RUTH BADER
GINSBURG, 1933-2020
Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg dies at 87
A tireless advocate for gender equality, she became
known as “The Notorious RBG” for her barbed dissents.
By DAVID
COHEN and JOSH GERSTEIN
09/18/2020
07:40 PM EDT
Updated:
09/18/2020 09:58 PM EDT
https://www.politico.com/news/2020/09/18/justice-ruth-bader-ginsburg-034990
Ruth Bader
Ginsburg, an accomplished advocate against gender discrimination who became one
of the most revered justices in U.S. Supreme Court history, has died of
complications related to pancreatic cancer. She was 87.
Only the
second woman to serve on the Supreme Court, Ginsburg wrote some of the Supreme
Court’s most notable opinions on gender discrimination, including the majority
opinion in United States v. Virginia, a 1996 case which opened the Virginia
Military Institute to women.
Ginsburg’s
death seems certain to touch off a political firestorm the likes of which
Washington has not seen in decades by offering President Donald Trump the chance
to fill a third vacancy on the court and cement its conservative majority.
The Trump
administration and its conservative allies lost a smattering of high-profile
cases in the past few years by votes of 5-4 with Chief Justice John Roberts
joining the court’s liberal justices, prompting grousing from conservative
legal activists that — even with two Trump appointees — the court’s rulings
were not reliably conservative.
The opening
of a vacancy with about six weeks to go before the presidential election will
lead lawmakers to revisit arguments about the wisdom and legitimacy of seeking
to confirm a new justice to the court when the presidency could shortly change
hands.
When
Justice Antonin Scalia died in February 2016, Senate Majority Leader Mitch
McConnell quickly announced that he would refuse to entertain any nominee for
the seat from President Barack Obama so that voters could weigh in via the fall
election.
However,
McConnell added a caveat of sorts to his stance, saying that it applied only
when the president and the Senate were controlled by different political
parties. That proviso was little noticed at the time, but he’s expected to rely
on it to move forward with a Trump nominee despite the looming election, even
as Democrats accuse him of a transparent double standard.
Ginsburg
foresaw the political battle her death would produce. She reportedly weighed in
strongly on behalf of holding her seat open and a Democratic victory in
November.
"My
most fervent wish is that I will not be replaced until a new president is
installed,” Ginsburg said before her death, according to a statement released
by one of her granddaughters, Clara Spera.
Whoever
replaces Ginsburg will be filling the shoes of a trailblazer who began her
career at a time when women were a rarity in the practice of law and rarer
still at the nation’s top law firms.
“I became a
lawyer when women were not wanted by the legal profession,” she said in a 2018
documentary about her life. “I did see myself as kind of a kindergarten teacher
in those days because the judges didn’t think sex discrimination existed.”
When he
nominated her, President Bill Clinton called her “the Thurgood Marshall of
gender equality law.” In 2015, writing about her as one of Time’s 100 most
influential people in the world, Scalia compared her to the same former
justice: “She became the leading (and very successful) litigator on behalf of
women’s rights — the Thurgood Marshall of that cause, so to speak.”
Her
influence went far beyond gender cases. In 2012, for instance, Ginsburg
authored a vital concurrence/dissent in the split decision for National
Federation of Independent Business v. Sebelius, a case that upheld aspects of
the Affordable Care Act.
And as the
frequency and barbed tone of her dissents increased later in her career, she
became a liberal icon, sometimes dubbed “The Notorious RBG.”
“No other
justice, however scrutinized or respected, has so captured the public
imagination,” wrote Irin Carmon and Shana Knizhnik in a 2015 book of that name.
They added: “Across America, people who weren’t even born when Ginsburg made
her name are tattooing themselves with her face, setting her famously searing
dissents to music, and making viral videos in tribute.”
During the
2016 campaign, she repeatedly blasted presidential candidate Donald Trump and
found herself scolded by those who thought justices shouldn’t get involved in
partisan politics — and the target of a Trump tirade. “Justice Ginsburg of the
U.S. Supreme Court has embarrassed all by making very dumb political statements
about me.” Trump tweeted in July 2016.
“Race
discrimination was immediately perceived as evil, odious and intolerable. But
the response that I got from the judges before whom I argued when I talked
about sex discrimination was: ‘What are you talking about? Women are treated
ever so much better than men.’”
Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg
Ruth Bader
Ginsburg was born Joan Ruth Bader on March 15, 1933, in Brooklyn, daughter of
Nathan and Celia Amster Bader. Her kindergarten class was loaded with Joans, so
she became just Ruth.
