Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Let's Make Some Connections

Ah, Networking. The word, innocuous as it is, brings with it so many bad connotations: for me, I imagine standing in a room packed with people, but having no idea who is receptive to being approached. Or that moment when you do enter a conversation, and it immediately stalls out. Sounds terrible.

But, it is getting to be that time of year. On Campus Interviewing for law students. Kick-off receptions for legal organizations. A renewed sense of programming for every workplace as summer ends and people are more readily available.

And really, if you think about it, those awkward situations pass quickly, or never really happen. Bring a friend out to an event, or put your arm in a sling as an automatic conversation starter if you're really nervous. But I usually leave an event thinking about the good conversations I had--not the few seconds I spent browsing the room nervously looking for someone to approach.

That cheerleading moment aside, I did some web-browsing for some networking tips for those with events around the corner. Forbes has some fun pictures to click through in this article for women networkers, although its tips basically boil down to "be yourself" and "get involved." If you are specifically looking for some good interviewing tips, I like this article on how interviewing is like dating, which can be applied to most professional events.

And sometimes the guise of networking is good: you'll never catch me "gossiping" with co-workers....I'm simply "networking."

Thursday, August 5, 2010

KAGAN CONFIRMED 63-37


Republicans voting for Solicitor General Kagan were were Sens. Susan Collins and Olympia Snowe of Maine, Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, Richard Lugar of Indiana and Judd Gregg of New Hampshire. . Thirty-six Republicans and one Democrat, Sen. Ben Nelson of Nebraska, voted against the nominee.

Friday, May 14, 2010

CONGRATULATIONS CHIEF JUSTICE LORIE GILDEA


Minnesota Women Lawyers issued the following statements following the appointment of Justice Lorie Gildea as chief justice, as well as two more women to the district court:

Minnesota Women Lawyers congratulates Justice Lorie Gildea on her appointment to Chief Justice of the Minnesota Supreme Court. We also congratulate Mary Mahler, appointed to a judgeship in the seventh district and Christine Long appointed to a judgeship in the third district, both of which were also announced today. MWL believes that the judiciary should fairly reflect the composition of the legal profession and of the public, and appreciates these appointments as important steps towards parity on the bench and in its leadership ranks. As women currently represent 26% of state judges on a national basis, we commend these efforts, and encourage the continued consideration and appointment of qualified women candidates for future Minnesota judicial positions.

Monday, May 10, 2010

Kagan Set to be Nominated

As can be seen in all the news reports this morning, President Obama is set to nominate Solicitor General Elena Kagan as the 112th Supreme Court Justice, to succeed Justice John Paul Stevens. The announcement is set to take place at 10 a.m.

This announcement brings with it all sorts of potential historical implications. It could be the first time that three women will serve at the same time. Ms. Kagan could be the youngest person ever nominated to the court, at 50 years old. There is also a lot of talk about her prior judicial experience....

Any thoughts on how different this confirmation process could be from Justice Sotomayor's confirmation? I'm betting quite a bit different.

Thursday, May 6, 2010

Equal: the end (of the book, that is)

26. Reckoning at the Supreme Court

Of course, the prospects for VAWA, at least for a civil rights remedy, were too good to be true and the Supreme Court immediately found the provision unconsititutional as soon as a case reached it.
It was the case of Christy Brzonkala, who said she was raped by two football players at Virginia Polytechnic Institute. The college's sexual assault policy was unsatisfactory, to put it mildly. One of her alleged rapists was an important football player and the proceedings against him were reduced to “abusive conduct.” He would have been eligible to play when Virginia Tech went to the Sugar Bowl in 1995, had he not been charged with breaking the door of a bar and hit and run.
Judges found VAWA's civil remedy unconstitutional almost every step of the way. She lost at the District Court, won before an appellate panel, lost in an en banc rehearing and eventually would lose at the Supreme Court.
Before she did, however, the high court decided two other cases that would limit the commerce clause and be used to strike down VAWA. The first was United States v. Lopez, where the court said that a federal law regulating guns near schools was not justified by the commerce clause. Justices Breyer, Souter, Stevens and Ginsburg dissented. Breyer's dissent argued that the gun law could have been upheld readily under existing precedent applying a rational basis test.
Lopez was decided in 1995, about a year after VAWA, which Rehnquist had vigorously opposed, was enacted,

