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First Read is an analysis of the day's political news, from the NBC News political unit. First Read is updated throughout the day, so check back often.

Chuck Todd, NBC Political Director

Mark Murray, NBC Deputy Political Director

Domenico Montanaro, NBC News Political Reporter



Conservatives up Judiciary pressure

Posted: Friday, June 05, 2009 12:23 PM by Domenico Montanaro
Filed Under: ,

From NBC's Domenico Montanaro
Want a behind-the-scenes example of the kind of criticism conservatives are pushing with members of Congress about Sonia Sotomayor?

Conservative judicial activist Wendy Long, a former clerk to U.S. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, sent a letter to the members of the Senate Judiciary Committee this morning calling into question Sotomayor's answers to her judicial questionnaire.

Longs writes that it "raises more questions than it answers. It is already clear that she has omitted controversial material from her past in which she asserts that '[c]apital punishment is associated with evident racism in our society' and advocates public opposition to restoring the death penalty in New York state."

She asserts the White House is trying "to rush the Senate into an unprepared confirmation hearing that overlooks critical materials" and "has had a recurring problem in failing adequately to vet nominees. Yet the Obama Administration yesterday touted Sotomayor’s questionnaire as having been returned to the Senate more quickly than those for the nominations of Chief Justice Roberts and Justice Alito. The submission of a memo that includes details such as unpaid dental bills, yet omits important issues such as activism concerning capital punishment makes one wonder whether this is simply another vetting failure or something more deliberate." 

She wants the senators to return the questionnaire to Sotomayor and the White House "marked 'Return to Sender,' with instructions that it is not to be redelivered to the Senate without complete answers and all required documents."

And she throws this out: "It is worth noting that Justice Souter, whose seat on the Supreme Court Judge Sotomayor has been nominated to fill, has never held that the death penalty is unconstitutional per se." She adds that it's clear Sotomayor is "a hard-left liberal judicial activist, much more akin philosophically to Justices William Brennan and Thurgood Marshall, than to Justice Souter, whom she would replace."

Honorable Patrick Leahy                                  Honorable Richard J. Durbin
Honorable Jeff Sessions                                    Honorable Lindsey Graham
Honorable Herb Kohl                                       Honorable Benjamin L. Cardin
Honorable Orrin G. Hatch                                Honorable John Cornyn
Honorable Dianne Feinstein                              Honorable Sheldon Whitehouse
Honorable Russell D. Feingold                         Honorable Tom Coburn
Honorable Charles E. Grassley                         Honorable Ron Wyden
Honorable Charles E. Schumer                         Honorable Amy Klobuchar
Honorable Jon Kyl                                           Honorable Edward E. Kaufman
Honorable Arlen Specter                                             

United States Senate
Washington, D.C.  20510

June 5, 2009
Re:       Judge Sonia Sotomayor’s Incomplete Senate Questionnaire

Dear Senators:

            A first read through Judge Sonia Sotomayor’s U.S. Senate questionnaire for her Supreme Court nomination raises more questions than it answers.  It is already clear that she has omitted controversial material from her past in which she asserts that “[c]apital punishment is associated with evident racism in our society” and advocates public opposition to restoring the death penalty in New York state.

            Whatever the immediate cause of this glaring omission, the ultimate blame should be placed squarely at the feet of the White House and its attempt to rush the Senate into an unprepared confirmation hearing that overlooks critical materials. The White House has had a recurring problem in failing adequately to vet nominees. Yet the Obama Administration yesterday touted Sotomayor’s questionnaire as having been returned to the Senate more quickly than those for the nominations of Chief Justice Roberts and Justice Alito.

            The submission of a memo that includes details such as unpaid dental bills, yet omits important issues such as activism concerning capital punishment makes one wonder whether this is simply another vetting failure or something more deliberate.  In any case, it is clear that the Sotomayor Senate questionnaire is incomplete and unreliable.  It must be sent back to her and to the White House, marked “Return to Sender,” with instructions that it is not to be redelivered to the Senate without complete answers and all required documents.

