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Senate Debate on Empathy
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This page has transcripts and video from the Senate debate on empathy. The debate was
started by Barack Obama saying that empathy was one of his criteria for choosing
a Supreme Court Justice. The debate heated up with the nomination of Sonia
Sotomayor and continued with the selection of District/Circuit Court
Judges as well as the nomination of Elena Kagan. This debate continues.
I've selected and organized hundreds of video clips and
transcripts from this Senate debate on empathy.
See also
Articles about
Conservative Attacking Empathy |
References
Related
Articles
Judging
Judges: Empathy as the Litmus Test for Impartiality by
Rebecca K. Lee University of Cincinnati Law Review, Vol. 82, No. 145, 2013
"This Article examines the role of empathy in judging, which has been directly
raised and questioned in recent years, in light of the discussion surrounding
judicial nominations and appointments to the Supreme Court. President Barack
Obama was right to emphasize that empathy is an important quality to be found
in a judicial nominee, but his public support for empathetic judging was
unfortunately cut short due to the political controversy and misunderstanding
surrounding what empathy means. The opportunity remains, however, for a
renewed discussion regarding judicial empathy by expressly connecting it to
our vision of judicial impartiality. "
In Defense of Judicial Empathy -
Thomas B. Colby - George Washington University Law School
"President Barack H. Obama has repeatedly stated that he views
a capacity for empathy as an essential attribute of a good judge. And
conservatives have heaped mountains of scorn upon him for saying so—accusing
him of expressing open contempt for the rule of law.To date, the debate has
been surprisingly one-sided. One federal judge has recently noted
that “President Obama’s statement that judges should have ‘empathy’ was met
with strong criticism from his opponents and uncomfortable silence from his
supporters.” No one has yet offered a sustained scholarly defense of the
President’s call for empathy in judging. This Article seeks to fill that
void."
In Defense of Judicial Empathy
by Thomas B. Colby "President Obama has repeatedly stated that he views a capacity for empathy as
an essential attribute of a good judge. And conservatives have heaped
mountains of scorn upon him for saying so—accusing him of expressing open
contempt for the rule of law. This Article seeks to offer a sustained
scholarly defense of judicial empathy. Empathy is properly defined as the
cognitive ability to understand a situation from the perspective of other
people, combined with the emotional capacity to comprehend and feel those
people’s emotions in that situation. This is an essential characteristic of a
good judge. Legal doctrine, at both the constitutional and subconstitutional
level, is permeated with reasonableness and balancing tests and other
doctrinal mechanisms that cannot possibly be employed effectively unless
judges are able to gain an empathic appreciation of the case from the
perspective of all of the litigants. "
Dahlia Lithwick & Edwin Rutsch: How to Build a Culture of Empathy on the
Supreme Court and Beyond Dahlia Lithwick writes about the courts and the law for Slate and is a
commentator on various national media programs such as NPR, Rachael Maddow
Show, Democracy Now, etc. She has written and commented on the role of empathy
in relationship to the Supreme Court, same-sex marriage and woman's issues.
There was a great deal of contention and confusion about the nature of empathy
during the last Supreme Court nomination hearings. We talked about preparing
now, for the next Senate discussions and debates about the role of empathy in
the justice system and Supreme Court.
Lies,
Damned Lies, and Judicial Empathy by Mary Anne Franks, University of
Miami School of Law President Obama's praise of empathy as a valuable judicial trait triggered a
shamefully partisan misrepresentation of both the concept of empathy and the
nature of our judicial system more generally. In this manufactured debate, the
Right presented the judicial status quo as "objective" and "universal,"
contrasting it starkly with a caricature of judicial empathy as "biased" and
"activist." To speak of the law or of the judiciary as impartial in a
descriptive, as opposed to an aspirational, way is to lie. It is a very
effective lie for the defenders of the status quo, because it makes the status
quo seem both natural and right. And if the status quo is natural and right,
any attempt to change it will be viewed as unnatural and wrong. If one instead
views the law is a product of the biases, assumptions, and self-interest of
those who write, enforce, and uphold it, then it seems both wise and necessary
to encourage the diversification of our moral and legal imagination. Empathy
is one way to engage in this reflective project
The
Anti-Empathic Turn by Robin West -
Georgetown University Law Center Justice, according to a broad consensus of our greatest twentieth century
judges, requires a particular kind of moral judgment, and that moral judgment
requires, among much else, empathy - the ability to understand not just the
situation but also the perspective of litigants on warring sides of a lawsuit.
Excellent judging requires empathic excellence. Empathic understanding is, in
some measure, an acquired skill as well as, in part, a natural ability. Some
people do it well; some, not so well. Again, this has long been understood,
and has been long argued, particularly, although not exclusively, by some of
our most admired judges and justices.
Comments by Barack Obama on Empathy and the Courts.
(click on image to play each video)
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2005-09-22 -
Obama on Roberts (1 of 90) |
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Barack
Obama as Senator talks about why he can not support Roberts for the Supreme
Court. He says Roberts tends to side with the powerful. Implies he doesn't
have empathy for the average citizen.
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2006-01-26
- Obama on Samuel Alito (2 of 90) |
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Barack
Obama as Senator talks about why he can not support Samuel Alito for the
Supreme Court. He says a justice needs a sense of empathy to deal with the
5% of very difficult cases. Implies Alito doesn't have this empathy. |
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2007-07-17
- Obama at Planned Parenthood (3 of 90) |
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Candidate Barack Obama says that if elected president, he will select a
Supreme Court justice that has empathy. |
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2008-03-02 - Westerville, OH -
Town Hall Meeting |
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At the Westerville
OH, Town Hall Meeting, Obama says he will choose Supreme Court Judges with
heart and empathy. "What I want on the bench are people who have
enough empathy, enough feeling for what ordinary people are going through."
Obama references, Brown v. Board of Education as
an example of judges having empathy. |
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2008-08-16 - Saddleback
Civil Forum and Supreme Court |
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Talks about
nominating Supreme Court Justices. |
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2009-05-01 - Obama on David Souter retirement (4 of 90) |
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After
hearing that David Souter will retire from the Supreme Court, President
Barack Obama holds a press conference and says empathy will be one of his
criteria for choosing a new justice. |
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Discussions on Empathy by Senator
2009
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2009-05-03
- Arlen Specter - Meet The Press - Empathy (5 of 90) |
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But if
you talk about empathy, you may be talking about something which is, which
is broader. But we'll have to test the nominee on that. Listen, the job of
the United States Senate is to ask firm, really tough questions to find out
whether the nominee has an open mind, whether the nominee respects the
supremacy of the Constitution, whether the nominee will look to Congress to
establish public policy. And there are going to be some empathetic factors,
but basically we're a nation with a rule of law. |
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2009-05-05
- Mitch
McConnell
(6 of 90) |
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As a
candidate for President, he said that his criteria for a judicial nominee
would be someone who would empathize with particular parties or particular
groups. This viewpoint was evident again last week when, in describing a
good nominee, the President seemed to stress empathy over and above a
judge's role of applying the law without prejudice.
The problem with this philosophy is that it arises out of the misguided
notion that the courts are simply an extension of the legislative branch
rather than a check on it. Americans do not want judges to view any group or
individual who walks into the courtroom as being more equal than any other
group or individual. They expect someone who will apply the law equally to
everyone, so everyone has a fair shake. |
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2009-05-06
- Ted Poe
(7 of 90) |
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Also, does the President only
want a politically correct judge or Justice that correctly judges the
Constitution? It appears to me that the new Justice should be qualified as a
constitutional scholar that believes in upholding the sanctity of the words
of the Constitution, rather than someone that just has empathy or a social
or political agenda they want impose on the whole Nation. |
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2009-05-13
- Roland
Burris
(8 of 90) |
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We must
oppose jurists who would overreach, but we would be well served to find a
candidate with the integrity to draw on his or her God-given sense of
empathy and personal life experiences. |
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2009-06-09
- Jon Kyl
(9 of 90) |
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Everybody is well aware of some of the factors this particular nominee has
talked about and the President has talked about--the empathy, the
background, the experience
in other matters. |
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2009-06-17
- Jeff Sessions
(10 of 90) |
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How
can we uphold the rule of law if those who weigh the scales have the power
to tip them one way or the other based on empathy, their feelings or their
personal views? How can we curb the excess of Federal power if we allow our
courts to step so far beyond the limits of their legitimate authority? How
can the least among us depend on the law to deliver justice, to protect
them, to steadfastly protect their liberties, if rulings are no longer
objective and if a single judge has the power to place his or her empathy
above the law and the evidence? |
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2009-06-17 - Richard Durbin
(11 of 90) |
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So the
Senator from Alabama came here and said: We do not need judges with empathy.