In 1997, City of Boerne v. Flores addressed congressional power under the 14th amendment. Congress had passed the Religious Freedom Restoration Act in 1993, setting forth a compelling state interest for a law burdening the exercise of religion. It relied on the same law that supported the civil rights remedy in VAWA. But in Borene, the court rebuffed Congress's attempt to tell it what test to use to judge constitutionality. It required congurence and proportionality between the injury and the remedy in legislation enacted under the 14th Amendment.
Both the constitutional provisions underlying VAWA had been battered. During argument Justice O'Connor asked for a “hook” to the commerce clause, and she turned out to be Justice Rehnquist's fifth vote to strike down VAWA. Gender motivated crimes of violence were not economic activity, and the voluminous fact findings of Congress were irrelevant. The four who dissented in Lopez dissented again.
Rehnquist also relied on the Civil Rights Cases of 1883 – which upheld racial discrimation – to say that the 14th amendment reached only state action. Those cases were written by Justice Joseph P. Bradley, who had also written the words, based on “the law of the Creator,” that prevented Myra Bradwell from becoming a lawyer, “The Supreme Court, as ever mostly male, closed the twentieth century be reaffirming a nineteenth-century justice who claimed blacks were the law's favorites and women were protected, thanks to the Creator, by men.

POSTSCRIPT
Toward Equality (Twenty-first Century)

Strebeigh writes that we don't know if Harriet Meiers was nominated to the court to serve as a “screen” to allow President Bush to nominate two men, John Roberts and Samuel Alito, to the court. We do understand that Justice Rehnquist maneuvered Justice O'Connor off the court ahead of him, leaving a vacancy to be filled by Roberts, his former clerk.
Streibeigh writes, “One might supposed that the gender of judges no longer shapes judgments about gender. But during the last three decades of the twentieth century, that supposition proved often false. Men in law fought to avoid looking closely at discrimination. Men in law fought to penalize pregnant women at work. Men in law fought to permit their firms to discriminate against women. Men in law saw sexual harassment at normal conditions of employment. Men in law cut away the legal power of Congress to curtail violence against women. Men in law then gained an increased majority on the court.”
Male presidents and senators allowed that to happen, he points out, writing before Justice Sonia Sotomayor ascended to the bench, appointed by President Barack Obama. “Voters can vote for equality.”

Friday, April 30, 2010

More good news for women partners

Forbes has reported that a new study shows that not only is it hard for a woman to make partner, its hard to stay there. The joint study, conducted by the Minority Corporate Counsel Association, the ABA Commission on Women in the Profession, and the Project for Attorney Retention, surveyed 700 female lawyer at regional and international law firms. According to the study, the majority of women who had made it partner had to attain the position by making a lateral jump to another firm--few were promoted from within.
It also reported that 9 percent of the woman partners lost their equity stakes.
The solution, according to Forbes--more women at the top. Sounds like a vicious cycle to me.

Thursday, April 29, 2010

Myra Bradwell award goes to Mary Vasaly


Minnesota Women Lawyers has made an outstanding choice with its decision to present its highest honor, the Myra Bradwell Award, to its past president Mary Vasaly.
The award is presented to an MWL member who expresses the highest ideals of the legal profession and who possesses the qualities exemplified by Myra Bradwell such as courage, perseverance, and leadership on issues of concern to women. Bradwell went before the U.S. Supreme Court in an attempt to be admitted to the practice of law, which the court denied. Bradwell was admitted a few years later in Illinois.
Vasaly is also the former president of the Hennepin County Bar Association and a founding member of the Infinity Project. The award will be presented at MWL’s annual meeting in May.

Friday, April 23, 2010

Toobin predicts Kagan will get SCOTUS nod

Last night's Law Day dinner, sponsored by the Fund for Legal Aid, was a boffo hit featuring Garrison Keillor, who talked about Don and Arvonne Fraser, and journalist Jeffrey Toobin, who covers the Supreme Court and is the author of "The Nine." In good news for readers of Woman, Esq., Toobin predicted that the next Supreme Court nominee would be Solicitor General Elena Kagan, and then after her, Janet Napolitano, Secretary of Homeland Security. That will make for interesting discussions, Toobin said, since Napolitano used to be Anita Hill's attorney. He also said that if Minnesota would elect a Democratic governor, Amy Klobuchar would be in the running. I think he was serious, although Klobuchar was in the audience and Toobin also remarked, "Nobody panders like I do."