It was her
mother who encouraged her to read by taking her to a public library in Brooklyn
above a Chinese restaurant. “Ever since, Ruth has associated the aroma of
Chinese food with the pleasure of reading,” wrote Elinor & Robert Slater in
“Great Jewish Women.”
Growing up
during the Holocaust, she came to identify with her fellow Jews who were
persecuted by Nazi Germany. Decades later, in the anthology “I am Jewish:
Personal Reflections Inspired by the Last Words of Daniel Pearl,” she would
write: “I am a judge, born, raised, and proud of being a Jew. The demand for
justice runs through the entirety of Jewish history and Jewish tradition.”
Her mother
died of cancer two days before she graduated from James Madison High School.
“Watching
the physical deterioration of the parent who represented nurture and security,
along with her father’s silent grief, had been anguishing for the sensitive
adolescent,“ wrote biographer Jane Sherron de Hart. “Yet with Celia’s
encouragement, she won prestigious college scholarships, played in the school
orchestra, and cheered on the football team as a baton twirler — never once
revealing to her schoolmates the illness that shadowed the Bader household in
Flatbush.“
Despite her
horrible loss, Ruth went on to attend Cornell University, where she excelled —
and also met and married Martin Ginsburg.
From
Cornell they went to Fort Sill in Oklahoma, where he served in the Army and she
gave birth to a girl, Jane. The family moved on together to Harvard Law School,
where she would become one of nine women in her class — and would find herself
facing discrimination for her gender.
“Ginsburg
attended a dinner in honor of women students that was a major turning point for
her,” wrote the Slaters in 1998. “She was aghast at the words of the dean, who
was host, as he asked each woman to explain what she was doing at the law
school occupying a seat that could have been filled by a man.”
Ginsburg
ended up literally occupying a seat that was supposed to be occupied by a man:
Her husband was diagnosed with testicular cancer, and she attended his law
classes as well as hers as he recuperated. (Martin recovered and had his own
notable legal career. He died in 2010 at the age of 78.)
When her
husband accepted a job in New York City, she transferred to Columbia Law School
to finish her education. Although she was a top-flight student, New York firms
were not interested in her. “The traditional law firms were just beginning to
turn around on hiring Jews. But to be a woman, a Jew, and a mother to boot —
that combination was a bit too much,” Ginsburg later wrote. Supreme Court
Justice Felix Frankfurter also declined to hire her, saying he was not ready to
employ a female law clerk.
She eventually
joined the faculty of Rutgers (N.J.) Law School and came to be a prominent
advocate for gender equality, then became the first woman to become a full
professor at Columbia. Ginsburg also gave birth to a second child, a son named
James, in 1965.
In the
1970s, she participated in a series of gender discrimination cases before the
U.S. Supreme Court in connection with the American Civil Liberties Union and
its newly created Women’s Rights Project.
At issue
was that the nation’s top court had never treated laws or government policies
that discriminated against women as necessarily violating a fundamental right.
It didn’t help that some of the laws in question were written by male lawmakers
to make it seem as if they were benefiting women, by keeping them from having
to deal with difficult situations that were — in the thinking of those male
lawmakers — best left to men.
“Race discrimination,” Ginsburg said at her
confirmation hearing in 1993, “was immediately perceived as evil, odious and
intolerable. But the response that I got from the judges before whom I argued
when I talked about sex discrimination was: ‘What are you talking about? Women
are treated ever so much better than men.’”
Reed v.
Reed (1971), for instance, dealt with an Idaho law that gave preference to a
dad over a mom in administering their late son’s estate. In 1972, she
successfully advocated for Susan Struck (Struck v. Secretary of Defense), who
had been told she needed to terminate her pregnancy if she wanted to stay in
the Air Force, clearly an issue a man would never face.
Within the
all-male Supreme Court, Ginsburg found an advocate for her viewpoint in Justice
William Brennan, who had been the cornerstone of the liberal Warren Court and
who was still able to sometimes build a majority on the more-conservative
Burger Court. Of the six gender-discrimination cases Ginsburg argued in the
1970s, she won five.
“To
challenge those laws,” according to “Justice Brennan: Liberal Champion“ by Seth
Stern and Stephen Vermeil, “she purposely sought out cases ‘with a strong human
appeal,‘ aware that justices would not naturally relate to a woman’s
experience.”