That word has been stretched in many different directions. But if empathy
means we do not need judges who understand the reality of the workplace, if
empathy means we would say to Lilly Ledbetter: Sorry, you missed it, girl,
you had 6 months to file that lawsuit from the first act of discrimination,
the first paycheck--you missed it, and you are out of luck--if empathy would
say that is not a fair or just result,
I want judges with empathy. I want them to know the real world. I want them
to know the practical impact of the decisions they make. I want them to
follow the law. I want them to be fair in its administration. But I do not
want them to sit high and mighty in their black robes so far above the real
world that they could not see justice if it bit them. I think that is what
empathy brings--someone who is at least in touch with this real world.
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2009-06-17
- Patrick Leahy
(12 of 90) |
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When
justice Brandies, one of the giants of the supreme court was nominated to
the high court he had to overcome severe anti-Semitism, significant
opposition. The commentary at the time was questions about the Jewish mind,
how its operations are complicated by altruism. Does that sound a little bit
like an attack on empathy? [laughter] of course, i would mention that the
opposite of empathy is indifference. Do we really want that in a justice? |
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2009-06-18
- Whitehouse ACS panel (13 of 90)
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Central
to the American legal tradition is the need for judges, and particularly
Supreme Court Justices, with the good judgment to exercise discretion
wisely. Right-wing critics of the administration have latched on to
President Obama's description of that good judgment as "empathy." Even the
ranking member of the Judiciary Committee, Senator Sessions, recently
suggested that President Obama's use of the word "empathy" indicates a
belief "that a judge should use his or her personal feelings about a
particular group or issue to decide a case." |
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2009-06-23 - Gibbs -
(press secretary not of interest) |
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2009-06-23
- Mitch McConnell (14 of 90) |
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Judge
Sotomayor's writings offer a window into what she believes having empathy
for certain groups means when it comes to judging, and I believe once
Americans come to appreciate the real-world consequences of this view, they
will find the empathy standard extremely troubling as a criterion for
selecting men and women for the Federal bench. |
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2009-06-23
- Jeff Sessions
(15 of 90) |
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He says
he wants someone who will use empathy--empathy to certain groups to decide
cases. That may sound nice, but empathy toward one is prejudice toward the
other, is it not? There are always litigants on the other side, and they
deserve to have their cases decided on the law. And whatever else empathy
might be, it is not law. So I think empathy as a standard, preference as a
standard is contrary to the judicial oath. This is what a judge declares
when they take the office: I do solemnly swear that I will administer
justice without respect to persons, and do equal right to the poor and the
rich, and that I will faithfully and impartially discharge and perform all
the duties incumbent upon me. |
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2009-06-23 - Bob
Menendez (16 of 90) |
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On top
of that, Judge Sotomayor's personal background is rich with the joys and
hardships that millions of American families share. Her record is proof that
someone can be both an impartial arbiter of the law and still recognize how
her decisions will affect people's everyday lives.
I think it says something that the worst her ideological opponents can
accuse her of is being able to understand the perspective of a wide range of
people whose cases will come before her. |
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2009-06-24
- Orrin Hatch
(17 of 90) |
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President Obama has already described his understanding of the power and
role of judges in our system of government. He has said he will appoint
judges who have empathy for certain groups and that personal empathy is an
essential ingredient for making judicial decisions. Right off the bat,
President Obama's vision of judges deciding cases based on their personal
feelings and priorities is at odds with what most Americans believe. A
recent national poll found that by more than three to one, Americans reject
the notion that judges may go beyond the law as written and take their
personal views and feelings into account. ..
We have the separation of government power under which the legislative
branch may employ empathy to make the law, but the judicial branch must
impartially interpret and apply the law. |
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2009-06-24
- Sam Brownback
(18 of 90) |
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Judge
Sotomayor has given speeches and written articles promoting judicial
activism. The President who appointed her said judges should have ``the
empathy to recognize what it's like to be a young teenage mom; the empathy
to understand what it is like to be poor or African-American or gay or
disabled or old,'' and that difficult cases should be decided by ``what is
in the Justice's heart.''
While I think it is admirable to have empathy, a Justice and a person who
sits on the bench is to decide this based on the law. That is what they are
to decide it upon, not an interpretation or rewriting of the law. |
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2009-07-07
- Jeff Sessions
(19 of 90) |
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What is
empathy? Is this your personal feeling that you had a tough childhood or
some prejudice that you have--you are a Protestant or a Catholic or your
ethnicity or your race or some bias you brought with you to life and to the
court? Is that what an empathy is? Well, it has no objective meaning, and
that is why it is not a legal standard. The oath of ``impartiality'' to
``equal justice to the rich and the poor alike'' is violated when such
things infect the decision making process. |
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Sotomayor
Hearings Overview
2009-07-13 - Day 1 - All - Senators Opening -
Sotomayor Opening
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2009-07-13 - Mitch McConnell (20 of 90)
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He has repeatedly emphasized that his ``criterion''
for a federal judge is their ability to ``empathize'' with certain groups. That
is a great standard, if you are a member of one of those specific groups. It is
not so great, though, if you are not. So it might be useful to consider some of
the
groups who have found themselves on the short end of the ``empathy'' standard.
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2009-07-13 - Jeff Sessions
(21 of 90) |
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I'm
afraid our system will only be further corrupted as a result of President
Obama's views that, in tough cases, the critical ingredient for a judge is
the "depth and breadth of one's empathy," as well as "their broader vision
of what America should be." Like the American people, I have watched this
for a number of years, and I fear this "empathy standard" is another step
down the road to a liberal activist, results-oriented, and relativistic
world where:
• Laws lose their fixed meaning,
• Unelected judges set policy,
• Americans are seen as members of separate groups rather than simply
Americans, and
• Where the constitutional limits on government power are ignored when
politicians want to buy out private companies. |
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2009-07-13 - Chuck Grassley
(22 of 90) |
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President Obama said that he would nominate judges based on their ability to
"empathize" in general and with certain groups in particular. This "empathy"
standard is troubling to me. In fact, I'm concerned that judging based on
'empathy" is really just legislating from the bench.
The Constitution requires that judges be free from personal politics,
feelings and preferences. President Obama's "empathy" standard appears to
encourage judges to make use of their personal politics, feelings and
preferences. This is contrary to what most of us understand to be the role
of the judiciary.
Judge Sotomayor, President Obama clearly believes you measure up to his
"empathy" standard. That worries me. I've reviewed your record and have
concerns about your judicial philosophy. For example, in one speech, you
doubted that a judge could ever be truly impartial. In another speech, you
argued it'd be a "disservice both to the law and society" for judges to
disregard personal views shaped by one's "differences as women or men of
color." In yet another speech, you proclaimed that the court of appeals is
where "policy is made." |
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2009-07-13 - Jon Kyl (23 of
90) |
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Of
course, every person should have empathy, and in certain situations, such as
sentencing, it may not be wrong for judges to be empathetic. The problem
arises when empathy and other biases or prejudices that are 'in the judge's
heart' become 'the critical ingredient' to deciding cases. As Judge Paez
explained, a judge's prejudices, biases, and passions should not be
embraced—they must be 'set aside' so that a judge can render an impartial
decision as required by the judicial oath and as parties before the court
expect. |
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2009-07-13
- Sheldon Whitehouse (24 of 90) |
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if you
have empathy for those people in this job, you are doing nothing wrong. It
is far better to listen for those unheard voices, and to seek to understand
their points of view, than to ignore them in favor of a particular ideology,
or corporation, or just the status quo...
The courtroom can be the only sanctuary for the little guy when the forces
of society are arrayed against him, when proper opinion and elected
officialdom will lend him no ear. This is a correct, fitting, and intended
function of the judiciary in our constitutional structure, and the empathy
President Obama saw in you has a constitutionally proper place in that
structure.
Judge Sotomayor, I believe your broad and balanced background and empathy
prepare you well for this constitutional and proper judicial role. So again,
I join my colleagues in welcoming you to the Committee and I look forward to
your testimony. |
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2009-07-13 - Tom Coburn
(25 of 90) |
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Senator
Obama referred to his empathy standard when he voted against Chief Justice
Roberts. He stated, "The tough cases can only be determined on the basis of
one's deepest values, one's core concerns, one broader perspective on how
the world works and the depth and breadth of one's empathy."
