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Posted
Monday, June 29, 2009 3:26 PM
| By
Emily Bazelon
On Slate, Walter Dellinger and Linda Greenhouse
agree that Judge Sotomayor has little to fear from today's Supreme
Court ruling in favor of the white New Haven firefighters who sued
their city when it threw out the results of a test for promotions.
Justice Kennedy's majority opinion barely mentions the brief panel
opinion Sotomayor signed. Justice Alito's concurrence is a little more
critical, but not much. Court observers, including me, will patiently
explain that the Supreme Court came up with a whole new rule in its
decision today, which it wasn't Sotomayor's job, as a Second Circuit
judge, to do. This is how the law is supposed to develop: The lower
courts abide by their own precedents, and the Supreme Court's prior
rulings, until the high bench tell them to shift course.
But as Linda points, out the right will try to make hay
with today's decision anyway. Alito gave them some pretty good lines.
He talks about the idea that the white firefighters who sued deserve
"sympathy," an idea that is in the opinion Sotomayor ... (Read more at DoubleX.com.)
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