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God's Politics

Interpretation, Hermeneutics, and Judge Sotomayor

by Ernesto Tinajero 07-16-2009

Judge Sonia Sotomayor has begun jumping through the Senate’s ritual hoops to become the next member of the Supreme Court. When she makes it through the carnival of media and posturing, she will hold the highest office ever attained by a Latino in this country. For this reason alone, most of us in the Latino community will be watching with great interest. Another reason might be to see what the process reveals about us, as a people and our faith.

The two charges most directed at Judge Sotomayor have been rolled into attacks about her decision in the New Haven Firefighter case. The first one, launched by such icons of Civil Rights as Rush Limbaugh and Newt Gingrich, is that Judge Sotomayor is a racist. The second one is that she will be an activist judge, going beyond what the constitution says, and try to make policy from the bench. Her critics attempt to roll both attacks into one to demonstrate their fears. While the first charge is so comical as to be a bad joke, the second offers an interesting understanding of modern hermeneutics. How people understand written text, especially ones composed in another time and culture, will be the unspoken context.

The process of interpreting written text is tricky, hence the need for the Supreme Court. In his latest book, Packing the Court, James MacGregor Burns points out that judicial activism is on the eye of the beholder. From the Dred Scott case to the Warren Court, the Supreme Court can be seen as “activistic.” He further argues that the history of the Court, with the exception of the Warren Court, is one of conservative activism. It has been a drag on the pull of history.

The current debate about judicial activism turns on a judicial philosophy called “strict constructionism.” This set of judicial ideas states that the text should be taken as literal and at face value without trying to understand the intention nor the context in which the constitution was written. The thought is that such interpretation will support the conservative worldview. At its core, the debate centers on interpretation — a battle modern Bible scholars have been waging for over 200 years. Many of those who buy into strict constructionism come from the same environs that interpret the Bible through a strict literalism.

It should be an interesting week.

Ernesto Tinajero is a freelance writer in Spokane, Washington, who earned his master’s degree in theology from Fuller Seminary. Visit his blog at www.life-and-faith.org.

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  • nuclearferret
    "Many of those who buy into strict constructionism come from the same environs that interpret the Bible through a strict literalism."

    'Buy into' implying "falling for'?
  • Uh-huh -- often ignoring the immediate historical context as well as the bigger picture.
  • "Bigger picture" and "immediate historical context" based on whose perspective? A libertarian will look at the "context" differently from a progressive or a conservative. Conservatives tend to look at the "context" in a moralistic sort of way (religious conservatives want to retain the "Christian nation" format that the founders "started"—which is a bunch of hogwash).

    Even if we agreed upon a method of understanding the Constitution, there are further questions regarding "context" or "literal" or "bigger picture." I'm not attacking your critique, I'm simply pointing out that "bigger picture" is vague at best because there are varying understandings of that "bigger picture." You and I quite obviously disagree on some of these things, based on past exchanges.
  • This is why you study as much history as you can, from all sides if possible. And yes, it's tedious but necessary.
  • prk
    "How people understand written text, especially ones composed in another time and culture, will be the unspoken context"

    I know the Federalist Papers.

    In the words of Justice Thomas there are two ways to interpret the constitution orginal intent or you can just make it up.

    The constitution can be changed and the instrutions on how to change it are in the constitution.
  • Yes, a "living constitution" means changing it, and the Constitution itself provides how to make it "living." Otherwise we could interpret it to mean whatever we pleased.
  • ando
    It would appear that the Republicans have treated Sotomayor with a little less partisanship than the Democrats did with Roberts and Alito. Can Obama expect the Republicans to vote for her when he voted against both of Bush's nominees?
  • Two things to consider:

    The GOP is in such bad shape that they can't appear to oppose a Latino candidate for fear they would lose even more of those votes. Also, Roberts and Alito are members of the Federalist Society, a right-wing legal fraternity that is by definition activist; the reason Robert Bork was voted down some 20 years ago was that he made that a little too obvious.
  • So when the Left doesn't attack, it's for good reason. When the Right attacks, it's for political reasons.

    Oh, the days when I used to think of things in "Left" and "Right." Made arguing so much easier.
  • Before you make any snarky comments about "left" and "right," refute the historical facts I just laid out. And that's all I will say at this point.
  • What historical facts? That Roberts and Alito are part of the Federalist Society? Cuz the other two statements are opinion and observation and interpretation of events, not "historical facts." That they're members of a group I can't refute, of course.