I believe that standard is antithetical to the proper role of a judge. The
American people expect our judges to treat all litigants equally, not to
favor and not to enter the courtroom already prejudiced against one of the
parties. That's why Lady Justice is always depicted blind and why Aristotle
defined law as "reason free from passion."
We expect a judge to merely call balls and strikes? Maybe so, maybe not. But
we certainly don't expect them to sympathize with one party over the other,
and that's where empathy comes from. |
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2009-07-13 - Dick Durbin (26 of 90) |
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In the
Safford v. -- United School District v. Redding, 13-year- old girl
strip-searched at her school because of a false rumor that she was hiding
ibuprofen pills. At the oral argument in April, several of the Supreme Court
justices asked questions about the case that, unfortunately, revealed a
stunning lack of empathy about the eighth grade victim.
One of the justices even suggested that being strip-searched was no
different than changing clothes for gym class. Although Justice Ruth Bader
Ginsburg helped her eight male colleagues understand why the strip search of
a 13-year-old girl was humiliating enough to violate her constitutional
rights, a majority of the justice ruled that the school officials were
immune from liability. |
2009-07-14
- Day 2 - All
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2009-07-14 - Sheldon Whitehouse
(27 of 90) |
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(on MSNBC) |
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2009-07-14
- Patrick Leahy (28 of 90) |
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(get
into sympathies)
And then you said judges must transcend their personal sympathies and
prejudices and aspire to achieve a greater degree of the fairness and
integrity based on reason of law. And I'll throw one more quote in there.
It's what you told me that ultimately and completely, the law is what counts
-- or the law is what controls.
So tell us, you've heard all of these charges and countercharges, the wise
Latina and on and on. Here's your chance. You tell us -- you tell us what's
going on here, Judge.
SOTOMAYOR: Thank you for giving me an opportunity to explain my remarks. No
words I have ever spoken for written have received so much attention.
(LAUGHTER) |
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2009-07-14
- Jeff Sessions (29 of 90) |
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(get
into sympathies)
SOTOMAYOR: I believe my record of 17 years demonstrates fully that I do
believe that law -- that judges must apply the law and not make the law.
Whether I've agreed with a party or not, found them sympathetic or
not, in every case I have decided, I have done what the law requires.
SESSIONS: But the statement was, "I willingly
accept that we who judge must not deny the differences resulting from
experience and heritage, but continuously to judge when those opinions,
sympathies and prejudices are appropriate." That's exactly opposite
of what you're saying, is it not? |
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2009-07-14
- Russ Feingold (30 of 90) |
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FEINGOLD: Let me go to something completely different. There's been a lot of
talk about this concept of empathy in the context of your nomination. A
judge's ability to feel empathy does not, of course, mean the judge should
rule one way or another, as you well explained.
But I agree with President Obama that it's a good thing for our country for
judges to understand the real-world implications of their decisions and the
effects on regular Americans and to seek to understand both sides of an
issue. |
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2009-07-14
- Jon Kyl (31 of 90) Conservatives claim that Sotomayor renounced
empathy in this exchange |
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KYL: But my question is really very
simple to you: Have you always been able to have a legal basis for the
decisions that you have rendered and not have to rely upon some extra-legal
concept, such as empathy or some other concept other than a legal
interpretation or precedent?
SOTOMAYOR: Exactly, sir. We apply law to facts. We don't apply feelings to
facts.
KYL: Right. Now, thank you for that. Let me go back to the beginning. I
raised this issue about the president's interpretation, because he clearly
is going to seek nominees to this court and other courts that he's
comfortable with and that would imply who have some commonality with his
view of the law in judging. It's a concept that I also disagree with. |
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2009-07-14
- Chuck Schumer (32a of 90) |
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SCHUMER: OK. Well, good. Let's turn to that record. I think your record
shows extremely clearly that, even when you might have sympathy for the
litigants in front of you, as a judge, your fidelity is first and foremost
to the rule of law, because, as you know, in the courtroom of a judge who
ruled based on empathy, not law, one would expect that the most sympathetic
plaintiffs would always win, but that's clearly not the case in your
courtroom. |
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2009-07-14
- Chuck Schumer (32b of 90) |
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SCHUMER: Even though, obviously, you wouldn't have much sympathy or empathy
for this officer or his actions. Is that correct?
SOTOMAYOR: I don't think anyone has sympathy for what was undisputedly a
racist statement, but the First Amendment commands that we respect people's
rights to engage in hateful speech.
SCHUMER: Right. Now, I'm just going to go to a group of cases here rather
than one individual case. We could go -- we could go -- we could do this all
day long where sympathy, empathy would be on one side, but you found rule of
law on the other side and you sided with rule of law. |
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2009-07-15 - Day 3 - All
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2009-07-15 - Charles Grassley
(33 of 90) |
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(in interview)
. SUPREME COURT AND THE PRESIDENT'S EMPHASIS ON APPOINTING SOMEONE BASED ON
EMPATHY SIGNALS TO MANY PEOPLE IN THIS COUNTRY THAT SHE IS A PERSON WHO
MIGHT... |
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2009-07-15
- Arlen Specter (34 of 90) |
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A lot
has been made of the issue of empathy, but that characteristic is not
exactly out of place in judicial determinations. We've come a long way on
the expansion of constitutional rights.
Oliver Wendell Holmes' famous statement that the life of the law is
experience, not logic.
Justice Cardozo in Palko v. Connecticut talked about changing values.
But it was a very, very thorough hearing. I spent beyond the hearing days in
three long sessions, five hours with Judge Bork. So it was his own approach
to the law which resulted there. But you had an evolution of constitutional
law, which I think puts empathy in a -- in an OK status, in an OK category.
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2009-07-15
- Orrin Hatch (35 of 90) |
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Hatch:
OKAY. PRESIDENT GEORGE H.W. BUSH APPOINTED YOU TO THE U.S. DISTRICT COURT IN
1992. I WAS HERE. ABOUT A YEAR EARLIER, HE NOMINATED CLARENCE THOMAS TO THE
UNITED STATES SUPREME COURT, WHO, LIKE YOU, WAS A U.S. CIRCUIT COURT JUDGE.
PRESIDENT BUSH DESCRIBED HIM AS QUOTE, DELIGHTFUL AND WARM, INTELLIGENT
PERSON, WHO HAS GREAT EMPATHY, UNQUOTE. PRESIDENT BUSH THEN SAID THAT JUDGE
THOMAS WOULD DECIDE CASES FAIRLY, QUOTE, AS THE FACTS AND THE LAW REQUIRE.
IN OTHER WORDS, HE DREW A CLEAR DISTINCTION BETWEEN THE HUMAN QUALITY OF
EMPATHY AND THE JUDICIAL QUALITY OR DUTY, EXCUSE ME, OF IMPARTIALITY. THIS
IS OBVIOUSLY VERY DIFFERENT FROM THEN SAYING THAT A JUDGE'S PERSONAL EMPATHY
IS AN ESSENTIAL INGREDIENT FOR DECIDING CASES. WHICH OF THESE IS CLOSER TO
YOUR OWN VIEW, DISTINGUISHING HUMAN EMPATHY FROM JUDICIAL IMPARTIALITY OR
MIXING THEM TOGETHER SO THAT EMPATHY BECOMES PART OF THE JUDICIAL DECISION
MAKING PROCESS?
Sotomayor: PRESIDENTS HAVE USED THE WORD
EMPATHY AND EACH OF THEM HAS GIVEN IT
THEIR DIFFERENT MEANING. AND I CAN'T SPEAK FOR THEIR CHOICE OF THE WORD OR
MAKE A CHOICE BETWEEN WHAT MEANING IS CLOSER TO WHAT I BELIEVE OR NOT.
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2009-07-16 -
Day 4 - All
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2009-07-16
- Jon Kyl (36 of 90) |
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To me,
there is one place where empathy does play a role in a judge's decisions,
and I can think of only this one situation, and it's at the time of
sentencing, when at least some states and the federal government now allows
persons who are not parties before the court to make statements before the
court at the time of sentencing.
And that is a time where, to the extent there is discretion with respect to
sentencing a judge can take into account what people tell him about the
victim, about the defendant, about other matters, and empathy cannot help
but play a role in that.