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

New Title IX Changes

The following is a post by Erin Davenport, an associate at Dorsey & Whitney:

Today, the Obama administration will reverse a Bush-administration policy regarding Title IX, which governs gender equity in athletics. Under Title IX, universities show their compliance with the law in three ways: (1) the number of male and female athletes are proportional to the university’s enrollment, (2) the university is expanding the athletic opportunities on campus, or (3) the university is meeting the interests and abilities of female students on campus. The third option initially required the consideration of several factors, but the policy changed under the Bush administration. The change allowed universities to meet the third option by using a model survey. Additionally, no response to the survey was allowed to be considered as a disinterest in athletics. The NCAA opposed the Bush administration policy.

With today’s announcement, using only the model survey will no longer be sufficient to show Title IX compliance. Universities can still use surveys but must provide additional information to prove that they are meeting students’ interests. The universities also cannot use students’ lack of response to a survey as an indicator of disinterest in athletics.

Although some disagree with changing the policy and think that students may not express their opinions, others think that the new policy will help female students. Perhaps, those in opposition are correct that students will not express their opinions under the new policy and that the administration assumes that it can gauge the level of interest better than students. Allowing a lack of response to a survey, however, to be considered a disinterest in sports is not an accurate indicator. Students have busy lives and may forget to complete the survey – especially when most people receive a large volume of email on a daily, if not hourly, basis. The new policy does not ban surveys as a tool; rather, the new policy merely wants universities to use multiple indicators, which could include the survey, to provide a balanced perspective. Thus, students could still have a voice in what athletics they are interested in if the university uses the survey. Ensuring female participation in athletics helps women realize their potential and may provide them with educational opportunities that they might not have had through athletic scholarships. This new policy likely will ensure that female athletes have an equal opportunity to participate in athletics of their interest and allow students’ voices to be heard.

Friday, April 16, 2010

Rumors that Kagan is a lesbian should be ignored, not disputed

Apparently rumors are circulating that Elena Kagan, the solicitor general who is widely viewed as a front-runner for Justice Stevens’ seat on the bench, is a lesbian. The response to this “news” should be a big yawn, but that’s not the real world. The first blog posting that Kagan is a lesbian was made by a Republican, so it wasn’t intended to be neutral information.

The White House, instead of saying, "so what," responded by asking CBS to pull a report on the blog posting because it made “false charges,” which the network eventually did . Not sure that really made the situation any better. What if the White House said, “Really? Who cares?” We don’t live in that society yet, but we have to take steps to get there. Might as well start here.

Equal: Women judges to the rescue

More posts from Equal. See the last one here.


24. Seeking Equal Judicial Firepower

VAWA turned to the National Association of Women Judges, which had pioneered research into gender bias in the court system, not only from judges but from male attorneys. They took their work back to their states, sometimes to the chagrin of their male colleagues. New Jersey was first, followed rapidly by other states, including Minnesota. Slowly, the federal courts became involved. “Nourse [recognized] the potential power of almost a decade of surveys and investigations into judicial gender bias led by America's National Association of Women Judges.”

25. Women Judges to the Rescue.

The National Association of Women Judges was led by Minnesota Hennepin County District Court Judge Cara Lee Neville at the time NAWJ agreed to back VAWA. It stood at the intersection of the judiciary, led by Rehnquist, and the young women lawyers who supported VAWA. After the association voted to support VAWA, Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals Judge Mary Schroeder and University of Southern California Law School Professor Judith Resnick were two influential women who threw their influence toward VAWA and got the resolution supporting it passed prior to the ABA annual meeting where the ABA Judicial Administration Division was expected to attack it. NAWJ supported four parts of VAWA as written, and supported the civil rights provision if it was narrowly tailored to cases where a federal forum was necessary and appropriate. This wording would give Judge Norma Shapiro, a member of the ABA house of Delegates and the Judicial Administration Division, a chance to influence the division to accept the women judges language regarding a civil remedy. Judge Schroeder would work on tailoring the civil rights language.

Right before the climactic ABA meeting, Justice Sandra Day O'Connor addressed the Ninth Circuit Judicial Conference and told them to think more expansively about the reach and responsibility of the federal courts in addressing discrimination against women.

The ABA seemed poised to vote against VAWA, even thought the Board of Governors supported it, when attorney Brooksley Born, chair of the ABA standing committee on the federal judiciary, told the House of Delegates this would be the first time the ABA opposed civil rights legislation. In the end, the judicial administration was defeated and VAWA had survived its worst moment en route to Congress.

