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Sonia Sotomayor BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

In the flurry of late November 2025 headlines, Sonia Sotomayor stands resolute as the senior liberal voice on the Supreme Court, garnering national attention both for her fiery dissents and unmistakable presence in the public square. Just this week, she captured the spotlight on CBS’s “Late Show with Stephen Colbert,” where her line “We should not have to live in a country where the government can seize anyone who looks Latino, speaks Spanish and appears to work in a low-wage job. Rather than stand idly by while our Constitutional freedoms are lost, I dissent,” electrified the audience and earned a rare standing ovation, underscoring her growing status as a cultural icon. ABC News and NBC also featured her in high-profile segments this fall, as she promoted her new children’s book and responded to questions about constitutional freedoms.

Moving from television to the bench, the justice’s recent opinions have been anything but quiet. According to the Philadelphia Inquirer, Sotomayor has sounded repeated alarms over the Supreme Court’s deference to executive power. Her dissents—often in concert with Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson—warn that no right is safe if the Court continues to restrict the judiciary’s power to check presidential authority, a view she articulated in scathing terms over emergency docket decisions and border enforcement cases. In late October and early November, she slammed what she described as the Court ‘rewarding lawlessness’ in immigration matters, as reported by AOL, and lambasted the use of legal technicalities to undermine constitutional protections for vulnerable immigrants. Further, in the latest oral arguments highlighted by Forbes and SCOTUSblog, she grilled attorneys on reducing prisoner sentences, reinforcing her reputation for pressing hard on civil rights and due process.

If all that weren’t enough, she’s been making waves on the lecture circuit. This fall, Sotomayor spoke with students and faculty at Howard University and Boston University, read children’s stories at the University of Vermont, and appeared nationwide promoting not only legal ideals but her own inspirational trajectory. FixTheCourt states she recently met with civil rights legend Dolores Huerta and renowned cartoonist Lalo Alcaraz at the Supreme Court, and in early November, made headlines in the Dominican Republic, where she shared a stage with President Luis Abinader and King Felipe VI of Spain.

On social media, clips of her Colbert moment and snippets from her public appearances circulate widely, fueling both admiration and debate, though no major controversies or unverified scandals have emerged. As speculation mounts about the long-term significance of her increasingly vocal dissents for the direction of the Court—and American democracy—her words are reverberating well beyond One First Street, transfixing a nation wrestling with fundamental questions about law and liberty.

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