            The questionnaire submitted yesterday fails to disclose and produce at least one very significant document required under the terms of Question 12(b), which requires Judge Sotomayor to “[s]upply four (4) copies of any reports, memoranda, or policy statements you prepared or contributed to the preparation of on behalf of any bar association, committee, conference, or organization of which you were or are a member or in which you have participated.”

            Judge Sotomayor discloses elsewhere in the memo that from 1980 to 1992 she was a member of the Puerto Rican Legal Defense & Education Fund (PRLDEF), serving in a number of high-ranking positions for the organization.  Despite more than a decade of work for the organization, however, she has failed to disclose the sort of documents requested by the questionnaire – documents that would give the Senate and the American public a better picture of who Judge Sotomayor is and how she has used her career to advance certain agendas. 

            Sotomayor lists on her Senate questionnaire a PRLDEF letter to then-Governor Hugh Carey, “opposing reinstatement of the death penalty,” dated April 10, 1981.  But she fails to list, and does not supply a copy of, a significant policy “Memorandum” that she signed on behalf of the PRLDEF “Task Force on the Bill to Restore the Death Penalty in New York State,” dated March 24, 1981.

            All three members of the task force, including Sotomayor, signed the Memorandum, urging the Board of PRLDEF to “take a public position in opposition to the restoration of the Death Penalty in New York State.”

            The memo signed by Sotomayor makes a number of controversial, unsupported, and badly reasoned assertions about the death penalty, including:

·        “Capital punishment is associated with evident racism in our society.”
·        “In the review of the current literature of the past two years, no publications have been found that challenge the evidence and the rationale presented in opposition to the death penalty.”
·        “The problem of crime and violence in American society is so complex, it is unreasonable to think that capital punishment will result in preventing it or diminishing it.”
·        “Our present perspective on the meaning of our values in the Judeo-Christian tradition, and the state of humanistic thinking in the world judge capital punishment as a violation of those values.” 
·        “It is counter-productive; we inflict death on the offender to manifest our opposition to his inflicting death on another.”

            It is worth noting that Justice Souter, whose seat on the Supreme Court Judge Sotomayor has been nominated to fill, has never held that the death penalty is unconstitutional per se. Although Justice Souter has voted frequently with the liberal wing of the Court to grant the writ of habeas corpus in death penalty cases, he has evaluated such challenges on a case-by-case basis.

            The Sotomayor memorandum that she withheld from the Senate provides an important data point to flesh out the picture of her that is emerging from her other writings, speeches and judicial opinions: a hard-left liberal judicial activist, much more akin philosophically to Justices William Brennan and Thurgood Marshall, than to Justice Souter, whom she would replace.  As a minimum, the memo places her firmly in the Brennan-Marshall line of thinking on the death penalty and race.  It is certainly a significant omission from her Senate questionnaire that is clearly called for by the terms of Question 12(b).

            Moreover, Judge Sotomayor was a member of the PRLDEF for 12 years, according to the questionnaire. It is hard to believe that this is the only policy memo she signed, and the Senate questionnaire calls for even more, including reports, memoranda, and policy statements even where she did not sign or contribute to them.

                                                            Respectfully yours,
                                                            Wendy E. Long
                                                            Counsel, Judicial Confirmation Network

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Comments

I hope the GOPer losers spend all their time on the confirmation while the President, his WH team and the Dems in congress do the people's business!

We will see who has the last laugh here and I'm betting it will not be the Limbaugh legions. ;)
We will see who has the last laugh here and I'm betting it will not be the Limbaugh legions. ;)
Ed, Fw, TX

A scream Ed! same here!
Who the heck cares what that dimwitted stepford wife wendy long thinks?  Obviously being a clerk for clarence thomas has dulled her intellect.  Just a petty partisan dirty trick to tell all the repugnant one senators to return the questionaire unread so as to drag out the process.

If the dopes of nope won't get with the program of doing their job then the Democrats need to cram Sotomayor's confirmation down their throats by any means necessary.  So what if she's more Liberal than Souter, Roberts and Alito were more conservative than those they replaced.

