With fear for our democracy

Dan Canon
I Taught the Law
Published in
4 min readJul 2, 2024

--

Before examining the specifics of her blistering dissent in Trump v. United States, in which the Supreme Court announced that presidents are immune from criminal liability for their official acts, there are three things you should know about Justice Sonia Sotomayor.

  1. She is a lawyer. Lawyers are necessarily cautious, institutional creatures. Most of us have faith in “the system” trained into us to an astonishing degree, and by looking at democratic institutions so closely all the time, we tend to lose the ability to think critically about them. Those institutions created us and sustain us now, and most of us believe they are worth preserving. That’s true even of the more reckless in our profession, but Sotomayor is not one of those — she is diligent and fastidious, not given to hyperbole or exaggeration.
  2. As liberal lawyers go, she is on the conservative side. Sure, she graduated from Yale, but the Ivy League is the Ivy League, and few Ivy Leaguers are even minimally tuned into leftist sensibilities for long after graduation. She started her career as a prosecutor, and has been a judge for over 30 years now. George H.W. Bush first put her on the district court bench in 1992, back when Republican presidents appointed people other than Federalist Society drones and deranged bloggers. She’s a boomer, and most boomers were raised on a force-fed diet of Cold War patriotism, a taste that never really gets out of one’s mouth. Throw in the fact that she was the daughter of laborers who grew up in a housing project, but still managed to become one…

--

--

Dan Canon
I Taught the Law

Civil rights lawyer, law professor, and high school dropout. Writes about the Midwest, class struggle, and the untold horrors of the legal system.