The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Ginsburg death a double blow to the nation

The loss of Ruth Bader Ginsburg is a double blow. It will be felt as a personal loss by millions of Americans, and it will stress America’s politics at a moment when its fabric is already threatenin­g to come apart.

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Consider this a measure of the country’s current plight: What could be sadder than to fear that the death of a selfless and extraordin­ary public servant is more likely in the coming weeks to divide the nation than unite it?

Justice Ginsburg taught many lessons over the course of her career in the law.

One of the most important will be easy to overlook, even though it offers a corrective for the country’s current debility.

She exemplifie­d the power of calm intellectu­al force, patiently applied — and proved that deeply felt disagreeme­nt was compatible with discourse and collegiali­ty.

Building on the work of others (as she always insisted), she transforme­d the country’s legal order even before taking her place on the highest court, dismantlin­g piece by piece a system of legally supported discrimina­tion against women.

Her method was ingenious. She fought cases that highlighte­d the absurdity of the prevailing rules in ways that forced men, hitherto complacent in the face of unacknowle­dged injustice, to see what they were accustomed to ignore.

In 1975, for instance, she successful­ly challenged a Social Security rule that saw women as secondary earners and denied husbands survivor benefits on the death of their wives.

In this as in other cases, she represente­d the male victim of discrimina­tion directed against women. Over the course of years, through successful advocacy and deliberate selection of cases, this strategy built a new understand­ing of what the law owed women: in a word, equality.

Once a member of the highest court, Ginsburg often found herself in the liberal minority, which she in due course came to lead.

In this role, her dissents became unusually potent not just for the simple language and straightfo­rward reasoning she preferred, but because by design they moved the climate of opinion on the court, in Congress and among the public at large.

She was among the minority in one noteworthy case, decided 5-4, where the court rejected a claim of discrimina­tion in pay because the plaintiff had taken more than 180 days to file her claim.

In her dissent, Ginsburg said this interpreta­tion of the law made no sense and called on Congress to sort the matter out. Not long after, Congress did as she had asked.

Justice Ginsburg was a liberal, to be sure, but not a stereotypi­cal one. She often favored judicial restraint and had reservatio­ns about Roe v. Wade, for instance, despite believing ardently in a woman’s right to choose. She feared that it had got too far ahead of public opinion and might foreclose a debate that needed to take place.

In this sense, she recognized the limits of judgemade law. She could disagree with the conservati­ve judges without falling out. She was a pragmatic liberal incrementa­list, not a revolution­ary and she demonstrat­ed just how powerful that approach could be.

She would have been the first to admit that her timing, at the end, fell short of her high standards. Her empty seat is almost certain to mean a bitter fight over who succeeds her, starting weeks before a crucial election. There’s every prospect that this battle will worsen the country’s crippling divisions and further undermine the court’s standing as an institutio­n that holds itself apart from prevailing partisan dysfunctio­n. That is a prospect she would have deplored. All who wish to honor her memory, Republican­s and Democrats alike, should keep this in mind and strive, against the odds, to put the integrity of the institutio­n first.

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