Sotomayor will make a great SC Justice and it's time to get on with the people's business instead of playing petty partisan political games.

In Sotomayor We Trust!
Go Lakers!
Judicial CONfirmation Network is brought to you by the same wingnuts who created the Swiftboaters.  Funny how that connection never seems to get mentioned in any story.

But now they have decided that a Supreme Court Nominee must be philosophically equivalent to the Justice they are designated to replace.

A former clerk for Clarence Thomas says so.

Pathetic.  
Republicans have lost their minds . . . they're even more out of touch now than they were during the election capmpaign

Here's a hint: the VAST majority of Americans could give a rat's patootie about Sotomayor - we're fighting for our livelyhoods - and the GOP hasn't done anything since Sept. except get in the way!!!
Another great week here at First Read, the best place on the web for political discourse.  Many thanks to Mark, Domenico and others of the First read crew who post so many great articles for us to comment on.  Thanks to all the great Obama supporters for their insightful comments!

So silly how this stepford wife wendy is seeing conspiracies where none are visible.  She's just trying to make this stupid stuff up to fire up the base of the clueless lemmings who follow whatever Lush Limburger tells them to.

"does anyone remember the last time Obama went to Germany..didn't the housing and banking markets collapse?" BJ, CA

Hey BJ - Obviously you're getting your clueless whining points straight from fox and freaks.  Also it's obvious you were asleep when your teachers taught cause and effect.  The cause of those collapses came from the repugnant ones deregulating banking while refusing to do proper oversight and racking up way too much national debt.

In Obama & Sotomayor We Trust!
Go Lakers!

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See for yourself
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How did she get a hold of Sotomayor's responses?  I would find out how she got them and who gave them to her.  No one should be commenting on them until the Senate hearings start.  Besides, these aren't radical ideas.  I happen to think that these views are a little harsh.  I would hope that the Senators who are on the committee ask some of the questions that this woman has.  That is the time to do it.
This is really no big deal. Both Democrats and Republicans will challenge the opponent's selections, and certain activist groups will make sure their causes are in the spotlight.

Sotomayor will be confirmed. Conservative won't be happy with her overindulgence of bringing race to the bench, but they will settle for the fact that she may be socially conservative in many ways, including her position on abortion.
I hope the GOPer losers spend all their time on the confirmation while the President, his WH team and the Dems in congress do the people's business!

Ed. Fw. TX

Congress is doing something? What? I sent my Representitive and Senators an e-mail asking them to not bailout Chrysler or GM. Guess what? None of them voted against the car makers bailout. Know why? There was no vote!!

Obama is now going to have yet another "Czar", a "Pay Czar". That right, the "Pay Czar" will make sure no executive in any company bailout by the government makes an "excessive" amount of money. Now, I'd write my congreess people again to give them my input on 1) Should anyone really be doing this and 2) Just what should those limits be if they do do this, but, Congress isn't debating or voting on this either!!

So do we have a dictator now with Obama? I don't think that's too strong of a thing to call him. Congress doesn't seem to much care what he does. So how long before the "Pay Czar" starts looking not only at companies that are bailed out by the government, to companies with contracts with the government? Now that would include a large amount of companies in the US. I better write my congress people and ask what they think.
Sotomayor is a "slam dunk" .  It's all much ado about nothing that the G NO P can't stop. The hearings won't be over before late August. Scalia might be dead by then. It's the next appointment to SCOTUS that is going to make all the difference. Ginsberg could resign at any moment. As for the conservatives, they really only care about preserving what they have been able to steal from the people over all these years. They do it by lying to you evry time they speak. They are the party of:
                   Re-peat the lie to the public-ans
Some empathy on Sotomayor's opart

'...Later, as one of 39 signatories, Sotomayor helped pen another letter to The Daily Princetonian responding to the ransacking of the dorm room of two gay students by a group of eight colleagues...'


