‘A fierce and fiery champion’: Conn. lawmakers react to RBG’s passing
Connecticut lawmakers eulogized Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg as a champion of women’s rights who shattered glass ceilings and transformed the nation, hours after her death Friday from complications from cancer.
U.S. Sen. Richard Blumenthal, a member of the judiciary committee, immediately called for
Ginsburg’s successor on the Supreme Court to be appointed after the election.
“I couldn’t improve on what Mitch McConnell said after Justice Scalia’s death: The American people must have a voice in the selection of their next Supreme Court Justice. Therefore, this vacancy should not be filled until we have a new president,” Blumenthal said in a prepared statement Friday night.
Ginsburg, 87, died Friday at her home in Washington, D.C., “due to complications of metastatic pancreas cancer,” the Supreme Court said in a statement.
Ginsburg’s death is likely to touch off a contentious fight between President Trump and Democrats over filling the vacancy left by her passing; but it was not immediately clear Friday whether the president plans to nominate a candidate for the position before the November election.
Blumenthal, Connnecticut’s senior democratic senator, called Ginsburg “a giant,” who made the world “a different place
because of her.”
“She was soft-spoken and slight in stature, but packed a mighty punch,” Blumenthal said.
Lt. Gov. Susan Bysiewicz said she had known Ginsburg since since she was a child, when the associate justice and Bysiewicz’s mother were both law professors “at a time when very few women worked in the legal profession.”
“She inspired many women, including me, to enter the legal profession. She showed the entire world that with perseverance and tenacity there is no obstacle you can’t overcome,” the Lt. governor said.
Gov. Ned Lamont ordered flags to be lowered to half-staff Friday out of respect.
He described the associate justice as “a fierce and fiery champion for fairness and equality for all.”
The governor noted that even while fighting cancer, Ginsburg rarely missed days in court.
“Our nation is greater for her tenacity, dissension, and adversity against injustice. As Justice Ginsburg put it best, ‘there will be enough women on the court when there are nine,’” the governor said.
Congressman Jim Himes spoke of how Ginsburg “was an incarnation of those things which truly make America great,” tempering justice with compassion, working for “the protection of liberty and the advancement of opportunity,” and perservering against the odds.
Congressman Joe Courtney, a Democrat representing the state’s second district, said Ginsburg had “an exquisite legal mind, and clarity of thought and word” that she used to change the nation for the better.
“Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s life was about shattering barriers for women, and all Americans who experience discrimination,” Courtney said in a prepared statement.
State Senate Majority Leader Bob Duff said in a tweet there would “never be another like her.”
“Such sad news hearing about the passing of the notorious RBG. A well lived and loved life,” the state senator, a Democrat, said.
Congressman John Larson said Ginsburg paved the way for millions of women and Americans “who have faced discrimination and inequality.
Ginsburg was appointed to the supreme court by President Bill Clinton in 1993, where she served for more than 27 years.
Congresswoman Rosa DeLauro said Ginsburg “changed what it meant to be a woman in America.”
“I reflect on what our world would have looked like had Ruth Bader Ginsburg backed down from a fight,” DeLauro said.
“I wonder what women’s health care would look like and which freedoms would be missing. I wonder what universities would be accepting women and whether I would find a door with my name on it in the halls of Congress,” she said.