Posted by Jonathan Adler:
Goldstein on Sotomayor and Race Cases (Again):
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_06_14-2009_06_20.shtml#1245178330


   SCOTUSBlog's Tom Goldstein has an [1]op-ed in today's NYT on how Sonia
   Sotomayor has handled cases involving race on the U.S. Court of
   Appeals for the Second Circuit. Given my high opinion of Goldstein's
   work, I found the article disappointing.

   Goldstein frames the article as a response to the charges that
   Sotomayor is biased or, worse, a "racist." As I've blogged previously,
   the racist charge is outrageous and unjustified. In this context it is
   also something of a straw man.

   Substantively, the op-ed largely rehashes his conclusions from [2]this
   SCOTUSBlog post. As a consequence, the essay is subject to the same
   criticisms [3]I made here and [4]David Stras made on SCOTUSBlog. Among
   other things, insofar as the analysis fails to compare Judge
   Sotomayor's pattern of deciding cases with those of her colleagues, it
   does not tell us very much about whether Judge Sotomayor is more or
   less likely to let her own preferences with regard to racial matters
   influence her judging than other judges. I recognize that such an
   analysis would likely require more time and energy than a practitioner
   in Goldstein's position has available, but such an analysis is
   necessary if one really wants to be able to make sweeping claims based
   on the numbers.

   As has been pointed out time and again, including by President Obama,
   any competent, reasonably conscentious appellate judge will reach the
   same conclusion as his or her colleagues in the vast majority of
   cases. In most such cases, the relevant law and precedent are
   sufficiently clear. [As an aside, this would even be true of a
   competent-yet-"racist" judge, as racial bigotry would not necessarily
   lead a judge to be ignore precendent, text, and the like.] A judge's
   "biases" or predisipositions are only likely to come into play in that
   small handful of cases -- five percent by the President's estimation
   -- in which the law is sufficiently unclear that there is room for a
   judge to indulge his or her preferences. This fact, and institutional
   pressures for unanimity, mean that the vast majority of appellate
   panel decisions are unanimous. As I don't think there is any question
   that Judge Sotomayor is a highly competent and conscientious judge,
   noting that she agreed with her colleagues in the vast majority of
   cases does not tell us anything that we did not already know.

   If we really want to know whether and how Judge Sotomayor's legal and
   policy preferences are likely to affect her decisions in race-related
   cases on the Supreme Court, we have to look at that small percentage
   of cases in which the law was unclear or where she and her colleagues
   diverged. There are only a handful of such cases, but focusing on
   these opinions is likely to tell us more than Goldstein's superficial
   analysis. Ricci is relevant here -- both because of [5]how it was
   handled procedurally and because the Obama Administration has asked
   the Supreme Court to reverse and remand the case -- as are some other
   cases like Brown v. City of Oneanta (an equal protection challenge to
   police conduct I discussed [6]here), Gant v. Wallingford Board of
   Education (involving a claim that demoting a black elementary school
   student was racially discriminatory), and Hayden v. Pataki (a
   disparate impact challenge to felon disenfranchisement).

   Looking at the race-related cases in which Judge Sotomayor has
   disagreed with her colleagues leads me to the following conclusion
   (although it [7]does not convince me to oppose her nomination).
   Compared to the other judges on her Cirucit, Judge Sotomayor appears
   more inclined to accept aggressive and innovative use of equal
   protection arguments in race-related cases and seems to be more
   accepting of the use of race to achieve diversity in the workplace.
   This does not make her an "extremist," and it certainly does not make
   her a "racist," but it does suggest she would fit comfortably on the
   "liberal" side of the current court on such issues, and is consistent
   with the inference one could draw from [8]her speeches. Insofar as one
   disagrees with this approach to race-related cases, this could be
   cause for concern. [Conversely, insofar as one believes the current
   Court is too timid on race-related issues, it could be cause for
   cheer.]

   I recognize that space limitations likely prevented Goldstein from
   presenting a more nuanced picture of Judge Sotomayor's record in this
   area, and almost certainly precluded a more detailed discussion of
   Ricci and other cases. But I also think that it is mistaken to claim
   that Goldstein's review of the cases somehow proves that Judge
   Sotomayor would be particularly moderate or restrained on race-related
   issues or is somehow immune to allowing her biases to influence her
   resolution of close cases.

References

   1. http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/16/opinion/16goldstein.html
   2. 
http://www.scotusblog.com/wp/judge-sotomayor-and-race-results-from-the-full-data-set/
   3. http://www.volokh.com/posts/1243909272.shtml
   4. http://www.scotusblog.com/wp/the-politics-of-the-sotomayor-nomination/
   5. http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_05_31-2009_06_06.shtml#1244327574
   6. http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_05_31-2009_06_06.shtml#1244041783
   7. http://volokh.com/posts/1244505308.shtml
   8. http://www.volokh.com/posts/chain_1243569680.shtml

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