baltimoresun.com

« Franchot files for re-election, not taking anything for granted | Main | Poll: Mikulski, O'Malley have solid job approval ratings; O'Malley would top Ehrlich or Steele in 2010 »

September 18, 2009

Cardin keeps promise to Sotomayor, Orioles still lose

soto%20photo%20smaller.JPG

 

 

Back in July, at a Senate confirmation hearing for Sonia Sotomayor, Sen. Ben Cardin of Maryland invited the judge to be his guest at an Orioles game. Sotomayor, a Bronx native and big Yankees fan, responded by revealing that she had already been to the Yards--presumably to root for her pinstriped heroes from New York.

As a federal appeals judge, Sotomayor was briefly famous for ending a baseball strike in 1995 (ruling in favor of the players and against the owners). That was the year Cal Ripken became immortal as the Iron Man, and Cardin thanked Sotomayor, on behalf of Orioles fans, for making it possible for him to set his record.

Last night, Cardin made good on the offer to Sotomayor, who became the first Latina Supreme Court justice to sit in a skybox at Camden Yards (the Maryland Stadium Authority's box, for those keeping score at home). As the Democratic senator had promised, it wasn't a night when the Yankees were in town, so Sotomayor was free to root for the home team.

Not that it made much difference. The O's,eight games under .500 on the mid-July day that Cardin extended the invite, went down to defeat again. They're now 26 games below .500, the second worst record in the American League, and are enduring their twelfth straight losing season under the ownership, it must be noted, of a personal injury lawyer.

Justice Sotomayor, meantime, boasts a still spotless record on the bench where she now sits. She's 0-0 in court decisions, having heard arguments in only one case, which has yet to be decided.

Posted by Paul West at 5:31 PM | | Comments (3)
        

Comments

So every time she does something, are we going to have to read "the first Latina Supreme Court justice to do X?"

How unbelievably asinine.

Your inability to pick up on sarcasm is pretty asinine as well.

Your inability to pick up on sarcasm is pretty asinine as well.

Post a comment

All comments must be approved by the blog author. Please do not resubmit comments if they do not immediately appear. You are not required to use your full name when posting, but you should use a real e-mail address. Comments may be republished in print, but we will not publish your e-mail address. Our full Terms of Service are available here.

Please enter the letter "z" in the field below:
About the bloggers
Laura Smitherman has been ensconced in the State House basement, writing about the governor, General Assembly and vagaries of Maryland politics for several years. An erstwhile business reporter, her interest in politics dates to her days in Washington when she covered Congress and national campaigns for another media outlet. She now follows a range of policy debates from slot-machine gambling to universal health care and energy regulation, while keeping an eye on the next election.

Paul West covers Washington for The Baltimore Sun, continuing a tradition that began the month the paper was born, in 1837. He hasn't been in the DC bureau that long--only since Ronald Reagan was president. He's covered Congress, the White House and presidential campaigns as the paper's national political correspondent and Washington bureau chief. He's on the lookout for news of significance to Sun readers at the other end of the B/W Parkway. That includes the activities of the state's congressional delegation and anything else that might shed some light on the inner workings of the nation's capital.

Julie Bykowicz's first days as a political reporter, in January 2009, coincided with Baltimore Mayor Sheila Dixon's indictment and the start of the Maryland General Assembly's 426th legislative session. She focuses on coverage of state agencies, such as social services, juvenile justice and prisons. During the session, she wrote about the death penalty, slots parlors and speed cameras, among other hot topics. Julie began political reporting after more than seven years on The Baltimore Sun's crime desk. She lives in Baltimore and works primarily in Annapolis.

-- ADVERTISEMENT --

Most Recent Comments
Headlines from The Baltimore Sun
Michael Steele
Coverage of RNC chairman Michael Steele
Photos: Through the years

Local politics news
Photo galleries
Blog updates
Recent updates to baltimoresun.com news blogs
 Subscribe to this feed