From Huff Post:



Sotomayor: Champion Of The Oppressed, Outcasts And Nerds
From her days as a student at Princeton to the weeks after she was contacted about a possibility of serving on the Supreme Court, Judge Sonia Sotomayor has associated herself with and championed the cause of society's oppressed and outcast.

A review of dozens of papers from her written career -- as released by the Senate Judiciary Committee on Thursday afternoon -- show a judge quite cognizant of the barriers that she had to overcome. Sotomayor wrote and spoke dozens of times about her identity as a Puerto Rican and the "shock" she and others felt at the less-than-lofty place they held in America's cultural fabric.

But her writings are not limited to concerns about people who share her background. As a student, lawyer and a judicial star, Sotomayor often commiserated with other minorities who -- through no fault of their own -- found themselves disadvantaged by society. Considered individually, the writings seem like general political reflections. Taken as a whole, however, they provide a unique insight into how Sotomayor has been shaped by her own biography and uses that story as a lens through which to view American society.

As one of Princeton's few female students in the 1970s, Sotomayor described the Ivy League institution as "an alien land." And yet, far from shying away from its somewhat stuffy mores, she attempted to change the culture from within. She became an activist for minority causes. And, as revealed in her Supreme Court questionnaire, she often publicly expressed her disappointment with the school.

Sotomayor wrote several letters to the student newspaper arguing on behalf of minorities. The first dealt with anti-Latino discrimination at the school, lamenting a "lack of commitment" to Puerto Rican or Chicano heritage.

"There is not one Puerto Rican or Chicano administrator or faculty member in the university," the sophomore wrote. "There are two million Puerto Ricans in the United States and two and a half million more on the island itself. Yet there were only 66 Puerto Rican applicants this year, and only 31 Puerto Rican students on campus."

Later, as one of 39 signatories, Sotomayor helped pen another letter to The Daily Princetonian responding to the ransacking of the dorm room of two gay students by a group of eight colleagues.

"Intimidation of those courageous enough to express their views, violence directed against unpopular associations, midnight criminal assaults on private residences --- these speak for themselves," the letter reads. "The entire university community should be angry, and disgusted, that this kind of action has occurred at Princeton."...'

Pat, Huntington, NY
Did you judge her a little too early
I thin Obama would pick a nominee who's good on fays and a choice

I just hope she believes in anti-trust
Here's a hint: the VAST majority of Americans could give a rat's patootie about Sotomayor - we're fighting for our livelyhoods - and the GOP hasn't done anything since Sept. except get in the way!!!
Independent in TN

Well then heck, if people don't care, then why do we even have hearings or confirmations or votes or anyting like that. Lets just let Obama do what ever he wants and send Congress home.
Everyone, please remember, after the way the GOP griped about the treatment of Meiers, Alito, and Roberts, they insisted that they should enact a policy in which filibusters should be done away with for all judicial nominees.

Anyone care to guess whether the GOP is still interested in that policy, or could they have *(gasp)* "flip-flopped" on that issue.
Clara, KC:

On the "Mark is Richard's dad" theory.

Too Funny.  Shouldn't insult Mark like that.  But I think, rather than a conspiracy, it's a function of time zone and work schedules.

Most of you are on your way home, cooking dinner etc. while some of the FR folks are working late at the end of the day.

It's kind of like the Pacific Coast election results.

On my way out the door, I just throw out stuff.  Some sticks.

The time zone thing also eliminates, for various reasons, any number of never seen posts.  Lucky for you.

Do I have to send Mark a Father's Day card?
It's nice to know that we're hearing from a former clerk of Clarence Thomas. I can't imagine the amount of copying work she did of all of Justice Thomas' opinons he's handed down. Oh, wait a minute Justice Thomas just nods his head and votes they way Scalia tells him to.
No matter how much whining and posturing the Republicans do Sotomayor WILL be approved by a bi-partisan group of Senators and will be seated as the next Supreme Court Justice. By then Senator Franken will be oriented and comfortable in his job representing the good people of Minnesota.
Alright "my gang" have a wonderful weekend! Got to get going...starting my weekend early...good luck out here!
DON'T go away Mad....

