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Guest Column |
Supreme
Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor. (Photo: Getty Images) Sonia
Sotomayor made history Saturday when she was sworn in as the nation's first
Hispanic Supreme Court justice. Chief
Justice John Roberts swore in Sotomayor twice at the court. The first
ceremony was private. A second ceremony was held in front of Sotomayor's
friends, family and the media. It
marked the first time in the court's history an oath-taking ceremony was
open to television cameras.
Sotomayor, a 55-year-old federal appeals court judge, was confirmed
Thursday in a 68-31 vote. Nine Republicans joined a unanimous Democratic
caucus in supporting her nomination. The only senator who was not present
for the vote was Sen. Ted Kennedy, D-Massachusetts, because of illness, but
he has supported Sotomayor in the past.
President Obama, who selected Sotomayor on May 26, said he was gratified
by the Senate vote. "This
is a wonderful day for Judge Sotomayor and her family, but I also think it's
a wonderful day for
Sotomayor will take her seat on the high court in September when the
justices reconvene to hear challenges to the McCain-Feingold campaign
finance law.
Sotomayor becomes the 111th person to sit on the Supreme Court, and the
third female justice. She has been praised by Democrats for her
made-in-America story as a minority woman who rose to success through hard
work and opportunity.
During her confirmation hearings last month, Republicans questioned her
judicial neutrality, complaining about speeches in which she made
controversial statements, including her hope that a "wise
Sotomayor's confirmation capped an extraordinary rise from humble
beginnings. Her parents came to Born
in the Bronx and raised in a public housing project not far from the stadium
of her favorite team, the New York Yankees, Sotomayor was nine when her
father died, leaving her mother to raise her and her younger brother. Her
mother, whom Sotomayor has described as her biggest inspiration, worked six
days a week to care for her and her brother, and instilled in them the value
of an education.
Sotomayor later graduated summa cum laude from She
worked at nearly every level of the judicial system over a three-decade
career before being chosen by President Obama to replace retiring Justice
David Souter on the Supreme Court. She
was named a district judge by President George H.W. Bush in 1992 and was
appointed to the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals by President Clinton in
1998.
Sotomayor presided over about 450 cases while on the district court.
Before her judicial appointments, she was a partner at a private law
firm and spent time as an assistant district attorney prosecuting violent
crimes.
by: CNN | Visit article original @ CNN (In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed by HispanicVista.com (www.hispanicvista.com) without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes.) |