
By: Josh Gerstein and Carol E. Lee
May 29, 2009 03:50 PM EST
The White House moved Friday to try to tamp down a swirling controversy over a 2001 speech in which Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor suggested that Hispanic women make better judges than white men.
“I think she’d say that her word choice in 2001 was poor,” Press Secretary Robert Gibbs told reporters at a daily briefing. “She was simply making the point that personal experiences are relevant to the process of judging, that your personal experiences make you—have a tendency to make you more aware of certain facts in certain cases, that your experiences impact your understanding.”
“I think we all agree with that. And that on a court that's collegial…that it can help others that are trying to wrestle with the facts of those cases,” he said.
Gibbs was clearly prepared for questions about the remark, which some Sotomayor critics have seized on to call her a racist. The president’s spokesman lashed out at some of the critics and read quotes he had with him on the podium in which justices Samuel A. Alito and Ruth Bader Ginsburg described how their backgrounds informed their work as judges.
Sotomayor’s provocative comment came in a lengthy address she gave to a University of California, Berkeley conference on Latinos in the judiciary.
“I would hope that a wise Latina woman with the richness of her experiences would more often than not reach a better conclusion than a white male who hasn’t lived that life,” said Sotomayor, whose parents came from Puerto Rico.
However, some Democrats and political strategists told POLITICO Thursday that the White House needed to do more to tamp down the flap over the remarks. Some observers said Sotomayor herself should speak out, while others said the White House or a senator who might speak with her could clarify her earlier comments.On Friday, Gibbs seemed to take some of that advice by dropping the out-of-context argument and walking back the judge’s use of the comparative term “better.”
“If she had the speech to do all over again, I think she’d change that word,” Gibbs said, in response to questions from POLITICO. As he concluded his briefing, Gibbs said he knew that Sotomayor has said that herself “in discussions with people.”
“With who?” reporters asked.
“People that have talked to her,” Gibbs said as he left the briefing room.
...
http://dyn.politico.com/printstory.cfm?uuid=8D991B36-18FE-70B2-A8CF6AE2B2A915EC