Then, in 1993, in a move that many saw as miraculous, the Judicial Conference reversed course from Rehnquist and shifted from opposition to VAWA to no position, opening the way for moderate judges to push for an acceptable and constitutional civil rights law for women. Judges began to see that closing the courthouse doors to women was not good for the judiciary.

A final challenge to VAWA came in meeting the concerns of judges by narrowing the scope of the civil rights provision but still affording the remedy that Nourse and the others involved with the bill sought. They wanted to draw on legal precedent but avoid the obstacles created in the 1880s civil rights cases and the early pregnancy cases. Eventually they reached the definition of crimes that VAWA covered: crimes committed because of gender or or the basis of gender and due, at least in part, to an animus based on the victim's gender. VAWA became law on Sept. 13, 1994.

Avoid engagement right catfights if you want the job

The What Not to Wear Fashion Show recently held in Chicago attracted all sorts of blogosphere attention. I’m a person who still wears pantyhose (when I can find them in stores) so I’m not the best to comment on the overly-casual dress I see everywhere that irritates me to death. Still, isn’t this kind of weird advice to job seekers: “do not wear your engagement ring if it is large because it may anger your women interviewers and cause jealousy (and perhaps rage).” Apparently that is advice from a woman lawyer.
However, this is my favorite comment and one I kind of agree with, although I haven’t been in Express in years (it’s not for the 50-something). “Maybe you bought your suit at Express or somewhere… and you bent over to get a Danish and I can see your tramp stamp.” Click here for Above the Law’s full coverage.

Monday, April 12, 2010

MWL Supports Retention Elections

The following is an update from Kelly Francis on MWL's recent public policy decisions:

At MWL's March Board meeting, the Board of Directors voted to support legislation proposing a constitutional amendment to move from contested judicial elections to retention elections. The proposed amendment stemmed from the recommendations of the Quie Commission, a group tasked with evaluating the potential ramifications of recent Supreme Court decisions on impartiality in Minnesota courts. In particular, the Commission was concerned that political and financial influences that had previously been restricted would start to interfere with judicial elections and outcomes. The resulting bills, SF70 and HF224, would change our current election process to an appointment and retention system with a Performance Evaluation Commission to evaluate appointed judges' qualifications.

The Board of Directors also voted to add MWL to the Coalition for Impartial Justice as a supporter of the pending legislation. The Coalition for Impartial Justice currently consists of 27 supporting organizations, both legal and non-legal.

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

National bar association recognizes Infinity Project

The Infinity Project has been awarded The 2010 Public Service Award by the National Conference of Women’s Bar Associations (NCWBA).

The Infinity Project was started in 2008 by Minneapolis lawyers Lisa Brabbit, Mary Vasaly and Marie Failinger; along with Sally Kenney of the University of Minnesota, to promote gender diversity on the Eighth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

“We share this award with all of you, our supporters and organizers. Thanks to Minnesota Women Lawyers who nominated the project and to all of you for your commitment to the mission,” said Brabbit, who now serves as Infinity’s president.

The Public Service Awards, first presented in 1985, recognize programs of member women’s bar associations which serve the wider community. The purpose of the awards is both to honor the work of the organizations selected and to inspire other women’s bar groups to consider creating similar programs in their own associations and communities.

The award will be presented at a luncheon during the 2010 Women’s Bar Leader Summit, Transforming Law, Transforming Lives, to be held on Friday, August 6th in San Francisco at Golden Gate University School of Law.
More information about the Infinity Project is available at http://www.hhh.umn.edu/centers/wpp/infinity/

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Another Country's Struggle for Equality

Although it is clear that the playing-field is not yet level for American women pursing legal careers, at least we are allowed on the field.

A good reminder of all the opportunities that women have in this country is a news story posted just today on Arab News.com: Women Lawyers Face Difficulty in Pursuing Careers.

The story talks about the difficulties facing all lawyers in the Saudi kingdom, but emphasizes how women are probably the worst off because they are not hired for necessary training jobs at firms.

“Women lawyers are not welcome in the Kingdom’s courts at all,” [one woman] said, adding that as a result she is forced to operate through male representative.

Instead of having the job opportunities available to male law school graduates, most women specialize in contracts or real estate, or work for the government.

Monday, February 8, 2010

MWL Winter Event

Save the date! MWL's 2010 Winter Celebration is taking place on Tuesday, March 16th, 2010. The celebration will feature dinner, a silent auction, and a keynote address given by Civil Rights Attorney and Harvard's first tenured black woman professor Lani Guinier.

