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Wilfredo Lee/AP
Federal appeals court Judge Barbara Lagoa is high on President Trump’s list of potential nominees for the Supreme Court seat left open by the death of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg.
Although she has been a federal judge for less than a year, Lagoa’s background and judicial philosophy are attractive qualities for the president and conservatives. She’s Cuban-American and speaks fluent Spanish; she’s a conservative Catholic, thus appealing to an important religious constituency; and perhaps most important of all, she is from Florida, a pivotal state in the upcoming presidential election.
“She’s excellent,” Trump said on Fox News on Monday. “She’s Hispanic. She’s a terrific woman from everything I know … [but] I don’t know her. Florida — we love Florida.”
Daughter of refugees
The 52-year-old Lagoa is the daughter of parents who fled Fidel Castro’s communist regime in 1966, after the Communist revolution. She got her law degree from Columbia in 1992, and she practiced law in Miami for 10 years before, representing, pro bono, the Miami relative of Elián González in 2000.
Gonzalez was the 5-year-old boy found floating in the ocean after his mother and others drowned while trying to flee to the United States.
Elián’s father then sought to return the child to his custody in Cuba; Lagoa represented other relatives in Cuba who sought, unsuccessfully, to block his return.
The political flap over Gonzalez’s case highlighted tensions over federal power in the United States and the political influence of the Cuban-American community in South Florida. Republicans sought, and continue to seek, support there by promising a tough policy against Havana.
Florida Supreme Court
In 2006, then-Gov. Jeb Bush appointed Lagoa to a state’s appellate court for the 3rd District in Miami, where she served for 13 years, rising briefly to chief judge.
In 2019, newly elected Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis appointed her to the Florida Supreme Court, on which Lagoa was the first Latina. She served for less than a year before being nominated by President Trump to the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals in Atlanta later that year same year.
During her 11 months on the 11th Circuit, she has written just seven opinions, the fewest of all of her colleagues during that same period.
Recusal controversy
Lagoa pledged in her U.S. Senate confirmation hearing that she would recuse herself from any case in which she had participated as a judge. At the time she was not viewed as a particularly controversial nominee and she was confirmed by a vote of 80 to to 15.
Once on the federal court, however, Lagoa did not recuse herself from a case that she had heard while on the Florida Supreme Court. Though she was gone from the state court by the time the advisory opinion in the case was issued, judicial ethics rules require a judge to recuse herself if she has previously participated in any “proceeding” at “any stage of litigation.”
The case was a consequential one. It involved a Florida referendum, passed by a large majority of Florida voters in 2018, that amended the state constitution and restored the right to vote to more than a million ex-felons in the state.
The federal courts upheld the measure three times against a law passed by the Republican-dominated state legislature that sought to neuter the constitutional amendment. But the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals, with Lagoa participating, intervened earlier this year to prevent the ex-felons from voting.
That prompted the Democrats on the Senate Judiciary Committee to write a letter asking for an explanation for her apparent contradiction of the pledge she made at her confirmation hearing.
“We ask you to explain how your involvement in the decision … and your continued participation in the case — is consistent with the commitments you made to the Senate Judiciary Committee and the code of conduct,” the 10 Democrats on the committee wrote.
Here’s how The Tampa Bay Times described her position:
“Lagoa and her supporters counter that the cases were technically different — even though the issue was basically the same. While she had heard arguments and commented on the case as a Florida justice, she did not vote on it because she was appointed to the federal bench before the state court ruled.”
Record supporting Republicans
In addition to the controversy over felon rights, Lagoa, per the South Florida Sun Sentinel:
- Upheld Florida Gov. DeSantis’ decision to oust the former Broward County sheriff from office in the wake of the Parkland school shooting.
- “Declined to take up a lower court’s ruling striking down a Miami Beach ordinance that would have raised the city’s minimum wage to more than $13 per hour”
- “Was part of a Supreme Court flip-flop on a foreclosure case that made it harder for homeowners to collect legal fees in disputes with the mortgage industry. With Lagoa’s support, the court reversed a previous decision favoring homeowners on the grounds that it didn’t have jurisdiction over the case”
- “Joined in a ruling that Uber drivers are not entitled to unemployment benefits because they are independent contractors and not employees.”
Lagoa has been a member of the Federalist Society since 1998 and if she were nominated and confirmed, would be another conservative Supreme Court justice who subscribes to “originalism.”
She described the depths of her beliefs in that doctrine in her Senate confirmation hearing.
“If we are not bound by what the Constitution means, and it is ever changing, then we are no different than the country that my parents fled from, which is Cuba,” Lagoa said during her 2019 confirmation hearing.
“Cuba has a constitution and a bill of rights and it means nothing,” she said, “because there is no one to hold it and to say, ‘this is what the definition of this constitution means’ if it is always ever-changing … The principles that were articulated in the [U.S.] Constitution at the time of ratification have a meaning — that meaning is constant.”
Lagoa also said she is not a fan of the philosophy put forward by former President Obama that empathy was important in a judge.
“A judge’s decision must be governed by the law and the facts and cannot be affected by sympathy for one party or another,” she wrote in response to questions from Senate Democrats in 2019 for her confirmation to the federal bench. “That obligation is embodied in the judge’s oath to ‘administer justice without respect to persons’ … Empathy does not supersede a judge’s obligation to follow the law.”
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