Could you just remind us from your perspective of having worked for victims'
rights now why it is important for judges to consider the point of view of
victims in this particular situation in -- in sentencing statements or in
the other situations in which it's appropriate for a victim or a victim's
advocate to make an appearance in a given case? |
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2009-07-16 - Mr. Henderson
(37 of 90) |
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This
afternoon I will briefly address four of the points that have figured in the
debate about Judge Sotomayor's nomination:
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first, her qualifications for serving on
the nation's highest court;
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second, her personal background and her
empathy for others who have had to work hard to succeed;
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third, her role in the unanimous ruling by
a three-judge panel in the case of Ricci vs. DeStefano;
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and fourth, her past membership on the
board of one of the Leadership Conference's member organizations, the
Puerto Rico Legal Defense and Education Fund.
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2009-07-16
- Lt. Vagus (38 of 90) |
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(are others
to sort) |
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Senate Floor Debate |
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2009-07-20
- Mitch McConnell (46 of 90) |
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Empathy
Standard
... AND THE DEPTH AND BREADTH OF ONE'S EMPATHY. WHAT'S COME TO BE KNOWN AS
"THE...
... WHAT'S COME TO BE KNOWN AS "THE EMPATHY STANDARD." SO OVER THE COURSE
OF THE...
... REPEATEDLY THROUGHOUT THIS DEBATE, EMPATHY IS A VERY GOOD QUALITY IN
ITSELF, AND...
... BUT WHEN IT COMES TO JUDGING, EMPATHY IS ONLY GOOD IF YOU'RE LUCKY
ENOUGH TO...
... GROUP THAT THE JUDGE IN QUESTION HAS EMPATHY FOR. IN THOSE CASES,
IT'S THE JUDGE,...
... INTRODUCTION OF NEW STANDARD -- THE EMPATHY STANDARD -- THE EMPATHY
STANDARD --...
.. -- THE EMPATHY STANDARD -- THE EMPATHY STANDARD -- FORCES US TO
REEVALUATE...
... ENVIRONMENT? I BELIEVE IT IS. IF EMPATHY IS THE NEW STANDARD, THEN THE
BURDEN IS...
... THEY SHOULD. UNFORTUNATELY THE NEW EMPATHY STANDARD REQUIRES A MEASURE
OF...
... THIS IS THE REAL-WORLD EFFECT OF THE EMPATHY STANDARD. IF THE JUDGE
HAS EMPATHY FOR...
... EMPATHY STANDARD. IF THE JUDGE HAS EMPATHY FOR YOU, GREAT. BUT IF SHE
HAS IT FOR... |
2009-07-28 - Day 5 - Committee Approves Sotomayor (couldn't find full
transcripts)
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2009-07-28 - Orin Hatch (39 of 90) |
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...
personal values, perspectives and empathy would lead him to results that
senator... |
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2009-07-28
- Chuck Grassley (40 of 90) |
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President Obama clearly believes Judge Sotomayor measures up to his
“empathy” standard, which encourages judges to make use of their personal
politics, feelings and preferences. This radical “empathy” standard stands
in stark opposition to what most of us understand to be the proper role of
the judiciary. To her credit, at the hearing Judge Sotomayor repudiated
President Obama’s “empathy” standard. But Judge Sotomayor’s record, both in
and outside of the courtroom, reveal to me a judicial philosophy that
bestows a pivotal role to personal preferences and beliefs in her judicial
method. |
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2009-07-28 -
Lindsey Graham (41 of 90) |
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than she can understand
mine and this
empathy idea makes us all kind of dr. phils. i...
... character, so when i
rejected the
empathy heart standard and went back to what... |
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2009-07-28 -
John Cornyn (42 of 90)
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... and
losers based on some subjective
empathy standard or whatever is in the judge's... |
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2009-07-28 -
Dick Durbin (43 of 90) |
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... lot has been said about the issue of
empathy and this question of the wise latina...
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2009-07-28
- Sheldon Whitehouse (44
of 90) |
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Mr.
Chairman I think we are witness here to an effort to define justice in
America in alignment with a particular point of view. My colleagues are
entitled to their point of view. They are entitled to their view about guns,
they are entitled to their point of view about property rights, they are
entitled to their point of view about other issues.
What I resist is any effort to define that point of view as a judicial norm
against which any other point of view is to be seen as an aberration, as
"biases and prejudices," to use one quotation. In this case, I further
believe that their definition of justice in America - their definition - is
just plain wrong both as history and as justice. In particular I do not wish
to force, as the new judicial norm, the sort of judges who, to paraphrase a
recent article on the Supreme Court "in every major case vote for the
corporation against the individual, for the government against the criminal
defendant, and for the executive branch against the legislature." I do not
wish judges without empathy, who will ignore the long and proud history of
the courtroom, as the last stand for many beleaguered Americans where they
can get fearless justice even when all of the forces of politics, of proper
opinion, and of corporate power may be arrayed against them - with judges
willing to provide that fearless justice, even if it completely upsets the
status quo. |
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2009-07-28 -
Arlen Specter (45 of 90) |
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... and then the business
of
empathy. there is no doubt about the history...
... in our country
responding to
empathy empathy. the life of the law section...
... our country responding
to empathy
empathy. the life of the law section...
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Senate Floor Debate
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2009-07-30
- Lamar Alexander (47 of 90) Sotomayor rejected |
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Courts were never intended to be political bodies composed of judges
``on your side'' who would reliably tilt your way in controversial
cases. Courts are supposed to do just the opposite: decide difficult
cases with impartiality. The oath Judge Sotomayor has taken twice and
will take again when she is sworn in as Associate Justice of the Supreme
Court says it best:
..... I will administer justice without respect to persons, and do equal
right to the poor and to the rich and ..... I will faithfully and
impartially discharge and perform all the duties incumbent upon me
..... under the Constitution and laws of the United States.
During her confirmation hearings, Judge Sotomayor expressly rejected
then-Senator Obama's view that in a certain percentage of judicial
decisions, ``the critical ingredient is supplied by what is in a judge's
heart ..... and [in] the depth and breadth of one's empathy.'' In answer
to a question from Senator Kyl, she said in her confirmation hearing: |
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2009-08-03 - Tom Udall
(48 of 90) |
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a better clip
I rise today to talk about Judge Sotomayor's experience, and I also
want to talk about empathy.
In the period since President Obama nominated Sotomayor, some of her
opponents have done their best to give
empathy a bad name. I think that is a shame. It would be sad for
us to confirm Sonia Sotomayor but allow her
empathy to be discredited as a
human emotion and a judicial asset.
During his confirmation hearings, Clarence Thomas said: What I
bring to this Court, I believe, is an understanding and the ability to
stand in the shoes of other people across a broad spectrum of this
country.
Justice Thomas's description of empathy captures one thing
Sotomayor would bring to this Court: a diversity of experience and the
ability to stand in the shoes of other people.
During her opening statement before the Judiciary Committee, Judge
Sotomayor talked about her experience as a prosecutor in New York for
legendary district attorney Bob Morgenthau. She said: |
2009-08-04 - Debate on Senate Floor
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2009-08-04 - Jeff Sessions on Fox Cavout
(49 of 90) |
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Jeff Sessions says
'Obama wants judges with empathy'. Empathy is a bias. A favorable opinion
for one side of a lawsuit. If you favor one then you have a bias against the
other. It goes against all we've be taught........' |
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2009-08-04 - Mitch McConnell
(50 of 90) |
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I will
not support this nomination, as I have already said, is because I cannot
support the so-called empathy standard upon which Judge Sotomayor was
selected and to which she, herself, has subscribed in her writings and
rulings.
As I have said, the empathy standard is a very fine quality. And I have no
doubt that Senator Obama, now President Obama, had very good intentions when
he made the case for a so-called empathy standard as a Senator, a candidate,
and now as President. But when it comes to judging--when it comes to
judging--empathy is only good if you are lucky enough to be the person or
group for whom the judge in question has empathy. In those cases, it is the
judge, not the law, which determines the outcome.
That is a dangerous road to go down if you believe, as I do, in a nation not
of men but of laws. |
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2009-08-04 - Jeff Sessions
(51 of 90) |
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Our
confirmation process began with the President indicating that empathy was a
standard that he believes should be applied to selecting judges. There is
some disagreement about that. I am one of those who do not believe that is a
legal standard. It is a kind of standard that is closer to a political
standard, and we need to be careful that politics do not infect the
judiciary.
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2009-08-04
Bob Menendez
(52 of 90) |
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With
all due respect to my colleagues who plan to vote against this nominee, what
speaks volumes about Judge Sotomayor's temperament, what speaks volumes
about her experience, what speaks volumes about her record is that the
worst--the very worst--her opponents can accuse her of is an accident of
geography that gave her the unique ability to see the world from the street
view, from the cheap seats.
