![[WSJ.com]](../../images/print-wsjie.gif)
July 9, 2001
Review & Outlook
The Liberal Hacienda
Here's today's political diversity quiz: When is an Hispanic-American not
really Hispanic?
Answer: When he's one of President Bush's potential nominees to the U.S.
Supreme Court.
We're referring to 39-year-old Miguel Estrada, who immigrated from Honduras
at age 17, taught himself English, graduated from Harvard Law, argued cases
before the Supreme Court as a deputy in the U.S. Solicitor General's office
and is now a private attorney. Mr. Bush has nominated him for a seat on the
prestigious D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals.
This sounds like an American success story to us. But to some Hispanic
liberals, ideology is thicker than skin pigment. You see, Mr. Estrada is a
judicial conservative, which means he's the wrong kind of diversity hire.
We came across this splendid logic in a letter that deserves more exposure.
It's addressed to Pat Leahy, the new chairman of the Senate Judiciary
Committee, from the Puerto Rican Legal Defense and Education Fund, or PRLDEF.
"As one of the leading legal organizations based in the Hispanic community, we
are extremely concerned about Mr. Estrada's nomination," says the letter.
Why? Well, PRLDEF and its president, Juan Figueroa, don't yet know enough
about Mr. Estrada to say. "Our investigation," says the letter, "is difficult
and proceeding slowly because this nominee has not reduced his opinions to
writing."
But give them time. Mr. Figueroa's letter says he has received "reports"
about "the nominee's ultra-conservative views." And these reports, though
lacking any specifics, suggest he is "totally insensitive to the interests,
views and concerns of Hispanics and other minorities in our nation."
The letter continues, again without evidence, that "We have reason to
believe that Mr. Estrada may not have the compassion, open mindedness,
sensitivity, courtesy, patience and freedom from bias," yada, yada, yada. In
short, PRLDEF wants Mr. Leahy to make Mr. Estrada his first judicial pinata.
We called Mr. Figueroa to make sure he was of sound mind when he wrote
this, and apparently so. Mr. Estrada doesn't belong to any of the usual
liberal Latino groups, Mr. Figueroa told us. Instead he belongs to the
Federalist Society, a group of conservative-leaning lawyers that sponsors
conferences. "I don't think Latinos have been generally known to be
conservative," he said.
So there it is. The only real Latino is a liberal Latino. We wonder what
other Hispanic Americans think of this, for example the 61% of them who are
pro-life, according to a recent Zogby poll? Or the 80% of them who favor
school choice? Maybe it's PRLDEF, with its liberal intolerance, that is out of
the Hispanic mainstream.
Not that we know or care what Mr. Estrada believes on these matters. We do
know that, although he supports the death penalty, he donated 450 hours to try
and spare the life of a condemned murderer in Virginia. And we know that
despite his conservatism he represented the National Organization for Women in
a case seeking to use the RICO statute against anti-abortion protesters. He
won, alas.
But these signs of legal independence don't matter to today's judicial
left. They've reduced the law to a scramble for power. Diversity is a tool to
be exploited when it's useful but discarded when it's not.
It'd be nice to think Mr. Leahy would rise above this debased politics and
give Mr. Estrada an early hearing and vote. But don't hold your breath. Senate
Democrats don't want to publicly oppose a Hispanic nominee, but they also
don't want to confirm a conservative who's a plausible candidate for the
Supreme Court once he's on the D.C. Circuit. We hope Mr. Bush makes the fair
treatment of his nominees, Hispanic and otherwise, an issue.
URL for this Article:
http://interactive.wsj.com/archive/retrieve.cgi?id=SB994623552316587841.djm