Just GO AWAY !!

'...Coleman himself appears ready to hang it up pretty soon...'

More GOOD NEWS form HuffPost:


'...Norm Coleman Ready To Give Up Fight, Allies Say


 
National Republican Senatorial Committee Chairman John Cornyn on Wednesday suggested that former Sen. Norm Coleman's long fight was almost over, saying that he'll support his old colleague "until he decides to hang it up one way or another."

Today Roll Call has reported that Coleman himself appears ready to hang it up pretty soon. While party leaders are prepared to back him in a fight to the Supreme Court, sources close to Coleman say that if he loses in the Minnesota Supreme Court he will accept the result.

Sources close to Coleman say the former Senator would likely give up his legal battle and accept defeat if the Minnesota Supreme Court decides in Franken's favor. That's because Coleman anticipates that Gov. Tim Pawlenty (R) would ultimately sign Franken's certification papers. [...] ...'


UhHHHH, when did you discover that you'd LOST Norm ??
From a previous post:
ther numbers people with a brain look at is the debt and deficit, both of which are going up at an alarming rate - those are leading indicators btw. People at the Fed, weeeing they've diluted the dollar by printing more dollars, are also looking for inflation to tick up when that happens. That would be a very bad number to see rising.
DP - MI (Sent Friday, June 05, 2009 12:14 PM)
*************************************************
Debt and Defecit have been rising for 6+ years, but now its something to be afraid of... oh yeah and its all the new guys fault.  your logic is horrible, and although what you say is true, the meaning behind your words is misleading at best, and downright deceitful to the way i read them.

All of you complaining about the "Obama spending spree" have very selective memories.  Bush didn't budget for war, natural disasters, bailouts, and the list goes on, yet we spent just as much money on those things as Obama is planning to.  to complain about these things now after sitting silent for 8 years of cowboy throwing money away is disingenuous.

do i like runaway spending?  no.
do i see the administration addressing the issue?  yes.
for now, i'll live with that.

The political stalling in elections and supreme court nominees just highlights how partisan and petty our elected officials can be.  time for another party to emerge that espouses middle ground, compromise, debate, and honesty.  i really miss honesty in our society, and wish they'd have informed me about its funeral...  :(
So far, the vetting of Sotomayor appears to be shaping up proportionately to the last two SC appointments.

Our system is working properly.  She will be confirmed after going through an appropriate initiation rite.

No reason for her not to experience the American way.  And I know she's tough enough not to cry like Alito's wife.

All of these opposing comments and issues are entirely appropriate, by the way.

That's at least one thing I've learned from Democrats and Liberals over the years.
[Conservative judicial activist ...]
--That's a phrase I've never heard before.  FirstRead, as Spock would say, "Fascinating."
Independent:

Typical.  As lefties bloviate and gloat about the impotence of the Republicans, others such as yourself pretend that they have the power to get in the way.

Pray tell, aside from entirely appropriate and legitimate dissent, what has gotten in the way of anything Obama wants?

There are some serious political bi-polar issues snaking through the Obama community.
Keep it up, republicans and then wonder where your moderate support is.  They spend so much time blustering about Sotomayor that they look like spoiled children.  I have no problem with questioning nominees toughly but personal attacks by those like Wendy Long, Newt the frog, Limbaugh simply remind Americans how petty the GOP has become.  

Just listened briefly to Newt accusing Pres Obama of wanting the government to take over the energy business.  Seems a bit shallow since I haven't seen the democrats blueprints for their power plant; last I heard Pres Obama is pushing for PRIVATE industry to get into the renewable energy business instead of just oil.  As far as cap and trade goes, sometimes it is necessary for Government to PUSH industry into doing the right thing such as fuel efficient vehicles otherwise private industry delays the inevitable--GM, Chrysler never looked to the future.  Everytime I listen to them, I wonder if the GOP ever thinks progressively, if they ever think about the future beyond tax cuts and no government.  I've always thought that failure to be progressive thinking in 1776 would mean we'd still be British.  Rigid ideology fails over the long haul.  The democrats had to figure this out now so do the republicans.