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2009-08-04 - Sheldon
Whitehouse (53a of 90) |
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Senator
Specter said it well at the committee vote. ``There is nothing wrong with a
little ethnic pride and a desire to encourage her law student audience.''
Maybe we should try to put ourselves in their shoes. Perhaps, with a little
empathy ourselves, it might be easier to understand how a profession and a
judiciary dominated by White males might look to those young law students,
and how important a little encouragement to them might be that their
experiences might give them something valuable to contribute; that they are
not the exception; that they are welcome and fully a part of our society,
and that they bring something valuable not only to the profession but, one
day, perhaps, even to the judiciary.
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2009-08-04 - Sheldon
Whitehouse (53b of 90) |
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In sum,
my Republican colleagues' criticisms of Judge Sotomayor appear to be
grounded in conservative political idealogy rather than legitimate concern
that Judge Sotomayor is not fit to serve on the Supreme Court, grounded in a
desire for more of the rightwing Justices who in recent years have filled
out a conservative wing on the Supreme Court. That wing has marched the
Court deliberately to the right in the last few years, completely
discrediting the Republican claim that judges are mere ``umpires.'' |
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2009-08-04 - Orin Hatch (54
of 90) |
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President Obama has described the kind of judge he intends to appoint. As a
Senator, he said that judges decide cases based on their ``deepest values
..... core concerns ..... broader perspectives ..... and the depth and
breadth of [their] empathy.'' As a presidential candidate, he pledged to
[Page: S8746] appoint judges who indeed have empathy for certain groups. And
as President, he has said that a judge's personal empathy is an essential
ingredient in judicial decisions.
This standard is seriously out of sync with mainstream America. By more than
3 to 1 Americans believe that judges should decide cases based on the law as
written, rather than on their own sense of fairness or justice. The American
people reject President Obama's standard for the kind of judge we need on
the Federal bench.
At the Judiciary Committee hearing, Judge Sotomayor said that her judicial
philosophy is simply fidelity to the law. While some of my Democratic
committee colleagues said that they wanted to avoid slogans, codewords, and
euphemistic phrases, they apparently accepted this one at face value.
Unfortunately, it begs rather than answers the important questions. |
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2009-08-04 - James Inhofe
(55 of 90) |
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2009-08-04 - Sherrod Brown (56
of 90) |
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Current
and former Supreme Court Justices from across the ideological spectrum have
described how their personal experiences informed their judicial
perspective. Judge Sandra Day O'Connor, nominated by President Reagan, once
said: We're all creatures of our upbringing. We bring whatever we are as
people to a job like the Supreme Court. We have our life experiences.
Empathy, perhaps?
Justice Samuel Alito, a conservative nominated by President Bush, said
during his confirmation hearings: When I get a case about discrimination, I
have to think about people in my own family who suffered discrimination
because of the ethnic background or because of religion or because of
gender. And I do take that into account.
Empathy, perhaps? |
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2009-08-04 - Charles Grassley
(57 of 90) |
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Justice
is blind. Empathy is not. Empathetic judges take off the blindfolds and look
at the party instead of merely weighing the evidence in light of what the
law is. Empathetic judges put their thumbs on the scales of justice,
altering the balance that is delicately crafted by the law. Empathetic
judges exceed their role as part of the judicial branch and improperly take
extraneous, nonlegal factors into consideration. That is why President
Obama's judicial standard of empathy is problematic,
and why we should be cautious in deferring to his choices for the judicial
branch. |
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2009-08-04 - Patrick Leahy
(58 of 90) |
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I also
believe she will have an understanding of the real world impact of the
Supreme Court's decisions, which will be a welcome addition. When she was
designated by the President, Judge Sotomayor said: The wealth of
experiences, personal and professional, have helped me appreciate the
variety of perspectives that present themselves in every case that I hear.
It has helped me to understand, respect and respond to the concerns and
arguments of all litigants who appear before me, as well as the views of my
colleagues on the bench. I strive never to forget the real-world
consequences of my decisions on individuals, businesses, and government.
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2009-08-05 - Debate on Senate Floor
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2009-08-05
- Patrick Leahy (59 of
90) |
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So what
I bring to this Court, I believe, is an understanding and the ability to
stand in the shoes of other people across a broad spectrum of this country.
That is the definition of empathy. That nominee, of course, was Clarence
Thomas. Indeed, when President George H.W. Bush nominated Justice Thomas to
the Supreme Court, he touted him as: A delightful and warm, intelligent
person who has great empathy and a wonderful sense of humor.
Let me cite one example of a decision by Justice Thomas that I expect was
informed by his experience. In Virginia v. Black, the Supreme Court, in
2003, held that Virginia's statute against cross burning, done with an
attempt to intimidate, was constitutional. However, at the same time, the
Court's decision also rejected another provision in that statute. Justice
Thomas wrote a heartfelt opinion, where he stated he would have gone even
further. |
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2009-08-05
- Amy Klobuchar (60 of 90) |
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I have
to say, I woke up this morning to the radio on my clock radio and heard one
of my colleagues who decided he was not going to support her, in his words,
because of the ``empathy standard.''
I kind of put the pillow over my head. I thought: He must not have been
sitting in the hearing because she was specifically asked by one of the
other Senators about how she views the cases. They specifically asked her if
she agreed with President Obama when he said: You should use your heart as
well as the law. She said: Actually, I do not agree with that. I look at the
law and I look at the facts. |
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2009-08-05
- John Cornyn (61 of 90) |
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As I
said, notwithstanding her earlier statements, I agree with that statement
she made at the hearing. I believe both Republicans and Democrats were
satisfied with that statement as well. We agreed that ``empathy'' or
``what's in a person's heart''--to borrow a phrase from then-Senator
Obama--should not influence the decisions of a judge. I think we were all a
little surprised when Judge Sotomayor, at the hearing, rejected President
Obama's standard. She said:
I wouldn't approach the issue of judging the way the President does. .....
Judges can't rely on what's in their heart. They don't determine the law.
Congress makes the law. The job of a judge is to apply the law. And so it's
not the heart that compels conclusions in cases--it is the law. I agree with
that statement, and indeed Republicans and Democrats alike appeared to
embrace that statement of an appropriate judicial philosophy. No one
defended the statement that then-Senator Obama made with regard to empathy
or what is in a person's heart. I was encouraged to see that. |
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2009-08-05
- Pat Roberts (62 of 90) |
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Thus
the entrance of the ``empathy'' issue to this debate. I respectfully
disagree with now-President Obama.
Judges must decide all cases in adherence to legal precedent and rules of
statutory or constitutional construction. It does not mean if they do that
they do not have empathy. I agree--and I think everybody would
agree--everybody on the Supreme Court has empathy. But the role of a judge
is not to rule based on his or her own personal judgments but to adhere to
the laws as they are written. |
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2009-08-05
- Roger Wicker (63 of 90) |
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When
discussing the qualifications he would look for in replacing Justice Souter,
President Obama said:
I view the quality of empathy, of understanding and identifying with
people's homes and struggles as an essential ingredient for arriving at just
decisions and outcomes.
Empathy is a great personal virtue, but there is a difference between
empathy as a person and empathy as a judge. Judges should use the law and
the law only, not their personal experiences or personal view or empathy.
Personal biases and empathy have no place in reaching a just conclusion
under the law. Ricci is an example of where Judge Sotomayor clearly failed
this important test. |
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2009-08-05 - Charles Schumer
(64 of 90) |
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I can
go on. Judge Sotomayor voted to deny the victims of TWA flight 800 crash a
more generous recovery because that was ``clearly a legislative policy
choice, which should not be made by the courts.'' If you have empathy,
you certainly are going to decide with the victims. I met some of their
families. She did not. The law did not allow her. |
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2009-08-05
- Jon Kyl (65 of 90) |
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Moreover, I appreciate her many declarations during the hearing that judges
must decide cases solely on the basis of the facts and the law; and
especially her disagreement with the President's erroneous, I believe,
formulations that, in the hard cases, a judge should rely on empathy and
what is in his or her heart. |
2009-08-06 - Debate on Senate Floor
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2009-08-06 - Dick Durbin
(66 of 90) |
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The
last issue I would like to address is that word ``empathy.'' Judge
Sotomayor's critics have twisted and tortured this word in an effort to
discredit her and raise doubts about her objectivity. Empathy is simply the
ability to see another person's point of view. It is the ability to put
yourself in their shoes. That is it. It doesn't mean exercising bias or
favoring a particular side. The judge's critics are wrong to conflate these
concepts. I believe, and President Obama believes, that Judge Sotomayor's
life experience--from her days growing up in public housing, to her service
as a high-powered lawyer representing large corporations--will give her a
unique ability to understand the interests of all the parties that come
before her for decisions of the Supreme Court. It gives her an ability to
understand different perspectives and points of view. That is what empathy
is all about. |
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2009-08-06 - George
Voinovich (67 of 90) |
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I am
comforted by Judge Sotomayor's express rejection of then-Senator Obama's
view that in a certain percentage of judicial decisions ``the critical
ingredient is supplied by what's in the judge's heart and the depth and
breadth of one's empathy.'' In answer to a question from Senator Kyl, Judge
Sotomayor said:
I can only explain what I think judges should do, which is judges can't rely
on what's in their heart. They don't determine the law. Congress makes the
laws. The job of a judge is to apply the law. And so it's not the heart that
compels conclusions in cases, it's the law. The judge applies the law to the
facts before that judge.