In 1980,
President Jimmy Carter picked her for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C.
Circuit. Thirteen years later, with the retirement of Justice Byron White,
Clinton had the opportunity to appoint a Supreme Court justice for the first
time and selected Ginsburg.
“Throughout
her life,” Clinton said in announcing Ginsburg’s nomination, “she has
repeatedly stood for the individual, the person less well-off, the outsider in
society, and has given those people greater hope by telling them they have a
place in our legal system.”
She was
confirmed by a vote of 96-3. “By any measure,” said then-Senate Minority Leader
Bob Dole (R-Kan.), “she is qualified to become the Supreme Court’s ninth
justice.”
“Ginsburg
is known as a ruthless editor with a keen eye for detail," wrote Edith
Lampson Roberts soon afterward in “The Supreme Court Justices: Illustrated
Biographies, 1789-1995." “Her soft voice and reserved manner hide great
perceptiveness and a warm interest in people.”
Though
tagged as a liberal, Ginsburg was an advocate for judicial restraint, arguing
against attempting to legislate through judicial fiat. At times, she was
critical of the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision not because she disapproved of legal
abortion but because she thought the court had overreached.
“Ginsburg
is professional, polite and extraordinarily precise in her opinions and
questions,” wrote Laurence Tribe and Joshua Matz in their book “Uncertain
Justice: The Roberts Court and the Constitution.” “She cares deeply about the
role of the Court and frequently speaks about the need to find a balance
between advancing constitutional values and respecting the Democratic process.”
She wrote a
landmark opinion in the 1996 VMI case, which allowed women to enroll at the
military academy, the nation’s last all-male public university. “It may be,”
Ginsburg wrote for the court, “that many women would not want to go to VMI, but
many men would not, either. And as long as there are qualified women who want
to go — and there are — they must be admitted.”
National
Federation of Independent Business v. Sebelius, the 2012 case in which a
divided court upheld most but not all of the Affordable Care Act, saw another
of her most consequential opinions — part concurrence, part dissent. “Congress
had a rational basis for concluding that the uninsured, as a class,
substantially affect interstate commerce,” she wrote.
In 2000,
she was one of four dissenting justices in the emergency case of Bush v. Gore,
which decided the presidential election. “The Court’s conclusion that a
constitutionally adequate recount is impractical is a prophecy the Court’s own
judgment will not allow to be tested. Such an untested prophecy should not
decide the Presidency of the United States,” she wrote. “I dissent.”
Another
notable dissent came in Gonzales v. Carhart, a 2007 case in which the court
upheld the Partial-Birth Abortion Act of 2003. “Legal challenges to undue
restrictions on abortion procedures do not seek to vindicate some generalized
notion of privacy; rather, they center on a woman’s autonomy to determine her
life’s course, and thus to enjoy equal citizenship stature,” she wrote. In
2013‘s Shelby County v. Holder, she blasted the majority’s decision to gut
elements of the Voting Rights Act: “The Court’s opinion can hardly be described
as an exemplar of restrained and moderate decision-making. Quite the opposite.
Hubris is a fit word for today’s demolition of the VRA.“
Over the
years, she developed a close friendship with Scalia, a bond they maintained
despite significant ideological differences.
“Ruth and I
disagree on the law all the time,” Scalia said at a joint forum in 2014. “But
that has never had anything to do with our friendship.”
Scalia and
Ginsburg both loved opera. In 1994, the two joined together to appear as extras
in a Washington Opera production of a Richard Strauss opera. She also joined
Justices Anthony Kennedy and Stephen Breyer on stage in 2003 in “Die
Fledermaus.”
In 2013,
she lectured on the subject of “Law in Opera” at the Chautauqua Institution in
western New York. That was the same year a musician named Derrick Wang set
Scalia-Ginsburg arguments to music in an opera called “Scalia/Ginsburg.”
“They liked
to fight things out in good spirit — in fair spirit — not the way we see
debates these days,” NPR’s Nina Totenberg observed as the time of Scalia’s
death in 2016.
The court’s
official statement announcing Ginsburg’s death declared that she “died this
evening surrounded by her family at her home in Washington, D.C., due to
complications of metastatic pancreas cancer.”
Ginsburg is
to be buried at Arlington National Cemetery, the statement said.
“Our Nation
has lost a jurist of historic stature. We at the Supreme Court have lost a
cherished colleague. Today we mourn, but with confidence that future
generations will remember Ruth Bader Ginsburg as we knew her – a tireless and
resolute champion of justice,” Roberts wrote.
