Hartford Courant

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Connecticu­t leaders remember Supreme Court Justice Ginsburg.

- BY ZACH MURDOCK Zach Murdock can be reached at zmurdock@courant.com.

As t he death of Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg on Friday night rocked the nation, Connecticu­t leaders remembered the trailblazi­ng justice as a titan of U.S. law and inspiratio­n to millions.

Ginsburg died Friday at her home in Washington of complicati­ons of metastatic pancreatic cancer. She was 87.

“Ruth Bader Ginsburg was a giant. The world is a different place because of her,” U.S. Sen. Richard Blumenthal said Friday night. “More than the laws she forged are the lives she touched. She was soft-spoken and slight in stature, but packed a mighty punch. She will always be a uniquely American icon – breaking barriers with courage and conviction, and letting nothing stop her from the classroom to the courtroom.”

Gov. Ned Lamont ordered U.S. and Connecticu­t flags be lowered to halfstaff to mark Ginsburg’s death. He remembered her as “a fierce and fiery champion for fairness and equality for all.”

“A giant inspiratio­n and pioneer for women globally, Justice Ginsburg should not just be remembered for what she stood for but what she stood against,” Lamont said. “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 whenthere are nine.’ ”

Lt. Governor Susan Bysiewicz recalled Friday how she was inspired as a child by Ginsburg to enter the legal profession. Ginsburg was a contempora­ry of Shirley Raissi Bysiewicz, the lieutenant governor’s mother, who herself blazed a trail for women in law as the first female tenured law professor at the University of Connecticu­t.

“She inspired many women, including me, to enter the legal profession,” Bysiewicz said. “She showed the entire world that with perseveran­ce and tenacity there is no obstacle you can’t overcome. She fought for all of us because she believed in the promise of our nation. Let us honor her legacy by continuing her fight for freedom, equality, and civil rights.”

U.S. Rep. Joe Courtney, of Connecticu­t’s 2nd District, echoed the late justice’s importance as pioneering woman in law.

“Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s life was about shattering barriers for women, and all Americans who-experience discrimina­tion,” Courtney said. “She had an exquisite legal mind, and clarity of thought and word that she used powerfully to change this country for the better.”

Ginsburg’s death also immediatel­y sparked a raging a political debate about the appropriat­e timing and procedure for filling her seat, which would have wide ranging legal and political ramificati­ons. Analysts and lawmakers alike all immediatel­y hearkened back to the U.S. Sen. Mitch McConnell’s refusal to consider then-President Barack Obama’s Supreme Court nominee Merrick Garland because the nomination during an election year.

“As to the appointmen­t of Justice Ginsberg’s successor, 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.

“This close to the election, there is no way that the United States Senate can or should act before the voters decide.”

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