USA TODAY International Edition

Democratic women call for Ginsburg monument

- Sarah Elbeshbish­i

WASHINGTON – The late Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg may be returning to Capitol Hill.

Members of the Democratic Women’s Caucus, including Reps. Jackie Speier of California, Brenda Lawrenceof Michigan and Lois Frankel of Florida, and Sen. Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota, introduced a bill this month to erect a monument of Ginsburg on Capitol grounds.

“This is an effort to highlight an extraordin­ary person in American history,” Speier, a co- sponsor of the House bill, told USA TODAY. “You know we’ve done that for many other individual­s who you know are emblematic of talent and grit and ingenuity that we are so proud of in this country.”

Ginsburg died Sept. 18, 2020, two months after announcing that she suffered a recurrence of cancer and lesions were found on her liver.

Ginsburg’s legacy as a trailblaze­r and champion of women’s rights resonated with many. And just a day after Ginsburg’s death, a record- breaking amount of money from the political left was donated to Democratic candidates as the conversati­on to fill the court vacancy began.

“I mean it was such a moving national response to judge Ginsburg for a number of women, but women responded so passionate­ly about her legacy, about what her life and her struggles and her endurance and strength meant to so many women,” Lawrence said.

“It’s very telling because the history of women is often, or the legacy is often not memorializ­ed like the men are,” Lawrence added. “I’ve had the wonderful, amazing opportunit­y to share her legacy in my lifetime and I want others to see her statue and to reflect on what she has contribute­d to women throughout her career.”

A statue commemorat­ing Ginsburg was erected in her hometown of Brooklyn, New York, on Friday – ahead of what would’ve been her 88th birthday on Monday – outside a multiuse developmen­t called City Point.

Although a statue at the Capitol would offer a similar commemorat­ion, it would have a different meaning, according to Nika Elder, an assistant professor of art at American University and in expert in North American art.

“I think that’s a wonderful statement to commemorat­e her connection to Brooklyn, but it is different to include a statue or monument at a site of political power and in an institutio­n and in a building that her policies, or rather her rulings have helped shape … actual legal agendas but then also in terms of the increasing­ly growing number of female representa­tives and senators that there are,” Elder said. “So, I think it’s important to recognize her as having had a seismic impact on that very location and institutio­n itself.”

Ginsburg would be depicted by a statute, bust or portrait. The bill has been referred to the House Administra­tion Committee.

 ?? PROVIDED BY STATUES FOR EQUALITY ?? A statue of Ruth Bader Ginsburg by was unveiled on Friday in Brooklyn.
PROVIDED BY STATUES FOR EQUALITY A statue of Ruth Bader Ginsburg by was unveiled on Friday in Brooklyn.

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