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2009-08-06 - Barbara Boxer
(68 of 90) |
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She doesn't directly
mention empathy, but says Sotomayor will bring new perspective and gives the
example of the case of the13 year old girl that was strip searched in
school. Male justices didn't have a problem with this, but Justice Ginsberg
did. Boxer implies the males didn't empathize with the 13 year old girl and
Sotomayor would. |
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2009-08-06 - Charles
Grassley (69 of 90) |
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When
then-Senator Obama voted against now-Chief Justice Roberts, he spoke from
his desk over there about how a judge needed to have, in his words,
``empathy'' to decide the hard cases. He said:
That last mile can only be determined on the basis of one's deepest values,
one's core concerns, one's broader perspective on how the world works and
the depth and breadth of one's empathy....... in these difficult cases the
critical ingredient is supplied by what is in the judge's heart.
In another speech, President Obama further elaborated on this empathy
standard:
In those 5 percent of cases, what you've got to look at is what is in the
Justice's heart. What's their broader vision of what America should be .....
We need somebody who's got the heart--the empathy--to recognize what it's
like to be a young teenage mom, the empathy to understand what it's like to
be poor or African-American or gay or disabled or old--and that's the
criteria by which I'll be selecting my judges.
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2009-08-06 - Jeff Sessions (70 of 90) |
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The
debate over Judge Sotomayor's nomination began with President Obama's
radical new vision for America's court system. According to the President,
all nominees to the Federal bench would now have to meet an ``empathy
standard.'' This standard requires judges to reach their most difficult and
important decisions through the ``depth and breadth of [their] empathy'' and
``their broader vision of what America should be.'' This is a stunning
ideology. It turns law into politics. The President of
the United States is breaking with centuries of American legal tradition to
enter a new era where a judge's personal feelings about a case are as
important as the Constitution itself. |
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2009-08-06 - Patrick Leahy (71 of 90) |
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Some
critics have attacked President Obama's nomination of Judge Sonia Sotomayor
by contending he picked her for the Supreme Court to substitute empathy
for the rule of law. These critics are wrong about the President; they are
wrong about Sonia Sotomayor. |
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2009-08-06 - Mitch McConnell
(72 of 90) |
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President Obama asked himself a different question when he was looking for a
nominee. The question he asked is whether that person has the ability to
empathize with certain groups. And as I have said, empathy is a fine
quality. But in the courtroom, it is only good if a judge has it for you.
What if you are the other guy? When he walks out of the courthouse, he can
say he received his day in court. He can say he received a hearing. But he
can't say he received justice.
At her hearings Judge Sotomayor was quick and even eager to repudiate the
so-called empathy standard. But her writings reflect strong sympathy for it.
Indeed, they reflect a belief not just that impartiality is not possible,
but that it is not even worth the effort.
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Post Sotomayor
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Judge
David
Hamilton Nomination for
Appeals
Court
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source? |
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According to
Hamilton,
"Empathy is the ability to understand the world from another person's point
of view,"
"A judge needs to empathize with all
parties in the case - plaintiff and defendant, crime victim and accused
defendant - so that the judge can better understand how the parties came to
be before the court and how legal rules affect those parties and others in
similar situations." |
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2009-09-17
- Jeff Sessions on Judge Hamilton (73 of 90) |
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Sessions gives his
usual attack on empathy.
This time in relationship to the nomination of Judge
Hamilton.
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2009-09-29
- Jeff Sessions on Viken (74 of 90) |
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He
stated that he believes he fits President Obama's standard for the types of
judges he will nominate to the Federal courts; that is, he meets the
President's ``empathy standard....
Whatever the empathy standard is, it is not law, and we have courts of law
in this country. Whenever a judge employs his personal beliefs, biases, or
experiences to make a decision that favors one party, is it not true that he
necessarily has, therefore, disfavored the other party as a result of his
personal beliefs and biases? For every litigant who benefits from the
judge's so-called empathy, there is a litigant who loses not on the basis of
law but because the judge did not identify with them.
(note: version 2 available with better quality) |
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2009-xx-xx - Judge Viken Committee Questionnaire |
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Q. What role do you
believe that empathy should play in a judge’s consideration of a case?
A. Response: A judge's consideration of a case must always be governed by
impartiality, evenhandedness, attention to facts presented by the parties,
and respect for established law. Empathy is a personal characteristic which
may assist a judge in analyzing the human circumstances which bring people
before the court. But the law and not the personal experiences of jurists is
the path to justice in considering each case |
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2009-10-27 - Jeff Sessions on Judge Irene Cornelia Berger
- sort |
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She
indicated in those answers outright that she did not agree with the empathy
standard President Obama has used, saying: A judge should apply the law to
the facts of a case without being influenced by sympathy or empathy. She
further stated that it is never proper for a judge to indulge his or her own
sense of empathy in deciding what the law means. I wholeheartedly agree and
am pleased to be able to support her nomination. |
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2009-10-27 - Jeff Sessions on Judge Hamilton
- sort |
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Instead of
embracing the constitutional standard of jurisprudence, Judge Hamilton has
embraced this empathy standard, this
feeling standard. Whatever that is, it is not law. It is not a legal
standard. He has said that he believes a judge will ``reach different
decisions from time to time ..... taking into account what happened and its
effect on both parties, what are the practical consequences.'' Judge
Hamilton also appears to have embraced the idea of a living Constitution.
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2009-11-09 - Jeff Sessions on Judge Honeywell
- sort Jeff
Session |
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Empathy does not
play role in my consideration of cases. Presently, I decide cases by
applying the law to the facts of the cases pending before me. If confirmed
by the Senate to serve as a District Court judge, I will decide cases in the
same manner...
Instead of embracing the constitutional standard of jurisprudence, Judge
Hamilton has embraced this `empathy' standard, this `feeling' standard.
Whatever that is, it is not law. It is not a legal standard,''
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2009-11-18
- MarLandrieu on HealthCare
- sort |
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...
BECAUSE OF HIS COMPASSION AND HIS GREAT EMPATHY, I
GUESS DEVELOPED OVER A LIFETIME OF CARING... |
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2009-11-18 - Tom Coburn on Nomination of Judge Hamilton
- sort |
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c-spanvideo.org
c-spanvideo
I was even more disturbed by Judge Hamilton's answers to my written questions
following his hearing. In his responses, Judge Hamilton embraced President
Obama's empathy standard, writing
that empathy was ``important in
fulfilling [the judicial] oath.'' As a matter of fact, Supreme Court Justice
Sotomayor cited just the opposite. What she said was that she looks at facts,
not empathy. She rejected the empathy standard. |
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2009-11-12 - Jeff Sessions at 2009 Federalist Society
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Jeff Sessions,
Pt. 1
Jeff Sessions, Pt. 2
Jeff Sessions, Pt. 3
Jeff Sessions, Pt. 4
... Is to be found in president obama's so-called empathy standard, a
standard he has reaffirmed repeatedly...
... For judges is the depth and breadth of their empathy, as well as their
comical, broader vision...
... Law of the land. Instead, each court allowing empathy to be, to control,
becomes a constitutional...
... To achieve their desired outcome. Intro, the empathy standard is a
politically new but carefully...
... Obama proudly announced he selected using the empathy criteria, in her
speeches she repeatedly said...
... On the scales. And this is the fatal flaw of empathy. Empathy for one
party can only be prejudiced...
.. Scales. And this is the fatal flaw of empathy. Empathy for one party can
only be prejudiced against...
... Law? So if we follow the road paved by the empathy standard, if we
abandoned the legacy of objective...
