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Senate Debate on Empathy
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http://www.c-spanarchives.org/congress/?q=node/77531&id=9027857
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Mr. INHOFE. Mr. President, let me confess that I feel totally inadequate
standing here tonight and talking about the subject of the confirmation of Judge
Sotomayor. I am not a lawyer. I am amidst these brilliant lawyers. I listened to
Senator Hatch and Senator Sessions. They have the kind of background where they
can really get into this and look constitutionally and legally and evaluate, and
I am not in that position.
I would like to speak on this nomination for the following reasons. I want to
reaffirm my opposition to her confirmation.
I was the first Member of the Senate on the day she was nominated who announced
I would not be supporting her. I recognize, as Senator Hatch said, that she will
be confirmed. We know that.
I remember what Senator Schumer, the senior Senator from New York, said shortly
after she was first nominated. He made the statement that Republicans are going
to have to vote for her because they don't want to vote against a woman, vote
against a Hispanic. He was right. But I would suggest that after the hearing,
that statement is not nearly as true as it was before the hearings because of
some of the extreme positions she has taken.
I have to say that from a nonlawyer perspective, I look at it perhaps
differently than my colleagues who are learned scholars in the legal profession.
A lifetime appointment to the Supreme Court requires not only a respect for the
rule of law but also for the separation of powers and an acknowledgment that the
Court is not a place where policy is made. The Court is about the application of
the law and not where judges get to make the world a place they want it to be. I
saw that all throughout
the hearings I watched with a great deal of interest.
In May of 2005, Judge Sotomayor asserted that the ``court of appeals is where
policy is made.'' She also wrote in a 1996 law review article that
``change--sometimes radical change--can and does occur in a legal system that
serves a society whose social policy itself changes.''
The Constitution is absolutely clear: Policy is made in the Halls of Congress,
right here--that is what we do for a living--not in the courtroom. Legislators
write the laws. Judges interpret them. We understand that. Even those of us who
are nonlawyers remembered that all the way through school. Sotomayor is correct
that societies change, but the policies that are made to reflect these changes
are done through Members of Congress who are elected to represent the will of
the people.
Obviously, we are talking about a lifetime appointment. There is no
accountability after this point. When judges go beyond interpreting the laws and
the Constitution and legislate from the bench, they overstep their jurisdiction
and their constitutional duty. Allowing judges who are not directly elected by
the people and who serve lifelong terms to rewrite laws from the bench is
dangerous to the vitality of a representative democracy. Simply put, judicial
activism places too much power in the
hands of those who are not directly accountable to the people. That is what we
are talking about, a lifetime appointment.
Judge Sotomayor has overcome significant adversity to achieve great success, and
I agree with Senator Hatch in his comments that we admire her for her
accomplishments under adverse conditions. However, while her experiences as a
Latina woman have shaped who she is as a person, they should not be used, as she
affirms, to affect her judicial impartiality and significantly influence how she
interprets the law and the Constitution.
In 2001, Judge Sotomayor gave a speech at the University of California, Berkeley
in which she stated:
I would hope that a wise Latina woman with the richness of her experiences would
more often than not reach a better conclusion than a white male who hasn't lived
that life.
She has on several occasions conveyed the same idea. Between 1994 and 2003, she
delivered speeches using similar language at Seton Hall University, the Woman's
Bar Association of the State of New York, Yale University, the City University
of New York School of Law. It is not a slip of the tongue once; this is a
statement that has been reaffirmed and reaffirmed. Quite frankly, that was the
reason for [Page: S8752]
my opposition back in 1998 when she was nominated to
be on the circuit court of appeals. The statements she made show a very biased
opinion that someone who is not a lawyer sees and thinks should disqualify
someone for the appointment.
She further stated in 1994, in a presentation in Puerto Rico, that:
Justice O'Connor has often been cited as saying that ``a wise old man and a wise
old woman reach the same conclusion'' in deciding cases ..... [however] I am
also not sure that I agree with that statement ..... I would hope that a wise
woman with the richness of her experience would, more often than not, reach a
better conclusion.
That is pretty
emphatic. There is no other way you can interpret that. She
thinks that a woman with her experience can make a better conclusion than a
White male. I consider that racist. Sotomayor not only suggests the possibility
of judicial impartiality but also that gender and ethnicity should influence a
judge's decision.
Furthermore, President Obama said that
in choosing the next Supreme Court nominee, he would use an
empathy
standard. While judges may and should be empathetic people, they must be
impartial judges first. If empathy was a guiding standard, with whom
should a judge empathize? Should more empathy be shown to one race, one
gender, one religion, one lifestyle? True justice does not see race, gender, or
creed. We are all equal in the eyes of the law, and the law must be applied
equally.
That is why she wears a blindfold. It is supposed to be blind justice.
