Senate Debate on Empathy
=====================================
McConnell, Mitch [R-KY]
Begin2009-06-2311:25:11End11:35:22Length00:10:11
2009-06-23
11:25:11End11:35:22Length00:10:11
McConnell,
Mitch [R-KY]
http://74.125.95.132/custom?q=cache:1Wa9FrcG93wJ:www.c-spanarchives.org/congress/%3Fq%3Dnode/77531%26id%3D9002311+mcconnell+empathy&cd=1&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=us
Mr. McCONNELL. Madam President, this morning I would like to turn my
attention to the nomination of Judge Sonia Sotomayor to the Supreme Court and
more specifically to the so-called
empathy
standard that President Obama employed in selecting her for the highest Court in
the land.
The President has said repeatedly that his criterion for Federal judges is their
ability to empathize with specific groups. He said it as a Senator, as a
candidate for President, and again as President. I think we can take the
President at his word about wanting a judge who exhibits this trait on the
bench. Based on a review of Judge Sotomayor's record, it is becoming clear to
many that this is a trait he has found in this particular nominee.
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.
A review of Judge Sotomayor's writings and rulings illustrates the point. Judge
Sotomayor's 2002 article in the Berkeley La Raza Law Journal has received a good
deal of attention already for her troubling assertion that her gender and
ethnicity would enable her to reach a better result than a man of different
ethnicity. Her advocates say her assertion was inartful, that it was taken out
of context. We have since learned, however, that she has repeatedly made this or
similar assertions.
Other comments Judge Sotomayor made in the same Law Review article underscore
rather than alleviate concerns with this particular approach to judging. She
questioned the principle that judges should be neutral, and she said the
principle of impartiality is a [Page: S6908]
mere aspiration that she is skeptical judges can achieve in all or even in most
cases--or even in most cases. I find it extremely troubling that Judge Sotomayor
would question whether judges have
the capacity to be neutral ``even in most cases.''
There is more. A few years after the publication of this particular Law Review
article, Judge Sotomayor said the ``Court of Appeals is where policy is made.''
Some might excuse this comment as an off-the-cuff remark. Yet it is also
arguable that it reflects a deeply held view about the role of a judge--a view I
believe most Americans would find very worrisome.
I would like to talk today about one of Judge Sotomayor's cases that the Supreme
Court is currently reviewing. In looking at how she handled it, I am concerned
that some of her own personal preferences and beliefs about policy may have
influenced her decision.
For more than a decade, Judge Sotomayor was a leader in the Puerto Rican Legal
Defense and Education Fund. In this capacity, she was an advocate for many
causes, such as eliminating the death penalty. She was responsible for
monitoring all litigation the group filed and was described as an ardent
supporter of its legal efforts. It has been reported that her involvement in
these projects stood out and that she frequently met with the legal staff to
review the status of cases.
One of the group's most important projects was filing lawsuits against the city
of New York based on its use of civil service exams. Judge Sotomayor, in fact,
has been credited with helping develop the group's policy of challenging those
exams.
In one of these cases, the group sued the New York City Police Department on the
grounds that its test for promotion discriminated against certain groups. The
suit alleged that too many Caucasian officers were doing well on the exam and
not enough Hispanic and African-American officers were performing as well. The
city settled a lawsuit by promoting some African Americans and Hispanics who had
not passed the test, while passing over some White officers who had.
Some of these White officers turned around and sued the city. They alleged that
even though they performed well on the exam, the city discriminated against them
based on race under the settlement agreement and refused to promote them because
of quotas. Their case reached the Supreme Court with the High Court splitting 4
to 4, which allowed the settlement to stand.
More recently, another group of public safety officers made a similar claim. A
group of mostly White New Haven, CT, firefighters performed well on a
standardized test which denied promotions for lieutenant and for captain.
Other racial and ethnic groups passed the test, too, but their scores were not
as high as this group of mostly White firefighters. So under this standardized
test, individuals from these other groups would not have been promoted. To avoid
this result, the city threw out the test and announced that no one who took it
would be eligible for promotion, regardless of how well they performed. The
firefighters who scored highly sued the city under Federal law on the grounds of
employment discrimination.
The trial court ruled against them on summary judgment. When their case reached
the Second Circuit, Judge Sotomayor sat on the panel that decided it.
It was, and is, a major case. As I mentioned, the Supreme Court has taken that
case, and its decision is expected soon. The Second Circuit recognized it was a
major case too. Amicus briefs were submitted. The court allotted extra time for
oral argument. But unlike the trial judge who rendered a 48-page opinion, Judge
Sotomayor's panel dismissed the firefighters' appeal in just a few sentences. So
not only did Judge Sotomayor's panel dismiss the firefighters' claims, thereby
depriving them of
a trial on the merits, it didn't even explain why they shouldn't have their day
in court on their very significant claims.
I don't believe a judge should rule based on
empathy,
personal preferences, or political beliefs, but if any case cried out for
empathy--if
any case cried out for
empathy--it
would be this one. The plaintiff in that case, Frank Ricci, has dyslexia. As a
result, he had to study extra hard for the test--up to 13 hours each day. To do
so, he had to give up his second job, while at the same time spending $1,000 to
buy textbooks and to pay someone to record those textbooks on tape so he could
overcome
his disability. His hard work paid off. Of 77 applicants for 8 slots, he had the
sixth best score. But despite his hard work and high performance, the city
deprived him of a promotion he had clearly earned.
Is this what the President means by ``empathy''--where
he says he wants judges to empathize with certain groups but, implicitly, not
with others? If so, what if you are not in one of those groups? What if you are
Frank Ricci?
This is not a partisan issue. It is not just conservatives or Republicans who
have criticized Judge Sotomayor's handling of the Ricci case. Self-described
Democrats and political independents have done so as well.
President Clinton's appointee to the Second Circuit and Judge Sotomayor's
colleague, Jose Cabranes, has criticized the handling of the case. He wrote a
stinging dissent, terming the handling of the case ``perfunctory'' and saying
that the way her panel handled the case did a disservice to the weighty issues
involved.
Washington Post columnist Richard Cohen was similarly offended by the way the
matter was handled. Last month, before the President made his nomination, Mr.
Cohen concluded his piece on the subject as follows:
Ricci is not just a legal case but a man who has been deprived of the pursuit of
happiness on account of his race. Obama's Supreme Court nominee ought to be able
to look the New Haven fireman in the eye and tell him whether he has been
treated fairly or not. There's a litmus test for you.
Legal journalist Stuart Taylor, with the National Journal, has been highly
critical of how the case was handled, calling it peculiar.
Even the Obama Justice Department has weighed in. It filed a brief in the
Supreme Court arguing that Judge Sotomayor's panel was wrong to simply dismiss
the case.
So it is an admirable quality to be a zealous advocate for your clients and the
causes in which you believe. But judges are supposed to be passionate advocates
for the evenhanded reading and fair application of the law, not their own
policies and preferences. In reviewing the Ricci case, I am concerned Judge
Sotomayor may have lost sight of that.
As we consider this nomination, I will continue to examine her record to see if
personal or political views have influenced her judgment.
I yield the floor.