Justice Sotomayor admits she cries in her office after some Supreme Court decisions
There are days when the Supreme Court releases opinions that Justice Sonia Sotomayor goes into her office, closes the door, and cries, she said while describing the frustration of being one of three liberal justices on the court.
“There are moments when I’m deeply, deeply sad,” she told a crowd at the Radcliffe Institute at Harvard University on Friday – not specifying what decisions have evoked that feeling.
Justice Sotomayor, one of the three liberal justices on the court, was being honored with a Radcliffe Medal for her “commitment to excellence, inclusion, and social impact.” As part of the program, she had a public conversation with her former law school classmate where she spoke about the challenges of being on the court.
“There are moments when, yes, even I feel desperation. We all do. But you have to own it, you have to accept it, you have to shed the tears and then you have to wipe them and get up,” Justice Sotomayor said.
Over the last few years, Justice Sotomayor has found herself in the minority opinion over and over again – especially on major decisions like abortion, racial gerrymandering, criminal justice reform and LGBT+ rights.
In more recent decisions, Justice Sotomayor and her colleagues, Justice Elena Kagan and Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, have used their dissenting opinions to deliver scathing condemnation of the conservatives’ rationale.
Last year, Justice Sotomayor calledthe court’s decisions on affirmative action an “unjustified exercise of power” that “will serve only to highlight the Court’s own impotence in the face of an American who cries for equality resound” in her dissent.
Publicly, she also expressed disappointment about the court’s opinion of various decisions.
She told students at the