Ginsburg
struggled with bouts of cancer for more than two decades. In 1999, she was
diagnosed with colon cancer, but recovered after surgery and radiation therapy.
A decade later, an annual exam turned up early-stage pancreatic cancer,
prompting another round of surgery.
In 2018,
Ginsburg was struck by lung cancer, which a court statement said was discovered
by chance while she was being treated for a fall in which she broke two ribs.
Surgery followed to remove two nodules but no further treatment was planned,
the court said.
While
Ginsburg prided herself on not missing any court arguments during her earlier
bouts of illness, she missed two weeks of oral arguments in January 2019 as she
recovered from the lung cancer surgery.
In August
2019, the court announced that Ginsburg’s pancreatic cancer had recurred and
that she underwent a non-surgical, radiation treatment to shrink the tumors.
She later claimed to be cancer free.
While
Ginsburg drew kudos for her tenacity and became a testament to the success of
modern medicine in managing cancer, she was often sluggish to disclose bad news
she’d received from her doctors, perhaps out of fears of alarming her legions
of supporters.
In February
of this year, Ginsburg was notified that a scan had found lesions on her liver,
marking her fifth known occurrence of cancer. The diagnosis prompted a biopsy
and then immunotherapy. When that was unsuccessful, she began chemotherapy in
May.
However,
she offered no public indication that her cancer had returned until July, after
two intervening hospitalizations for other illnesses that were announced by the
court but portrayed as minor.
Although
Ginsburg was not always prompt in announcing her health setbacks, court
observers noted that other justices are more reserved or entirely silent about
their medical conditions. Five of the eight remaining justices are 65 or older
and it is common for justices to remain on the bench into their 80s.
Ginsburg
was last seen by the public in late August via a photo posted on Twitter of her
officiating at a wedding of a couple described as family friends of the
justice.
"There
is nothing like a cancer bout to make one relish the joys of being alive,” she
said in 2001, after her first brush with the disease. “It is as though a
special, zestful spice seasons my work and days. Each thing I do comes with a
heightened appreciation that I am able to do it."
Though
slight in appearance — and despite her long-running battles with cancer —
Ginsburg was a physical dynamo, known for her ambitious workouts. “People who
think she is hanging on this world by a thread underestimate her,” wrote Carmon
and Knizhnik in their 2015 book. “RBG’s main concession to hitting her late
seventies was to give up water skiing.”
Ginsburg’s
fitness regime became legendary, with videos of her workouts circulating
widely. In 2017, a POLITICO reporter described his efforts to match her routine
in an article headlined, “I Did Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s Workout. It Nearly Broke
Me.”
Her energy
carried her well beyond Washington, as she found herself in considerable demand
as a speaker.
“Soaking in
her late-in-life emergence as a liberal icon,” the Associated Press wrote in
January 2018, “she’s using the court’s month-long break to embark on a speaking
tour that is taking her from the Sundance Film Festival in Utah to law schools
and synagogues on the East Coast.”
Her honors
sometimes took forms unusual for a jurist. In 2016, it was announced a new
species of praying mantis from Madagascar had been named for her. Scientists
from the the Cleveland Museum of Natural History said they had named the
species Ilomantis ginsburgae because of “her relentless fight for gender
equality.”
Justices
had been the subject of occasional cinematic biographies dating at least back
to Oliver Wendell Holmes and 1950‘s “The Magnificent Yankee.” But in 2018,
Ginsburg was the subject of two: “RBG,” a documentary, and “On the Basis of
Sex,” in which she was portrayed by Felicity Jones. At the time of the release
of the latter, POLITICO’s Peter Canellos said it was only the tip of the
iceberg in terms of Ginsburg adulation, noting fans could also choose “from
four biographies, five children’s books, a coloring book, a workout book, an
action figure, an ‘historic Ruth Bader Ginsburg notebook,‘ a throw pillow and a
robe-bedecked figurine.”
Ginsburg
was the court’s oldest sitting justice and the second-longest-serving member of
the court’s current bench.
Justice
Clarence Thomas, who was nominated by President George H.W. Bush in 1991, is
the most senior justice. With Ginsburg’s passing, the oldest current member of
the court is 82-year-old Justice Stephen Breyer, a Clinton appointee.
The last
president to install more than two justices on the court was President Ronald
Reagan, who filled three vacancies, as Obama could have had Garland been
confirmed.



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