My Questions For Sotomayor — Will Republicans Dare Ask Them?

By Steve Sailer

07/09/2009

The Senate Judiciary Committee hearings on Obama’s Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor are currently scheduled to begin this Monday, July 13.

The Democrats want to rush Sotomayor through with merely some celebrations of her Hispanicness, and no tough questioning. For example, these will be the first Supreme Court nominee hearings in decades that National Public Radio, that adjunct of the Obama Administration, won’t broadcast live.

Some Republican Senators have been talking about trying to postpone the hearings until September, claiming that they need more time to review her complex record.

In reality, Sotomayor’s record isn’t all that complicated. It consists of two parts.

Of course, the problem with being on the Court of Appeals (like Sotomayor at present) is that if you indulge your political biases too much, you'll get embarrassingly overruled by the Supreme Court (as Sotomayor got overturned on the Ricci v. DeStefano case).

Once you are on the Supreme Court, however, you are (effectively) above the law. So past opinions you've written are of less predictive value about how you will rule when unfettered than your off-hours volunteering.

And this is the second part of Sotomayor’s record:

Racial preferences have been very, very good to Sonia Sotomayor. And it would be only natural for her to be very, very good to preferences when she’s on the Supreme Court.

Obviously, Sotomayor is going to be approved. The Democrats have 60 Senators and she only needs 50.

And many Republican Senators would no doubt like to fold quietly, what with, as we are constantly told in the media, Hispanics accounting for nine percent of the vote according to exit polls in 2008. (Actually, the Hispanic share of the vote in 2008 turned out to be, according to the gold standard Census Bureau survey of 50,000 households, only 7.4 percent, but who cares about reality?)

The tactical issue for the Republicans, however, is whether they are going to forfeit all the political mileage they could get out of the Ricci victory — in which the Supreme Court brusquely junked Sotomayor’s decision upholding corrupt racial discrimination against white firemen in New Haven.

The Main Stream Media, of course, has every intention of shoving Ricci far down the Memory Hole. The only way to remind the public of what is at stake is to make Ricci the central focus of the Sotomayor hearings.

The strategic issues for Republicans are manifold:

Allow me to offer some advice and questions for the Senators.

First, go easy on the excruciatingly boring questions about judicial philosophy.

The Obama Administration will no doubt have provided Judge Sotomayor with test-marketed talking points. Anyway, the public doesn’t much care about judicial philosophy in the abstract. It cares about philosophies when they lead to injustices done to actual people, such as what Sotomayor authorized be done to Ricci and his colleagues.

Second, you don’t have to ask Sotomayor the toughest questions about the Ricci case. The media is all prepared to raise a stink about evil white male Senators being unchivalrous and insensitive being toward a Latina. But, fortunately, there’s a sleazy white male stand-in for Sotomayor.

Make Ricci v. DeStefano humanly vivid to the public by calling as witnesses both parties: the victim-turned-winner, fireman Frank Ricci, and the victimizer-turned-loser, New Haven Mayor John DeStefano, Jr.

Then let the eight-term politician (who happened to be a Democrat) have it with both barrels for his slimy acts of racial discrimination against Ricci.

As the basis for your questioning use Justice Samuel Alito’s blistering concurring opinion in Ricci, which vividly spells out how the mayor badgered the Civil Service Board into cheating Ricci.

An argument among three Italian-American guys — Ricci, DeStefano, and Alito — is less easy for the media to spin along its usual ethnic/gender "Who? Whom?" lines. So, for once, people will be allowed to think simply about principles of justice.

It won’t be hard to show that, in practice, "diversity" is just another word for DeStefano’s Boss Tweed-type politics.

Here are my questions to ask the "wise Latina" — after you've worked out on DeStefano.

Obviously, she'll bob and weave around most of them, refusing to answer on the usual specious grounds employed by past nominees. But these questions would be worth asking for their own rhetorical sake:

[Steve Sailer is movie critic for The American Conservative. His website www.iSteve.blogspot.com features his daily blog. His new book, AMERICA’s HALF-BLOOD PRINCE: BARACK OBAMA’s "STORY OF RACE AND INHERITANCE", is available here.]

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