.. Her activist record and prior statements and empathy standard announced
by the president who selected...
... Politics. Who put the evidence before their empathy, and to put what
the constitution says before.. |
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2010
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2010-02-09
- Jeff Sessions on Judge Greenaway
(-
sort-d) |
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As for
Judge Greenaway, he, like many of President Obama's nominees, I am pleased
to say, has openly rejected the empathy standard. In his response to a
follow-up question, Judge Greenaway stated this about the controversial
empathy standard: Empathy cannot play a role in a judge's consideration of a
case or in determining what the law means. I have told lawyers who appear
before me that as a human being, I may have empathy for their client, but as
a judge, I have none because that is not my job. The pure exercise of
empathy in decision making would lead to unsound and inconsistent decisions. |
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2010-04-16 - Goodwin Liu -
Professor Goodwin Liu testified about his nomination to the Ninth Circuit
Court of Appeals.
(-
sort) |
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Q: Do you believe
that it is ever appropriate for judges to indulge their own subjective
sense of empathy in determining what the Constitution and the laws
mean? If so,
under what circumstances?
A: To the extent that empathy means an ability to understand a claim from
another person’s point of view, I think it can help a judge to appreciate
the arguments on all sides of a case and to ensure that the litigants’
claims have been fully heard. However, to the extent that empathy causes a
judge to be biased or prejudiced or to
identify with a particular litigant or outcome, it is inappropriate and must
have no role in
judicial determinations of what the Constitution and the laws mean. |
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Nomination of Elena Kagan
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2010-05-10 - Obama Nomination of Elena Kagan |
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(TPC - TP - VD
- VE - VU - fin) |
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But while Elena had
a brilliant career in academia, her passion for the law is anything but
academic. , “behind law there are stories -- stories of people’s lives as
shaped by the law, stories of people’s lives as might be changed by the
law…” That understanding of law, not as an intellectual exercise or words on
a page, but as it affects the lives of ordinary people, has animated every
step of Elena’s career |
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2010-05-07
- Jeff Sessions - Americans look for Supreme Court
(- sort-d) |
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Americans look for Supreme Court to restrain federal power, not expand it
When the president nominated Sonia Sotomayor to the court last
May, he said he wanted a justice who would decide cases based on her sense
of empathy. But the empathy standard was soon rejected by the American
people for what it was: license for unaccountable, lifetime-appointed judges
to impose their political and social preferences from the bench. Despite
widespread repudiation of the empathy standard -- including an explicit
rejection from Sotomayor -- the president has not retreated from this view.
Instead, he has searched for new ways to describe the same flawed idea.
President Obama said recently that his court nominee must have
"a keen understanding of how the law affects the daily lives of the American
people." This is nothing more than another thinly veiled attempt to
justify judicial activism. |
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2010-05-11 - Sen. Jon Kyl Interview
(- sort-d) towards end
section |
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Fox - Greta Susteren
- Supreme
Battle Looms
Obama SCOTUS pick Elena Kagan may have rough road in confirmation
Now, she has said some things in connection with her clerkship with Justice
Thurgood Marshall on the Court that could lead one to believe that she has a
standard somewhat similar to the Justice Sotomayor language about empathy
for the downtrodden and the disadvantaged and that a Justice's job is to try
to protect them. That we will want to inquire about because, obviously, you
want justice for all, and that may or may not mean protecting someone who is
disadvantaged. |
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2010-05-11
- Sen. Jeff Sessions Interview (-
sort-d) |
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Fox - Greta Susteren
S -
Supreme Battle Looms
There is afoot a philosophy of judging that I think is dangerous to the
constitution. It suggests that a judge can consider evolving circumstances,
things outside the constitution to redefine it's meaning.
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2010-05-10 - Sen. Barasso - Ready to Question Kagan
(- sort-d) |
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Fox -
Republican senator on concerns with Supreme Court
empathy found at
1:03
… that the feeling is where which he just brought up those what
President Obama said in the past about. Judges needing to have empathy
. When they look at the
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2010-05-14 -
Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy talks about
Empathy |
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Q: Can Empathy be
perfectly excised from the Judiciary?
A: Anthony - No,... If lack of empathy means to close your eyes to the
consequences of the laws decree, that's just silly. We supervise the
criminal system. Our sentences are 8 times longer than sentences in England
and Western Europe. Winston Churchill said your society will be judged
by how you treat the least deserving of your citizens. Of course empathy has
a role.... You certainly formulate principles without being unaware of where
those principles will take you and what their consequences will be in human
terms... If cost is a way to activate human compassion, I'll take it.....
Q: One last empathy question if I may, does it ever worry
you that empathy, while it's a necessary component of jurisprudence, could
swing to far to the other side?
A: Of course, I tried to indicate, if I feel so sad about this I'm
going to change the law, no, the law has to have a stability... but as I
tried to indicate, maybe not to well, we have to be aware of the
consequences of our legal principles... |
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2010-05-16 - Sessions - Kagan Road to the High Court
(TPC - TP - VD
- VE - VU - fin) |
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Fox at
2:15 …
Sen. Jeff Sessions on Supreme Court nominee's path to confirmation
And so we have within the law schools. Some activists philosophies that
are out there that suggest judges allow their empathy as President
Obama said. |
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2010-05-16
- Mitch McConnell - Kagan
(TPC - TP - VD - VE - VU
- fin) |
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http://www.c-spanarchives.org/program/293544-1&start=1233
The administration has nominated one of its own to a lifetime position on
the country's highest court. We need to be convinced that Ms. Kagan is
committed to the principle that the first amendment is not, as she put it,
just some ``unfortunate,'' impediment to the government's power to regulate.
It applies to groups for whom Ms. Kagan and the administration might not
have empathy. And it applies to speech
they might not like. |
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2010-06-15 - Chuck Grassley
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(TPC
- TP - VD - VE - VU - fin) |
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Moreover, President Obama's
standard for picking judicial nominees is one that places a premium on a judge's
empathy for certain individuals or
groups rather than on an even-handed reading of the law...
Thus, it is safe to assume that the
President was true to his promise and picked someone who embodied his
empathy
standard. |
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2010-06-21
- Jeff Sessions |
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(TPC
- TP - VD - VE - VU - fin)
http://www.c-spanvideo.org/program/294160-1&start=9750 |
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ONE'S -- THE DEPTH
AND BREADTH OF ONE'S EMPATHY." THE CRITICAL
AGREEMENT IS SUPPLIED... 2:42 |
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2010-06-23 -
Sherrod Brown - try empathy |
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(TPC
- TP - VD - VE - VU - fin) *
http://www.c-spanarchives.org/program/294208-1&start=2404 |
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I wonder sometimes if
my colleagues on the other side of the aisle who are voting no every time we
try to bring this up, if they know anybody who lost a job, if they know
anybody who lost insurance, if they know anybody who lost a home. I plead
with them, I ask them, the people who have voted no, to try some empathy.
Try to imagine you are a father or a mother and you have lost a job, lost
your insurance. You have a sick child. You are borrowing money. You are
trying every week to find a job, and you are three payments behind on your
home. You have to sit down at dinner one night--a pretty inadequate dinner
because you are stretching every cent you have--and you have to explain to
your son and daughter, 10- and 12-year-olds, that they will have to move out
of their room, out of the house. |
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2010-06-24 -
Orrin Hatch |
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(TPC
- TP - VD - VE - VU - fin)
http://www.c-spanarchives.org/program/294227-1&start=3884
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That sounds a lot
like President Obama, who said as a Senator that judges decide cases based
on their own deepest values, core concerns, the depth and breadth of their
empathy, and what is in their heart. If that is too results oriented, Ms.
Kagan wrote, so be it.
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Kagan Hearings
-
Day 1 2010-07-01
-
Day 2 2010-07-29
-
Day 3 2010-07-30
-
Day 4 2010-07-01
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.
JUSTICE MARSHALL'S PIONEERING WORK ON CIVIL RIGHTS AS AN EXAMPLE OF
EMPATHY, A WORD WHICH UNFORTUNATELY HAS TAKEN A
NEGATIVE CONNOTATION BY SOME... |
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...
DAUGHTER. SHE HAS ALREADY LOST HER HOME. I KNOW EMPATHY
IS IN SHORT SUPPLY IN THIS WORLD... |
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2010-07-12 -
Richard J. 'Dick' Durbin - U.S. Senator, D IL
U.S. Senate |
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..
