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...And a Justice for
All July 4
2005
“It is during our most challenging
and uncertain moments that our Nation’s commitment to due process is
most severely tested; and it is in those times that we must preserve
our commitment at home to the principles for which we fight abroad.
. . . The imperative necessity for safeguarding these rights to
procedural due process under the gravest of emergencies has existed
throughout our constitutional history, for it is then, under the
pressing exigencies of crisis, that there is the greatest temptation
to dispense with guarantees which, it is feared, will inhibit
government action. . . . It would indeed be ironic if, in the name
of national defense, we would sanction the subversion of one of
those liberties, which makes the defense of the Nation worthwhile.).
. . Justice O’Connor, who last week announced her resignation, was probably the one justice whose stinging rebuke of Presidential excess represented not just her own opinion, but those of both the liberal and conservative wings, and why she had to be the one to write the Court’s decision. Justice O’Connor was Ronald Reagan’s first Supreme Court nomination, and after unanimous confirmation by the Democrat-controlled Senate became the Court’s first female justice. She had grown up on an isolated Arizona cattle ranch, entered Stanford University at the age of 16, graduated with a B.A. in economics, and then in two years instead of the usual three years graduated from Stanford Law School, third in her class. (William Rehnquist was first in the class). But, she was denied employment innumerous times because she was female. Eventually, she became a prosecuting attorney, civilian lawyer for the Army, Senate majority leader in Arizona (the first female to hold that position in the nation), and an Arizona appellate court judge. At the time she was appointed to the Supreme Court, she was a political conservative, recommended to President Reagan by Sen. Barry Goldwater, one of the nation’s most respected conservative politicians. During her 24-year court career, the independent Justice O’Connor usually thought through cases not on basis of political expediency or entrenched judicial philosophy, but on a case-by-case basis, thus becoming the Court’s swing vote on innumerable issues. On 5-4 decisions, she was in the majority more than 90 percent of the time. Representing conservative issues, she was firmly a states’ rights advocate, and was the swing vote to uphold both the “three strikes and you’re out law” and to approve the use of public funding for “vouchers” to children to attend private schools. In December 2000, she cast what was the deciding vote that essentially elected George W. Bush to his first term. Citing the First Amendment freedom of association clause, she was the swing vote that the Boy Scouts could exclude gays. But, she also was the swing vote that not only struck down a Texas law banning homosexual activity, but also forcefully stated that gays have a constitutional right of privacy. On liberal issues, she consistently voted in the majority in several 5-4 decisions to uphold abortion-rights cases, was the deciding vote to declare school-sponsored prayer and religious displays on public lands unconstitutional, upheld the rights of the disabled to sue states, and determined that affirmative action in university admissions criteria was constitutional. Her centrist views in a divided court often forced other justices to modify their own views in order to gain her vote. On dozens of critical social issues, “she held the balance on whether the country would tilt all the way to the right or try to find a compromise between ideological poles,” said Kathleen Sullivan, professor of Constitutional Law at Stanford. For more than two decades, said Justice Antonin Scalia, perhaps the most conservative justice on the Supreme Court, “she shaped the jurisprudence of this court more than any other associate justice.” But, that reputation for independence and being the swing vote also brought her scorn. O’Connor’s role on the Court left the perception among many legal scholars that she was opportunistic and lacked an intellectual honesty, Dr. Charles Kessler, professor of government at Claremont-McKenna College, told the Arizona Republic. “Her dilemma is that she’s made a principle of not having a principle,” he said. Justice O’Connor—a scratch golfer, who also enjoyed tennis and whitewater rafting—did not retire because of her age, physical or medical condition, or because she was mentally tired, but because of a long-standing commitment to her family. Known for treating her staff and co-workers as beloved members of an extended family, she retired to care for her husband, also a Stanford Law graduate, who has Alzheimer’s Disease. Part of President Bush’s legacy will be what he does with the nomination for Justice O’Connor’s replacement. If he continues to disregard the advice of those who aren’t his closest political advisors and sticks to his promise to nominate someone acceptable to the evangelical right-wing of his party, his legacy may be further tarnished. Not only would he show disrespect of the legacy of Justice O’Connor, but will have set into motion a political battle that may eventually lead not only to a greater division in the country, but of a Supreme Court that may be responsible for a further reduction of Constitutional freedoms. Walter Brasch’s latest book is 'America’s Unpatriotic Acts; the Federal Government’s Violation of Constitutional and Civil Rights'. You may contact Dr. Brasch through his web site, www.walterbrasch.com. |
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