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Supreme Court Confirms: Sotomayor was Wrong
Sanctioned discrimination against firefighters
for color of skin
Contact: Demi Bardsley,
Concerned Women for America, 202-488-7000 ext. 134
WASHINGTON, June 29 /Christian
Newswire/ -- The United States Supreme Court reversed Supreme Court
nominee Sonia Sotomayor in the now-famous New Haven firefighters
case. Although Judge Sotomayor and two of her colleagues did not even
think the case worthy of a published opinion, the Supreme Court said the
case presented "two provisions of Title VII to be interpreted and
reconciled, with few, if any, precedents in the courts of appeals
discussing the issue."
Concerned Women for America (CWA) President Wendy Wright
said, "This decision sends a disturbing message that Sonia Sotomayor, as
a judge, sanctioned discrimination against people because of the color
of their skin. This validates concerns that Judge Sotomayor's judicial
philosophy reflects her personal bias, as expressed in speeches and the
controversial groups to which she has belonged, that people should be
discriminated against based on their ethnicity or sex. No one in a
burning building cares if their fire chief is a minority. A
firefighter's qualifications can determine if innocent people will live
or die. Yet Judge Sotomayor denied qualified firefighters a promotion in
order to advance her ethnic politics. Judge Sotomayor's decision in the
Ricci case proves that questions about her fitness to serve at the
Supreme Court are legitimate. Her decisions suggest such an enormous
bias in her philosophy that we could not fault anyone in her courtroom
for questioning her impartiality."
"In choosing a Supreme Court nominee, President Obama
said 'I will seek someone who understands that justice ... is also about
how our laws affect the daily realities of people's lives, whether they
can make a living, and care for their families, whether they feel safe
in their homes, and welcome in their own nation. I view that quality of
empathy, of understanding and identifying with peoples hopes and
struggles as an essential ingredient for arriving at just decisions and
outcomes.' Judge Sotomayor's unjust decision in the Ricci case shows
that she does not fit that description. She denied firefighters the
well-deserved promotions and, by doing so, was willing to make people
unsafe in their homes."
Mario Diaz, Esq., CWA's Policy Director for Legal Issues,
said the Ricci case "exposes not only bias, but arrogance on the part of
a judge at the brink of getting a lifetime appointment to the highest
court of the land. How she thought this case did not even deserve a
published opinion is beyond comprehension. It seems ethnicity and gender
not only 'play a role' in her judgment as she has said, but they
actually control her judgment to the point where she can no longer look
at the facts of a case impartially. Looking at her record, it seems her
passion for minorities is such that she would need to recuse herself
from any case involving a minority party in litigation.
"Unless she renounces her own statements and has some
strong explanation for her actions in cases like Ricci at her hearings,
I don't see how any Senator, or even the President himself, can feel
confident about her fitness to serve at the Supreme Court."
Concerned Women for America is the nation's largest
public policy women's organization.
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