Sotomayor's objectivity is key question for GOP
Key Republican looking at if nominee lets personal views color decisions
Video |
Will Sotomayor attacks ease? May 31: As the confirmation process gets underway, the White House is pushing back against criticism of Judge Sotomayor's 2001 comments regarding her judicial perspective. NBC’s John Yang reports. Nightly News |
Video |
GOP's split personality on Sotomayor June 4: While Republican senators try to play nice with Judge Sonia Sotomayor, conservative pundits are still calling her names. The Washington Post’s Chris Cillizza talks about the hypocrisy unraveling within the Republican Party. Countdown |
Video |
Sotomayor questionnaire released June 4: The Senate Judiciary Committee has released Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor's 173 page judicial questionnaire detailing her speeches, cases and rulings. NBC's Kelly O'Donnell reports. MSNBC |
Video: White House |
Obama to unveil plan for Afghanistan Nov. 30: Rachel Maddow is joined by HDNet’s Dan Rather to discuss early reports on President Obama’s plan for Afghanistan and the conditions Rather found on his recent trip there. |
Tweets from inside the Beltway |
|
Click here for more tweets from NBC's D.C. bureau. |
Interactive |
White House visitor logs |
Public records Help figure out who has been visiting the White House during the first eight months of the Obama administration. |
WASHINGTON - The senator leading the GOP's review of Sonia Sotomayor said the central question in her Supreme Court nomination should be whether she allows personal views to color her decisions.
In the Republican Party's weekly radio and Internet address Saturday, Sen. Jeff Sessions didn't say whether he thinks Sotomayor crosses that line. But he raised questions that reflect a growing chorus of GOP criticism that the federal appeals court judge sees her role as something more than an impartial umpire.
Republicans have seized on speeches in which Sotomayor said she hoped a wise woman or Latina "with the richness of her experiences" would make better, more compassionate decisions in court than a white man.
While he didn't specifically mention those remarks, Sessions asked "if a judge is allowed to let his or her feelings for one party in the case sway his decision, hasn't that judge then demonstrated a bias against the other party?"
"Although we sometimes take our heritage of neutral and independent judiciary for granted, the truth is, this great tradition is under attack," he said.
Sessions said Americans should follow the confirmation process closely and ask what kind of judge they would want in court.
"Do I want a judge that allows his or her social, political or religious views to impact the outcome, or do I want a judge that objectively applies the law to the facts?" he said. "That is the central question around which this entire nomination process will revolve."
Sotomayor was raised in a working-class family in the Bronx and would be the first Hispanic justice. She told senators in private meetings this past week that while her background shapes who she is, she believes judges should follow the law above all.
President Barack Obama has said she misspoke when she made her "wise Latina" remarks and probably would phrase them differently today.
Some Republicans have labeled her a racist for the comments. Sessions has called such criticism inappropriate and said Sotomayor has an impressive life story and resume. But he is trying to slow down Democrats' plans for a summertime confirmation, saying Republicans need more time to review her record.
More on Sonia Sotomayor | Jeff Sessions
- Discuss Story On Newsvine
-
Rate Story:
View popularLowHigh - Instant Message
MORE FROM THE WHITE HOUSE |
| Add The White House headlines to your news reader: |
Sponsored links
Resource guide






