Political Hotsheet
May 27, 2009 2:30 AM

WhiteHouse.gov Transparency? Not In Supreme Court Pick

(Pace University)


For an administration that claims to be "the most open and transparent in history," President Obama's nomination of Sonia Sotomayor on Tuesday leaves something to be desired.

The White House posted a reasonably detailed background document on its Web site, which mentions a series of cases that she heard as a judge. But there are no hyperlinks or details.

Among the mentions of specific cases: an injunction against Major League Baseball owners, United States v. Quattrone (dealing with the release of juror's names), United States v. Reimer (an alleged Nazi concentration camp guard), Lin v. Gonzales (a Chinese woman seeking asylum).

White House aides obviously read Sotomayor's opinions as part of their vetting process, so why not post them publicly? Reading the full text of a court opinion gives a much clearer picture of a judge's reasoning than a few excerpted words can, and few average Americans have access to expensive Lexis/Nexis or Westlaw accounts. Plus, it would it be a useful -- and unique -- exercise in civic education.

Fortunately, SCOTUSblog.com partially filled the gap with a summary of some of the judge's appellate opinions in civil cases (#1 and #2).

(By way of background, here's more from CBSNews.com on the Obama administration's transparency efforts at the 100-day mark, and a look at the openness of WhiteHouse.gov.)

Nobody would claim that the White House is necessarily required to post the full text of Sotomayor's opinions. But one might expect "the most open and transparent" presidential administration in history to do it anyway.



Do you approve of President's Obama choice of Sonia Sotomayor for the Supreme Court?
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Tags:
Sonia Sotomayor ,
transparency ,
whitehouse.gov
Topics:
Sonia Sotomayor
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by edwinljones May 27, 2009 5:28 PM EDT
Look at the bottom line, people. While President Obama is being inclusive, the republican right is being divisive. The republican party is dying a slow and painful death. R.I.P.
Reply to this comment
by declanm-2009 May 27, 2009 12:23 PM EDT
Oh, journalists are perfectly capable of doing their own research; here's my own article with analysis of full court opinions:
http://www.cbsnews.com/blogs/2009/05/27/politics/politicalhotsheet/entry5041949.shtml

But why should non-journalists have to pay subscription fees to read court opinions, which should be free and available to the public anyway?
Reply to this comment
by orsands May 27, 2009 6:37 AM EDT
Who wrote this nonsense?
I presume it has always been the job of the journalist to do his/her own background investigations. Since when has that been the responsibility of the White House Staff to do it for you? We realize that for the last 8 years most journalists stopped doing any real investigating and only reported what the Bush administration was spoon feeding them-but seriously folks... one would think that as more and more people move over to getting their news from online sources like Huffington Post that you would be working twice as hard to prove your worth. If the everyday person can do a search for Sotomayor's opinions-then why can't you? It's not like those records are not available.
So instead of throwing a tantrum for not being included on every tiny detail of how Obama came to this decision-why not get off your keister and do some good old time investigation into her background yourself?
Reply to this comment
by Snowhare May 27, 2009 4:10 AM EDT
Come on CBS. This is just complete dribble.
Posted by DefendLiberty

You do your nick no honour!
Comeon, Liberty, nobody needs the whitehouse homepage to be easy for journalists. But what about ordinary citizens.
And the writer of this comment states that the white house doesn't HAVE TO be open.
However, it is true: Obama promised complete openness and doesn't deliver on it.
Hey, Liberty, be at ease! I am absolutely convinced that America coulnd't have a better president than Obama. However, there is no reason not to point out a way how he could be better still.
Reply to this comment
by DefendLiberty May 27, 2009 3:44 AM EDT
THIS MORON (writer) is COMPLAINING because the White House did not provide HYPERLINKS to make his research easier? That is his ENTIRE COMPLAINT. WHAT A PATHETIC FOOL.

WHAT EDITOR AT CBS allowed this TRIPE to be published? it is a JOKE and it TRIVIALIZES the issue of transparency. I mean, WHO THE HELL PAID THIS WRITER TO WRITE THIS GARBAGE?

Does ANYBODY at CBS edit this stuff? How about some REAL ARTICLES ABOUT THE REAL ISSUE OF TRANSPARENCY?

Come on CBS. This is just complete dribble.
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