Registration and information can be found here. This appears to be a speaker you will not want to miss--her credentials and publications sound absolutely fascinating:

In 1998, Professor Guinier became the first black woman to be appointed to a tenured professorship at Harvard Law School. Before joining the faculty at Harvard, she was a tenured professor for ten years at the University of Pennsylvania Law School.

Ms. Guinier came to public attention when she was nominated by President Bill Clinton in 1993 to head the Civil Rights Division of the Department of Justice, only to have her name withdrawn without a confirmation hearing. Ms. Guinier turned that incident into a powerful personal and political memoir, Lift Every Voice: Turning a Civil Rights Setback into a New Vision of Social Justice.

While a member of the faculty of the University of Pennsylvania Law School, Ms. Guinier investigated the experience of women in law school, leading to the publication of a book, Becoming Gentlemen: Women, Law School and Institutional Change. She and her co-authors found that women were not graduating with top honors, although women and men came to the school with virtually identical credentials.

The author of many articles and op-ed pieces on democratic theory, political representation, educational equity, and issues of race and gender, Ms. Guinier has written The Tyranny of the Majority (Free Press, 1994) about issues of political representation; Who’s Qualified? (Beacon Press, 2001) written with Susan Sturm about moving beyond affirmative action to reconsider the ways in which colleges admit all students; and The Miner’s Canary (Harvard Press, 2002), written with Gerald Torres about the experience of people of color as a warning or “canary” signaling larger institutional inequities.

A graduate of Radcliffe College of Harvard University and Yale Law School, Ms. Guinier has received numerous awards, including the 1995 Margaret Brent Women Lawyers of Achievement Award from the American Bar Association’s Commission on Women in the Profession.

Thursday, January 28, 2010

Equal: Judges strike back, and then strike back again


I just realized how long it's been since I posted a chapter of Equal. My apologies.
Here's two, to make up for it.

23. Judges Strike Back

Chief Justice William Rehnquist's attacks on women's rights were not unusual, which was why his opinion in Vinson was a surprise. But they usually were contained in judicial opinions. But in 1991, Rehnquist attacked VAWA in his year-end report. VAWA would involve the federal courts in a host of domestic disputes, add to the caseload crisis, and degrade the high quality of the federal courts. Only congressional action vital to meeting important national interests was appropriate, which did not include violence against women.

At the time, O'COnnor was the only Supreme Court woman justice; 9 percent of the Courts of Appeals judges were women and fewer than 7 percent of the federal trial judges were women. More than half the district courts had no women judges.

The Conference of Chief Judges of the state supreme courts opposed the civil rights provision as well. Then, a federal judicial impact assessment suggested that VAWA would damage the judiciary, apparently because violence was so pervasive that the courts would be flooded with claims. The need for the law meant the law should be opposed.

Rehnquist formed an ad hoc committee on gender-based violence to prepare a resolution for the Judicial Conference of the United States. Two women judges were appointed to the committee. The committee met with Nourse and was reassured that VAWA would not flood the federal courts, but the Judicial Conference disregarded this assurance and claimed the impact of the law would be more than 20 times greater than the original judicial impact assessment.

In doing so, the judges arguably were going beyond lobbying against legislation but interpreting in opposition to the stated intent of its drafters and before it was considered by Congress. These events coincided with the confirmation hearings of Clarence Thomas, which Biden was conducting.

Rehnquist continued his attack of VAWA on the grounds of federalism, again arguing that the federal courts limited role should be reserved for important national issues. He and other judges began to lobby the ABA to oppose VAWA's civil rights actions.

At a Congressional hearing sponsored by Rep. Chuck Schumer, chair of the House subcommittee on crime and criminal justice, Biden took on the chief justice. He told them that one of the judges in the ad hoc committee had said, in response to a comparison between VAWA and civil righs laws protecting African-Americans, “I wouldn't do it for black folks either.” Biden was challenging the committee to explain the difference between race discrimination and sex discrimination.

24, Seeking Equal Judicial Firepower

VAWA turned to the National Association of Women Judges, which had pioneered research into gender bias in the court system, not only from judges but from male attorneys. They took their work back to their states, sometimes to the chagrin of their male colleagues. New Jersey was first, followed rapidly by other states, including Minnesota. Slowly, the federal courts became involved. “Nourse [recognized] the potential power of almost a decade of surveys and investigations into judicial gender bias led by America's National Association of Women Judges.”

