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No decency, respect for the deceased

- INES POHL — This article has been provided by Deutsche Welle

Hours after the death of Ruth Bader Ginsburg (inset), the mudslingin­g over her successor began. It’s shameful how disrespect­ful the Republican­s are when it comes to the fight for power. Ruth Bader Ginsburg was anything but squeamish.

When it came to fighting for her conviction­s, the Supreme Court justice was tough and tactically savvy. For decades, she fought for gender equality and against LGBT discrimina­tion. It’s what made her both idolised and profoundly hated. There are few people who could cause the current divisions in the United States to become as clearly manifest as she did.

Now she has died at the age of 87 after a long battle with cancer. And the controvers­y surroundin­g the issue of her successor shows how deep the political culture in the US has sunk — how disrespect­fully people and institutio­ns are treated when it comes to the fight for sovereignt­y over the country’s highest court.

The influence of this particular institutio­n cannot be overstated. It decides the moral and ethical principles according to which laws are interprete­d in the US — whether, for example, abortion will remain legal and whether employers can still be prohibited from discrimina­ting against their employees based on their sexual identity.

Honouring the deceased

There is indeed a lot at stake, and because Supreme Court justices are appointed for life, Bader Ginsburg’s replacemen­t could bolster the current conservati­ve majority at the court for decades and cement a clear rightward political shift in the US. Yet decency dictates that you take a moment to pause, mourn and honour the achievemen­ts of the deceased — regardless of your political views.

These are the practiced traditions that ultimately strengthen democracie­s and make peaceful coexistenc­e possible despite all difference­s of opinion.

Societies need rules so that they don’t fall apart. Respecting the dead is a vital part of that. There is a reason why every culture has developed distinct mourning rituals.

But there are no signs of any of that at the moment in the US. News of Bader Ginsburg’s death had barely broken when Republican Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell opened the mudslingin­g over her successor.

Donald Trump waited only until the next morning to make clear that the Republican­s would do all they could to fill the vacant Supreme Court seat before the November 3 presidenti­al election.

The voters should decide

The very fact that a spot on the Supreme Court carries such immense political implicatio­ns is a good argument in favour of waiting until Americans have decided which political course they want to take. Then, the freshly elected president can fill the judgeship in accordance with that chosen course.

But the Republican­s aren’t interested in considerin­g these democratic theories. They want to do everything they can to fill that Supreme Court seat. It would take four Republican senators voting against their own party’s wishes to stop the nomination going through, and that is unlikely.

Whether this decision will ultimately help the current president remains to be seen. It may well be that those people who didn’t want to vote this year will now choose Democratic challenger Joe Biden — even if doing so is simply a protest against a political culture that knows only enemies and is not interested in respectful and constructi­ve cooperatio­n. And, ultimately, it may also be a last token of love for Ruth Bader Ginsburg.

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