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"On these sensitive high-stakes political issues, it's always a very delicate matter in the selection process
-- no president wants to have a litmus test," said Emma Coleman Jordan, a Georgetown University law professor and former Justice Department official who worked on Sandra Day O'Connor's 1981 nomination to the high court. "There are ways to determine inclinations, but not through crude, direct questioning. ... The process is not as hamhandedly political as the interest groups try to make it out to be," Jordan said. Obama's own pro-abortion rights stance has led many to assume that his chosen nominee would feel the same, but there's a history of presidents being unpleasantly surprised by their Supreme Court choices' positions. Retiring Justice David H. Souter, whom Sotomayor would replace if confirmed, was named by former President George H. W. Bush and was widely expected to support overturning Roe, but in 1992 he sided with a majority to uphold abortion rights. Sotomayor's decisions give little clue about her views on the subject, although she has issued two rulings on unrelated legal issues whose results favored abortion rights opponents. In 2002, she dismissed a challenge by an abortion rights group to the so-called "Mexico City" policy of denying federal funding to organizations that provide or promote abortions. Two years later, she ruled that abortion rights protesters who had unsuccessfully tried to sue Hartford police officers for using excessive force against them should, in fact, get to go to court. Neither case turned on the key questions of reproductive rights, privacy or Roe itself. Some abortion rights supporters say they take heart in Sotomayor's reputation as a judge who respects precedent and exercises restraint in her rulings
-- a reputation the White House has worked hard to bolster. "We're hoping and counting on her respect for past legal precedent as an encouraging sign, but we don't have any direct evidence," said Doug Laube of Physicians for Reproductive Rights. "Sure we're concerned, and I think most people who are on our side ... are concerned, but we're happy to take a wait-and-see attitude." Conservatives, for their part, say there's at least a chance Sotomayor could be on their side. "There's always the hope that she could be truly Justice Souter's opposite," said Yoest of Americans United for Life. "It gives me some consolation that they're concerned."
[Associated
Press;
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