PIONEERING WORK ON CIVIL RIGHTS AS AN EXAMPLE OF EMPATHY,
A WORD WHICH UNFORTUNATELY HAS TAKEN... |
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... --
AND CAN'T BE CORRUPTED BY FRIENDSHIP, EMPATHY OR
BIAS IN FAVOR OF THE PERSON WHO... |
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...
PRESIDENT OBAMA HAS SAID HE WANTS JUDGES WITH EMPATHY.
I DON'T KNOW WHAT EMPATHY IS. I DO NOT -- THAT IS
NOT A LEGAL... |
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...
WORKS AND THE DEPTH AND BREADTH OF ONE'S EMPATHY."
CLOSE QUOTE. THAT'S WHAT PRESIDENT...
WORKS? AND THE DEPTH AND BREADTH OF ONE'S EMPATHY?
THAT'S WHAT A JUDGE SHOULD DO? NOT... |
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.. A
JUDGE, HE WANTS TO KNOW IF THEY HAVE EMPATHY.
EMPATHY FOR WHO? WHICH PARTY DOES HE HAVE
EMPATHY FOR? HE WANTS A JUDGE WHO WILL BE... |
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2010-08-03 -
Charles E. 'Chuck' Grassley - U.S. Senator, R IA U.S. Senate |
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2010-08-03 -
Orrin Hatch - U.S. Senator, R UT U.S. Senate |
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... SAID THAT HE WOULD APPOINT JUDGES WHO HAVE
EMPATHY FOR CERTAIN GROUPS. AS PRESIDENT,...
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2010-08-03 -
James M. Inhofe - U.S. Senator, R OK U.S. Senate |
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...
SERVE AS LEGISLATORS WHO DEVELOP THEIR OWN EMPATHY
STANDARDS AND APPLY THE LAW IN A... |
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2010-08-03 -
Jeff Sessions - U.S. Senator, R AL U.S. Senate |
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..
JUDGES. THEY REJECT JUDGES WHO RELY ON THEIR EMPATHY.
AS THE PRESIDENT SAID A JUDGE MUST...
BELIEVE A JUDGE SHOULD RELY ON CASES. THEIR EMPATHY
TO DECIDE LEGAL AND JUDGES WHO SEEK... |
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2010-08-04 - Senator Sessions on Kagan Nomination |
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... JUDGES. THEY REJECT JUDGES WHO RELY ON
THEIR EMPATHY AS THE PRESIDENT SAID, THAT'S
WHAT...
JUDGES SHOULD RELY ONEOPL CASES. THEIR EMPATHY
TO DECIDE LEGALECID AND JUDGES WHO...
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..
WORKS AND THE DEPTH AND BREADth OF ONE'S EMPATHY."
THIS WAS IN A FLOOR SPEECH IN THE...
WORKS OR THE DEPTH AND BREADth OF THEIR EMPATHY OR
ONE'S DEEPEST VALUES OR CORE CONCERNS.... |
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2010-08-04 -
Edward E. 'Ted' Kaufman - U.S. Senator, D DE U.S. Senate |
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...
POINTS OUT, PRESIDENT OBAMA'S INTEREST IN EMPATHY
IN THE SUPREME COURT NOMINEES FOLLOWS...
BOSD UPON, IN PART, HOLMES' CAPACITY FOR EMPATHY.
ROWS VERY WELL SAID IT WAS EMINENTLY... |
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2010-08-05 -
Mitch McConnell Jr. - U.S. Senator, R KY U.S. Senate |
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..
WORDS, THAT SHE EMBRACES THE SO-CALLED EMPATHY
STANDARD WHEREBY JUDGES ACT ON, TO...
BE A SUPREME COURT JUSTICE. AS FOR THE EMPATHY
STANDARD, WELL, EMPATHY MAY BE A... |
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2010-08-05 -
Pat Roberts - U.S. Senator, R KS U.S. Senate |
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...
AND, FOUR, THE DEPTH AND BREADTH OF ONE'S EMPATHY. " WELL, MADAM PRESIDENT,
I RESPECTFULLY...
JUDGMENTS OR COMPLY WITH ONE'S PERSONAL EMPATHY, HOW THEY THINK THE WORLD
REALLY... |
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2011
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2011-05-19 - Orrin Hatch on Goodwin Liu |
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President Obama
takes the opposite view. When he was a Senator and opposed the nomination of
Chief Justice John Roberts, one of the greatest appellate lawyers in the
history of the country--he said that judges decide cases based on their
deepest values and core concerns, their perspective on how the world works,
their empathy, and what is in their
heart
I, for one, did not take an oath to support and defend a judge's empathy
or perspective on how the world works, whether that judge is liberal or
conservative. |
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2011-10-03
- Jeff Sessions |
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... THEIR ACTIVIST
WHEN IT SUITS THEM. AND IT IS A STRENGTH BOTH FOR WHAT IS EMPATHY? JUDGES
MUST ENFORCE, LAWS PASSED PEOPLE, NONLAWYERS GET CASES TURN...
... PART OF THE HAS THE RIGHT TO ALLOW THE LAWS IN FRANCE. WE WHO DO YOU
HAVE EMPATHY FOR? STATES. RIGHT. FINALLY, I WOULD NOTE -- WELL, SCALIA APTLY
DESCRIBED...
... A BETTER REALLY -- THIS INTERNATIONAL LAW HISTORIC OATH THAT JUDGES
TAKE. EMPATHY AND THEIR FEELINGS TO WE DIDN'T ADOPT LAWS IN ITALY OR
MAINTAIN A JUDICIARY...
... WORDS. EVER ENFORCED, WHICH THEY'RE FEDERAL JUDGES ARE JUST ALLOW THEIR
EMPATHY TO HELP THEM BY THE PEOPLE OF THE UNITED IMPORT. EXPERIENCE WHERE
ONE... |
Others |
( ) |
2009-08-12 -
Tribute to Phyllis Schlafly
(TPC
- TP - VD - VE - VU - fin) |
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A conservative says empathy is code word for spreading the wealth. |
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2009-10-02 - Justice Sotomayor and Supreme Court (75 of 90)
( video
@ c-span)
(TPC - TP - VD - VE - VU) |
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- Lyle Denniston -
from Scotusblog
- Michael Gerhard -
- Dahlia Lithwick - rise and fall of Judicial empathy.
- Charter Phillips -
Dahlia and some others say the debate over empathy is over and will not be
brought up again. She sees it as a failure. |
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2006-01-06 -
Samuel Alito's Decisions Guided By Ethnicity, Empathy
(TPC - TP - VD - VE - VU - fin) |
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When
a case comes before me involving, let's say, someone who is an immigrant,
and we an awful lot of immigration cases and naturalization cases, I can't
help but think of my own ancestors, because it wasn't that long ago when
they were in that position.... When I look at those cases I have to say to
myself, and I do say to myself, this could be your grandfather, this could
be your grandmother. they were not citizens at one time.... When I get a
case about discrimination, I have to think about people in my own family who
suffered discrimination because of their ethnic background or religion, or
because of gender, and I do take that into account. |
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1991-07-01 -
GOP Now and Then: George HW Bush Touted Clarence Thomas' "Great Empathy"
(TPC - TP - VD - VE - VU - fin) |
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Wolff Blitzer Notes
video clip
"I have followed this man's career for some time... He is a delightful and
warm, intelligent person who has great empathy and a wonderful sense of
humor." President George H.W. Bus |
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1991-10-??- Clarence Thomas - Hearings
(TPC - TP - VD - VE - VU - fin) |
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Clarence Thomas On Walking In Another's Shoes (VIDEO)
I believe, Senator, that I can
make a contribution, that I can bring something different to the Court, that
I can walk in the shoes of the people who are
affected by what the Court does.
You know, on my current court I have occasion to look out the window that
faces C Street, and there are converted buses that bring in the criminal
defendants to our criminal justice system, bus load after bus load. And you
look out and you say to yourself, and I say to myself almost every day, 'But
for the grace of God there go I.
So you feel that you have
the same fate, or could have, as those individuals. So I can walk in
their shoes and I could bring something
different to the Court. And I think it is a tremendous responsibility and
it's a humbling responsibility and it's one that if confirmed, I will carry
out to the best of may abilities.
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Committee Questionnaire
All District/Circuit Court nominees are now
asked about the role that empathy plays in their world view and in their court
decisions. See the side bar for their answers to this question.
(TPC - TP - VD - VE - VU - SB - CK - fin)
-
TPC - Text Page Created
-
TP - Text to Page
-
VD - Video Downloaded
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VE - Video Edited
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VU - Video Uploaded
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SB - Side Bar
-
CK - Check
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FIN - finished
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