racist? A person from an oppressed minority group addresses the results of that oppression and the tide turns on them? Interesting twist of events. 

One day, when we all live on a level playing field, Newt and Rush will be correct in their assessments.  However, until that day, the aggrieved will always have the right to speak about their injustices. 

Now, if Rush and Newt deny that the “Indigenous Peoples of the Western Hemisphere” have not been oppressed by the same group that Rush and Newt are vocal spokesmen, then we have a problem of blindness to deal with.

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