From earlier posts, pondered questions.  Has America done more good than harm?  That's a tough, thought-provoking question even though it wasn't directed at me.  There are many examples of the good we have done, and unfortunately, plenty of harm.  My answer would be that although America has done far more good in the world than harm, the harm we do is too often the view seen by the world and what ultimately gives us untold grief.

I'm still thinking about which pundit I would like to dine with.  There are several but if I must choose, today it would be Eugene Robinson, Pulitzer Prize winner, because his view of the past presidential election had to be an incredible, emotional journey while he tried to maintain his journalistic neutrality plus he just seems like a very nice person.

Have a nice weekend everyone.  Look forward to more combative rivalry next week.  
Debt and Defecit have been rising for 6+ years, but now its something to be afraid of... oh yeah and its all the new guys fault.

Going from $5T to $10T in debt was bad. Don't you recall Bush's approval ratings while that was happening. Not so hot, we're they? That's because Republicans didn't like what he was doing!

Going from $10T to $20T in debt is worse. But the same liberals that disliked Bush driving the debt up, are now cheering Obama. Go figure.

As for you being afraid of it, maybe you should be, maybe you shouldn't be. I guess it depends on how old you are. If you're 40 or under, you'll be on the hook for paying for it. If you're older then that, your children will be on the hook for it. And who gives a rats behind about the children?
Not in a position of power anymore & they still are demanding we just do what they say.  Go home you little clerk 's aide, you don't call the shots let alone demand.  The people have spoken & it said no more old white men telling us how to live.  Let alone some conservative justice's aide  demanding.  Go away now you guys lost, you don't get to dicate anymore.
Conservatives will support Sotomayor --- she is the closest thing to an "Anti-Abortion, Pro-Life" judge that Obama will ever nominate.
On the issue of reverse discrimination, race, et al. Discrimination continues in the universities as demonstrated in today's news of the Univ. Ill. favoritism. Favoritism has been the means of the influential for all time. Any attempt at officially favoring persons based on other factors as we have had in recent years would never equal what has gone on to favor the sons and daughters of the wealthy or the athletes recruited to be nothing more than entertainment. The goose always had a free pass.
I think Long is just glad she has "work" to do now, 15+ years is a long time. Anyone get the feeling even Clarence Thomas is rolling his eyes right now.
So do we have a dictator now with Obama? I don't think that's too strong of a thing to call him. Congress doesn't seem to much care what he does. So how long before the "Pay Czar" starts looking not only at companies that are bailed out by the government, to companies with contracts with the government? Now that would include a large amount of companies in the US. I better write my congress people and ask what they think.

L. Black, NYC (Sent Friday, June 05, 2009 1:09 PM)

Substitute Bush for Obama and you see 8 years of Bush.
If the complaint is that she didn't include "everything" in her questionnaire, maybe whatever she left out is in the 5 boxes of documents that were delivered to the committee today.
Isn't it interesting that she likens Judge Sotomayor to two of the "great" judges -- Justices Brennan and Marshall.  We would all be better served by more Supreme Court people like them, who were independent thinkers and uncowed by the pressure from the outside.  It is not good to have justices who defer in "lock-step" to other ones....it is critically important that a Supreme Court justice be independent.
1) Does the GOP really want to hang their hat on the issue of race and the death penalty? Do they not realize how many studies have been done that have compared similar cases and disparate sentencing with minorities vs. Whites? There is evidence that race is a factor, when applying the death penalty.

2) If Sotomayor is a racist because of the ONE firefighter case, what do her thousands of other decisions (many favoring White individuals and businesses) say about her? If she's a racist because of the Ricci firefighter case, then the GOP has simply proven that she's a really bad racist. Don't you think she's had many opportunities to "target Whites" from the bench? This racism claim is ridiculous, except if you look at words out of context and if you discontent the thousands of cases she's ruled on over the course of her career.


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