Remembering Angie McCaffrey


The legal community and I lost a friend last night. Professor Angela McCaffrey, director of clinics at Hamline University School of Law, died from ovarian cancer. She was a kind and gentle soul, a loyal friend to Legal Aid, and an inspiration to law students. As the director of legal clinics at Hamline, she was an advocate for the poor and voiceless.

Anglie was married to Assistant Hennepin County Public Defender Mark Cosimini, and mother to Charlie and Michael. Her mother survived the war in Hitler's Germany, and Angie once told me her mom mopped up blood in concentration camps. She was, understandably, an advocate of non-violence and the sort of person who loved origami birds that symbolized peace. She liked to go hear Mark play the blues and she liked to play bridge with us – although not as much as she liked staying home with her kids in the evenings, so we didn't see enough of her. During her cancer treatment her hair came back in very curly, and she thought that was “wild.”


She was not somebody the legal profession, or the world, can afford to lose.

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Reflections on a SmartTalk

On Monday, hundreds of Minnesota women (and maybe a few men) gathered at Orchestra Hall as the Minneapolis SmartTalk series got underway.

SmartTalk is a lecture series held once a month for the first five months of the year. The mission "stems from the idea that women are inspired by the heart and voice of other remarkable women." The lectures feature about 45 minutes of speech and then 45 minutes of question-and-answer.

The first speaker was former First Lady Laura Bush. Her topic: Life at and after the White House. All politics aside was the theme of the night. Her down-to-earth personality and easy-going nature allowed the audience to really think: what would it be like to live in the White House? How does such a life-altering experience ever allow you to feel at peace?

And even though you had to wonder if Laura Bush had really ever had a normal life once marrying the former President, with the Bush family's heavy involvement with high-stake politics, it made you realize that no matter where you live, certain things, like family, children, and love, always take the top priority.

While the talk may not have inspired all to go out and change the world, that might be the exact point. No matter how much of our lives we dedicate to changing the world, it is the close relationships with others that truly shape the world around us.

Monday, January 18, 2010

The Tragic Endings Continue

This morning's Star Tribune features a report on Minnesota's latest domestic dispute to end in tragedy. Three people were found dead on Sunday in a farmhouse in the southern part of the state.

The tribune was able to discover that the people were a 25-year-old woman, her stepfather, and a 28-year-old man who had been charged with assaulting the woman in December. The man, Shaun Haugen, had been released from the local jail just last Thursday after having violated the no contact order.

The tribune reports that this is at least the third such incident in recent months, and further states that:

In 2008, 3,119 of the 10,798 protective orders issued in Minnesota were violated. In 2007, there were 3,365 violations of the 11,374 orders filed. The first violation of an order is a misdemeanor. A second is a gross misdemeanor, and a third is a felony.

One quick Google search lead to one potential thought--tailoring protective orders or security measures when some of the more serious factors are present in a woman's request for a protective order. One study found that two huge indicators of protective order violations and further abuse is any continuing relationship once the order is issued, and any patterns of stalking. Although the courts are already stretched thin on domestic abuse work, there may need to be one extra step in the issuance of such orders to prevent the tragic endings that have been occurring with more and more frequency.

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Sotomayor profile: She thought she deserved to be a Supreme Court justice

The New Yorker has a really interesting piece on Sonia Sotomayor. I like this story:

Not every senator was charmed by Sotomayor. The day she broke her ankle, she kept an appointment with Senator David Vitter, a Republican from Louisiana. Vitter, Sotomayor later told a friend, was unwelcoming. As they were finishing their meeting, Vitter said, “I want to ask you—do you think if I was you, and I had made the wise-Latina comment that you made, that I would have deserved to be a Supreme Court Justice?”

Sotomayor replied, “If you had my record, yes.”



Read more: http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2010/01/11/100111fa_fact_collins?currentPage=4#ixzz0cRQd2AS7

Monday, January 4, 2010

ATL readers react with cruelty to sex discrimination filing

Above the Law has a post about lawyer Julie Kamps suing the Big Law firm of Fried Frank for sex discrimination. She worked there as an associate for 10 years, was repeatedly promised partnership, and then was fired. Now she is suing for sex discrimination, claiming sexual harassment. Although what I've read of the complaint is melodramatic and could use a good edit, it sounds like a sad story. What is really annoying, however, are the personal comments. (Annoying, but not surprising. I read them in order to get blog fodder.) "Ugh, look at her. Nobody is going to sexually harass that. I would make her wear a burqua if she worked in my office." Nice. What is the matter with these ATL readers?