Speaking at an annual event for the liberal American Constitution Society Thursday evening, Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor shared what it was like to grow up in public housing in the Bronx, the importance of diversity on the bench, and concerns that income inequality could lead to fewer poor children having the opportunities she had.
“We’re going backwards, with the rising cost of education,” Sotomayor said to Theodore Shaw, a longtime friend and former head of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund. “There’s a lot more kids, and I’m not talking just about kids of our background, but kids across the spectrum who no longer have a hope of attending the schools we did.”
“As the wealth difference grows, we’re going to, I suspect have many of the problems other countries have, the unrest other countries have,” Sotomayor said.
Sotomayor, who was appointed to the high court by President Barack Obama in 2010, has spoken openly about her childhood poverty in the Bronx and the way it has shaped her career and her understanding of the law. Liberals have touted her background as an American success story and an asset to the court, conservatives have caricatured her as an affirmative action pick whose identity politics impair her legal judgements. Particularly controversial was Sotomayor’s scorching dissent in a recent affirmative action case, in which she wrote that her conservative colleagues were “out of touch with reality” of racism in America.
Sotomayor said someone had recently asked her about that dissent, and the questioner wondered why Sotomayor couldn’t “separate” herself from her life experiences.