Rather than looking to factors beyond the law, judges must solely examine the
facts of the case and the law itself. Their ability to equally apply justice
under the law is the standard by which we should select judges. So we have two
different standards right now with which I disagree. One is that judges should
make policy and, secondly, that gender and ethnicity should influence decisions.
Another belief on which Judge Sotomayor and I fundamentally disagree is that
American judges should consider foreign law when deciding cases. This probably
concerns me more than any of the rest of them--the fact that we have this
obsession in these Halls, in this Senate, that nothing is good unless it somehow
comes from the United Nations or is coming from some multinational origin.
In 2007, in the forward to a book--and I read this myself--titled, ``The
International Judge,'' Sotomayor wrote:
[T]he question of how much we have to learn from foreign law and the
international community when interpreting our Constitution is not the only one
worth posing.
This past spring, Judge Sotomayor gave an alarming speech at the ACLU which
addressed this topic. She said:
[T]o suggest to anyone that you can outlaw the use of foreign or international
law is a sentiment that is based on a fundamental misunderstanding, what you
would be asking American judges to do is to close their minds to good ideas.
.....
No, Judge Sotomayor, it is sovereignty that we are talking about. Statements
like these make it clear that President Obama has nominated a judge to our
highest Court who believes our courts should rely on foreign decisions when
interpreting our Constitution. And I have to say, whatever happened to
sovereignty? This obsession with multinationalism has to come to an end. I
believe America will reject this type of thought. Americans do not want the rest
of the world interpreting our laws, and neither
do I.
Finally, Mr. President, Judge Sotomayor's record on the second amendment is
constitutionally outrageous. Maybe it is because I come from Oklahoma, but that
is the thing I hear about more than anything else down there, and my own kids, I
might add.
I do not believe Judge Sotomayor can be trusted to uphold the individual freedom
to keep and bear arms if future second amendment cases come before her. I have
received no assurances from her past decisions or public testimony that she will
be willing to fairly consider the question of whether the second amendment is a
fundamental right and thus restricts State action as it relates to the second
amendment. It is incomprehensible to me that our Founding Fathers could have
intended the right to
keep and bear arms as nonbinding upon the States and instead leave the right to
be hollowed out by State and local laws and regulations. History and common
sense do not support this.
I have to tell you, this has been more of a concern in my State of Oklahoma than
anything else. I cannot confirm a nominee who believes the second amendment is
something other than a fundamental right and instead treats it as a second class
amendment to the Constitution. I do not know what a second class amendment to
the Constitution is. This is not in line with my beliefs and not in line with
the beliefs of the majority of Americans--certainly from my State of Oklahoma.
Today, I am persuaded the confirmation hearings served only to highlight many of
my concerns. The numerous inconsistencies of her testimony with her record have
persuaded not only me but the American people that Judge Sotomayor is not
qualified to serve as a Justice on the highest Court, the U.S. Supreme Court. I
say that because a recent Zogby Poll--and as several other polls have also
consistently confirmed--following the confirmation hearings revealed that only
49 percent of Americans support
Judge Sotomayor's confirmation, with an equal number opposing it. This is
significant because she played the race card all the way through this thing and
was talking about the Hispanic effect. But the same poll showed that among
Hispanic voters, only 47 percent say they are in favor of her confirmation.
In other words, there are fewer people in the Hispanic community who are
favoring her confirmation than in the non-Hispanic. These numbers are evidence
of the fact that Judge Sotomayor has not gained the approval of the American
people during her confirmation hearings, and she certainly has not gained mine.
I was the first Member of the Senate to publicly announce my opposition to Judge
Sotomayor after her nomination to the Supreme Court on May 26. On that date, I
stated I could not confirm her. In addition to all the above, there is another
reason. While I do not often agree with Vice President Biden, I do agree with
his statement that once you oppose a Federal court nominee, you cannot support
that nominee for a higher court because the bar is higher. I think that is very
significant
to point out here because there are several who are still serving today, as I
am, who opposed her to the circuit court in 1998. I think Vice President Biden
is correct. As the standard goes up, once you get to the U.S. Supreme Court,
that is the end. So that should be the very highest standard. So it is
unconceivable that anyone who would have opposed her in 1998 could turn around
and support her now.
I have to say there are a lot of reasons I have pointed out. One is judges
making policy. I object to that; I find that offensive. Gender and ethnicity
should be a consideration; that is wrong. The international thing, that we have
to go to the international community to see that we are doing the right thing in
interpreting our Constitution; that is a sovereignty issue. The second
amendment, that is a concern.
So even though Judge Sotomayor will be confirmed, it will be without my vote. I
would have to say for the sake of my 20 kids and grandkids that I will oppose
Judge Sotomayor's nomination to the U.S. Supreme Court.
Mr. President, I yield the floor and suggest the absence of a quorum.