Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Abrahamson won’t seek another term

- Patrick Marley and Bill Glauber

Shirley Abrahamson — the first woman on the Wisconsin Supreme Court and a fixture of it for more than 40 years — won’t seek another term next year.

Abrahamson, 84, has participat­ed in cases by phone in recent weeks for undisclose­d medical reasons. She said Wednesday she would not leave the court before her term ends next summer.

“When I joined the court, I was given a voice — a voice that I have not hesitated to use,” she said in a statement. “The best expression of appreciati­on I can give the people who have elected and repeatedly re-elected me is to continue to speak with the clarity, forthright­ness and compassion that come from a life

I have tried to devote to service and to justice for all.”

A New Yorker who has never lost her accent, Abrahamson developed a national reputation as a leader in liberal legal thought. She has served longer on the high court than anyone in the state’s history.

“Shirley Abrahamson’s place in history was secured from the day she took the oath of office and began to serve on the Wisconsin Supreme Court as the first woman ever to be a justice,” said Joseph Kearney, dean of Marquette University Law School.

“To say that, though, is really just to scratch the surface of her influence on the court and the law of Wisconsin over the past going on 42 years. She brings to the court the dispassion of an academic, the extraordin­ary skills of a most able lawyer and a real ability to connect with the people of Wisconsin as proved over and over again in her first election and subsequent re-election campaigns.”

Democratic Gov. Patrick Lucey named Abrahamson to the court in 1976 after Chief Justice Horace Wilkie died.

In 1996, she became chief justice because she was the most senior member of the court.

She held the position until 2015, when voters adopted an amendment to the state constituti­on to allow the members of the court to pick the chief justice. Conservati­ves on the court quickly voted to move Abrahamson out of the job and replace her with Justice Patience Roggensack.

Abrahamson sued over her ouster in federal court but lost the case.

Abrahamson’s departure from the court will launch a scramble to replace her.

Brian Hagedorn, an appeals court judge and former chief legal counsel to GOP Gov. Scott Walker, said Wednesday he was having “many encouragin­g conversati­ons” about a possible run. On the left, Appeals Judge Lisa Neubauer is considerin­g a run and said in a statement she planned to decide quickly.

When the fall term starts, conservati­ves will have a 4-3 majority on the court. The election to replace Abrahamson in April will determine whether conservati­ves hold that margin or widen it to 5-2.

Abrahamson missed court arguments in three cases in October — a rarity for a justice who is known to work at the Capitol deep into the night. She said at the time she wasn’t feeling well but was better a few days later.

Starting in April, she began participat­ing in cases by phone. At the time, her office released a statement saying she was undergoing medical testing but did not provide any other details.

Janine Geske, a Marquette law professor and former justice, said she admired Abrahamson as a leader and jurist even though she didn’t always agree with her decisions.

“I don’t know anybody smarter or who works harder than she does,” Geske said. “She clearly was of the quality that could have been on the U.S. Supreme Court.”

Abrahamson turned dissenting into an art and sometimes had her views ultimately validated.

“She’ll write a dissent in the Wisconsin Supreme Court and it will go to the U.S. Supreme Court and be a majority opinion,” said Justice Ann Walsh Bradley.

That’s what happened when the Wisconsin Supreme Court struck down the state’s penalty enhancer for hate speech. When the U.S. Supreme Court took the case, it unanimousl­y sided with Abrahamson’s dissent.

Abrahamson had her detractors, both on the right and the left, who criticized her for her leadership style. Brandon Scholz, who has helped conservati­ves in court elections, noted Abrahamson led the court at a time when relations among the justices were often frayed.

“When you are the leader of an organizati­on ... you are responsibl­e for what happens with that body,” he said. “You’re responsibl­e for the good things and the not-sogood things.”

At the time Lucey appointed Abrahamson, she was lauded for her experience, but there were questions about her electabili­ty. She put those questions to rest, winning election four times.

Abrahamson’s parents were immigrants from Poland who owned a grocery store in Manhattan. At age 6, she decided she wanted to be a lawyer and became an eager student, earning honors in high school and college.

In 1953, she and her husband, Seymour Abrahamson, a zoology student, were newly married. They enrolled at Indiana University, where he pursued an advanced degree and she entered law school. For at least two semesters, she was the only woman studying law there. She ranked first in a class of 62 students when she earned her law degree.

The Abrahamson­s then moved to Wisconsin, where she went for a doctorate at the law school.

Abrahamson became a professor at the law school and partner at a Madison law firm where she worked for 14 years before being appointed to the high court.

In recent years, Abrahamson has been in the minority and has offered pointed dissents.

“I will continue to express my point of view,” she said. “I will do so on the bench. And, if principles and values integral to the great state of Wisconsin and its courts continue to be challenged, I will also express my views off the bench, if necessary and as appropriat­e.”

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