By Aaron Goldstein on 7.15.09 @ 6:06AM
When he testifies before the Senate Judiciary Committee, the New
Haven firefighter will once again be on the wrong end of liberal
empathy.
If I were a betting man, I would wager that the person who will
face the toughest scrutiny at Sonia Sotomayor's Supreme Court
nomination hearings before the Senate Judiciary Committee won't
be the nominee but rather a private citizen. Frank Ricci, the New
Haven firefighter whose discrimination lawsuit Sotomayor tried to
bury she was subsequently overturned by the Supreme Court, is due
to testify in front of the committee either Thursday or Friday.
Ever since Senate Republicans announced last week they had called
Ricci to testify, liberal activists have been chomping at the
bit. If the appetites of liberal activists are any indication,
then Senate Democrats will be chewing Ricci's flesh to the bone.
One might ask why Senate Republicans would put Ricci in such a
position. Let us remember that President Obama appointed
Sotomayor to the nation's highest court as much for her supposed
empathy as for whatever judicial qualifications she might
possess. Upon the announcement of David Souter's retirement on
May 1, President Obama
said:
I will seek someone who understands that justice isn't about
some abstract legal theory or footnote in a casebook; it 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 people's hopes and
struggles, as an essential ingredient for arriving at just
decisions and outcomes.
Well, Sotomayor's ruling against Ricci certainly affects the
daily realities of Ricci and the other New Haven firefighters.
Her ruling certainly affects whether Ricci and the other New
Haven firefighters can make a living. When it came to the
struggles of Ricci and company, where was the quality of empathy
from Sotomayor about which President Obama waxed so eloquently?
Ricci's presence before the Senate Judiciary Committee puts the
empathy question to the test.
Clearly Ricci's presence perturbs liberal activists, who see him
as a threat to Sotomayor's coronation. Leading the charge against
Ricci is the liberal activist group People for the American Way
(PFAW). Co-founded in 1981 by television producer Norman Lear, PFAW
proudly boasts that it "helped lead the coalition that kept
Robert Bork off of the U.S. Supreme Court" in 1987.
Shortly after learning Ricci would testify, PFAW circulated
an e-mail concerning Ricci's "troubled and litigious work
history." PFAW was referring to a lawsuit filed by Ricci in 1995
against the New Haven Fire Department. Ricci contended he had not
been hired because of his disclosure of his dyslexia. Eventually,
the New Haven Fire Department would hire Ricci in exchange for
dropping the lawsuit and payment of Ricci's legal fees.
Brian Beutler
wrote on the liberal blog Talking Points Memo:
If you were Frank Ricci, you might say something like, "Frank
Ricci got a job and somebody who wasn't dyslexic didn't."
Remember, this is the same Frank Ricci who took his reverse
discrimination suit all the way to the Supreme Court, where
lower court rulings against him--including one by Sotomayor's
Second Circuit--were overturned.
Ricci will testify against Sotomayor before the Senate
Judiciary Committee next week--this despite the fact that his
views on jurisprudence seem to begin and end with the
proposition that legal protections against discrimination are
great when they work in his favor, and unconscionable when they
don't.
Beutler misses the point. Ricci is being remarkably consistent in
that he is arguing that discrimination is discrimination. The
term reverse discrimination seems to imply that some groups are
supposed to be discriminated against -- namely white males. Is
Beutler suggesting Mr. Ricci ought to be prohibited from filing
more than one discrimination lawsuit in his lifetime? Isn't it
possible both lawsuits had merit? If a person genuinely believes
they have been discriminated against on more than one occasion
why should they prohibited from seeking a legal remedy? Somehow I
don't think Beutler would object to an African-American filing
multiple discrimination lawsuits unless, of course, that
African-American happened to be a conservative.
The fact is that in preparing for these promotional tests, Ricci
paid a friend $1,000 to read textbooks onto audio tapes as well
as made flash cards, took practice tests, participated in mock
interviews and in a study group. Liberals might choose to see
Frank Ricci as a malingerer and a malcontent. Conservatives,
however, choose to see Frank Ricci as a person who worked
diligently for his dream and earned it only to have it unjustly
taken from him.
For its part PFAW feigns innocence. Marge Baker, PFAW's Executive
Vice-President,
said her organization had "simply pointed out the fact that
Frank Ricci, on his own behalf, has used employment
discrimination laws to help him."
If only it were that simple. Indeed, PFAW also noted Ricci had
once been terminated by the fire department in Middletown,
Connecticut. Ricci contended he was fired for raising safety
concerns. It is worth noting the Middletown Fire Department would
later be fined due to safety violations.
Of course, if Ricci were an obstacle for a Supreme Court nominee
picked by George W. Bush and Republicans, PFAW would hail Ricci's
service as a firefighter and his courage as a whistleblower. But
since Ricci is a thorn in the side of the "wise Latina" and by
extension President Obama, PFAW instead portrays Ricci as a
troubled, litigious malcontent, not as a patriotic, courageous
whistleblower. But when Republican Lindsey Graham
tells Sotomayor at the outset of the hearings, "you're gonna
get confirmed," one must wonder why PFAW even bothers?
Yet it won't get any easier once Ricci testifies. He will be in
the awkward position of sitting in between Chuck Schumer and a
camera, not to mention be subjected to the comedy styling of
newly minted Senator Al Franken. I can imagine Patrick Leahy, the
Judiciary Committee Chair, saying, "Let this committee now come
to order. The Borking will now resume."
topics:
Affirmative Action, Sonia Sotomayor, Frank Ricci