Posted by Jonathan Adler:
The "Most-Liberal" Nominee in Decades?
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_08_02-2009_08_08.shtml#1249337424


   The [1]Ninth Justice blog reports that, according to the Segal-Cover
   ranking system, Sonia Sotomayor is the most liberal nominee to the
   Supreme Court in forty years -- the most liberal since Thurgood
   Marshall in 1967 How could that be?

   Segal-Cover rankings evaluate the perceived ideology of judicial
   nominees by examining how newspaper editorials evaluate their
   qualifications and ideology. Newspapers have given Sotomayor high
   marks for her experience -- earning her a 0.8 qualification score. (0
   is unqualified; 1 is perfectly qualified.) Yet newspapers have also
   divided over her ideoloogy -- earning her a 0.79 on ideology. (0 is
   conservative; 1 is liberal.) For comparison purposes, he scores of
   other judicial nominees can be seen [2]here.)

   Now recall that there have only been two Democratic nominees since
   President Johnson nominated Thurgood Marshall in 1967 -- Stephen
   Breyer and Ruth Bader Ginsburg. So, it's possible that Sotomayor could
   be the "most liberal" nominee without concluding that she's that much
   more liberal than current justices, at least at the time of
   nomination. Given the observed ideological drift of Supreme Court
   justices, to say she's the most liberal nominee is not the same thing
   as saying she'd be the most liberal justice.

   Stony Brook's Jeffrey Segal, who helped develop the system, thinks the
   focus on the Ricci case and other specific controversies may have
   played a role. "These scores represent to some extent a fixture on
   what's current, not necessarily what the court would see," he told
   Ninth Justice. He also stresses that the system evaluates the
   perceived ideology of the nominee, and is not a prediction of how a
   given justice would vote on the Court.

   Another possible explanation for Judge Sotomayor's liberal ideology
   score could be the increased polarization of the Supreme Court
   nomination process, and the increased attention to judicial ideology
   in the process. I believe there has been more attention paid to her
   judicial ideology because more folks on the Right have [3]accepted
   Senator Charles Schumer's invitation to explicitly consider a
   nominee's ideology in the confirmation process. As a consequence, it
   looks as if there will be more votes against Sotomayor than against
   any Democratic nominee since before World War II.

   While I believe Sotomayor is a fairly liberal nominee -- and will be a
   more reliably liberal vote on most issues than many others expect -- I
   still [4]do not oppose her confirmation. I remain one of those who
   believes the Senate should be relatively deferential to a President's
   judicial picks, focusing on qualifications, character, and
   temperament, rather than ideology. Thus, even if I believed Sotomayor
   was the "most liberal" nominee in decades -- and would, as a
   consequence, be the most "liberal" justice in a generation -- my
   position would be the same.

References

   1. 
http://ninthjustice.nationaljournal.com/2009/08/sotomayor-segal-liberal.php
   2. http://www.sunysb.edu/polsci/jsegal/qualtable.pdf
   3. http://www.nytimes.com/2001/06/26/opinion/judging-by-ideology.html
   4. http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_06_07-2009_06_13.shtml#1244505308

_______________________________________________
Volokh mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.powerblogs.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/volokh

Reply via email to