    On the Fed Society's own page, it "is founded on the principles that the state exists to preserve freedom, that the separation of governmental powers is central to our Constitution, and that it is emphatically the province and duty of the judiciary to say what the law is, not what it should be.... This entails reordering priorities within the legal system to place a premium on individual liberty, traditional values, and the rule of law."

    Wow, I'm scared! Such activism to make sure the Constitution is applied, not reinterpreted by judges who don't quite like the laws.

    And you cannot prove that it is "by definition activist" unless you admit that any endeavor to propagate a philosophy of politics or legal framework is also... which kinda means just about every political or religious organization.
  • Never go by what someone says -- go by what he/she does. The Federalist Society is in fact outright lying when it makes that statement of purpose, and in fact the "Roberts Court" has shown itself to be quite activist in at least three major decisions. That's the reason Miguel Estrada was filibustered for an appellate court position some years back.
  • Never go by what someone says -- go by what he/she does

    I'll take that as good advice, and agreed as far as it goes.
    ...and in fact the "Roberts Court" has shown itself to be quite activist in at least three major decisions.

    I don't really follow the Federalist Society, so I can't comment any more than what I've looked into. But it is not true that it is "fact" because it is your perspective and interpretation of their actions compared to their statements on their own website. The FedSoc would disagree, saying their actions fall under their perspective and philosophy, the pragmatic outcome of which you obviously disagree (else you wouldn't call them activist). I'm not sure where I'd fall, because I'm not exactly filled with SC historical knowledge.

    So you can point out that their actions don't fit with their statements, but that only means you'd prefer different actions based on their statements. You are disagreeing with their methods not their statements (or both, for that matter).
  • The FedSoc would disagree, saying their actions fall under their perspective and philosophy, the pragmatic outcome of which you obviously disagree (else you wouldn't call them activist). I'm not sure where I'd fall, because I'm not exactly filled with SC historical knowledge.

    The Ricci case, the Ledbetter case and the overturning of school desegregation plans in Louisville and Seattle, among others, were clear cases of right-wing judicial activism. In the last case the SCOTUS overturned a policy that actually had broad popular support as a remedy for past discrimination.

    One other barely-noted decision that was made for strictly political reasons: The freeing of Oliver North after being convicted over Iran-Contra; he appealed to the circuit court that had a known activist, Larry Silberman, on the bench.
  • Eric77
    Here's what Randy Barnett wrote about "activism" in the column I posted below. I agree with him. It's a useless term.

    The second empty issue to be discussed is the bugaboo of "judicial activism" and its conjoined twin, "judicial restraint," which today's judicial conservatives have inherited from New Deal progressives. But what exactly is "activism"? Is it activism when any popularly enacted law is held unconstitutional? Neither Democrats or Republicans truly believe this, however, since they want judges to strike down laws as unconstitutional when doing so leads to the "right result" (but not when it doesn't). So judicial activism means thwarting the "will of the people" when critics agree with the people, while they complain about the "tyranny of the majority" when they disagree.

    We can do better.
  • Well, the Supreme Court was accused by white Southerners of "judicial activism" when it began ruling against segregation laws in the 1950s and '60s. In fact, Southern states used the legal maneuvers of "nullification" ("it doesn't apply to us") and "interposition" (state law supersedes Federal law) to fight those rulings.
  • Eric77
    Yes, I know.
  • ando
    I listened to EJ Dionne and David Brooks on NPR's All Things Considered
    today. They were both saying that the hearings produced little of
    substance, and noted that the Republicans asked more probing questions than
    the Democrats. Others have intimated that Democrats fear that society as a
    whole is a bit more conservative than they are, and they did not want
    people to find out the real Sotomayor. Personally, I think she should be
    confirmed, and hope and pray she will stay true to her Catholic roots.
    The fact that
    the GOP is in such bad shape should not be something the Democrats
    should be gloating about; they're always only one or two elections
    away from becoming the minority party. They're in the majority now
    only because the Repubs are in such disarray, not because the public
    sees them in any great light.
  • I don't entirely agree. The Republicans are in disarray because, and only because, the ideologues who run the party permanently drove out nearly everyone who doesn't agree with them; the Democrats by contrast appear reasonable. Because such analogous extremists don't exist proportionately with the Dems, I seriously doubt they'll similarly overreach. And in fact, the Democratic Party has become a tad more conservative, especially in the issue of abortion.
  • ando
    They still have honorable people, such as Lindsay Graham and Tim Pawlenty. Pawlenty might become a force in the party mainly because he could be everything that Bush wasn't, starting with the fact that he's from a traditionally Democratic Midwestern state and he may well be a compassionate conservative.
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