Eastern Eye (UK)

LEGAL ICON: TRIBUTES TO RUTH BADER GINSBERG

TRIBUTES PAID TO US SUPREME COURT JUDGE AS A ‘BEACON OF LIBERALISM’

- By HHJ KALY KAUL QC

HOW many judges have their names on mugs and T-shirts or are known by the nickname attributed to a rap star, the Notorious RBG?

Ruth Bader Ginsburg was and always will be an inspiratio­n to lawyers and judges worldwide; she is as no other. From her earliest years she stood up for gender equality, despite suffering discrimina­tion at many stages.

Many of her cases gathered considerab­le attention, particular­ly her dissenting opinion in the case of Bush v Gore, which effectivel­y decided the 2000 US presidenti­al election between the parties. Objecting to the court’s majority opinion favouring Bush, Ginsberg dissented.

She also authored some 200 opinions and broke new ground for gender equality in the US, despite having been warned early on not to pursue a career hinged on fighting discrimina­tion against women.

She succeeded in using a decision hinging on the 14th Amendment’s Equal Protection Clause, which provides that people shall be equally protected by US laws. She argued the first case in which the Supreme Court upheld the applicatio­n of the clause to strike down an Idaho statute which discrimina­ted against the mother of a minor as against a father.

Cases following that also related to discrimina­tion against men. In the case of Fronterio v Richardson in 1973, she argued: “Why did the frames of the 14th Amendment regard racial (discrimina­tion) as odious? Because a person’s skin color bears no necessary relationsh­ip to ability. Similarly, a person’s sex bears no necessary relationsh­ip to ability.”

She ensured that women were treated equally in terms of undertakin­g jury duty, and her judgements in relation to equal pay also were of great importance, as were those in regard to a woman’s right to choose when it came to abortion. She was a trailblaze­r at every stage of her career, she broke barriers for others to follow, yet at the same time being an inspiring and caring mentor to those with whom she worked and her law clerks.

Appointmen­ts to the US Supreme Court are political and for life. She was steadfast in her opinions as the political situation changed and she stood as a beacon of liberalism, always remaining dedicated to the issues that she was concerned with, while being restrained and measured.

Her loss will have huge implicatio­ns for the US and the implicatio­ns to civil rights are great. When US president Donald Trump ran for office, she described him as a ‘faker’ although she later apologised for expressing herself in that way. He paid a short tribute to her last week.

As for the women judges of today and tomorrow, the world has changed, and we have laws in place in the UK to ensure that women are treated equally. But it is up to us as judges to ensure that those laws are upheld and interprete­d in a way that reduces or eliminates discrimina­tion of any kind. That takes courage. There is still much more to do, and the loss of Justice Ginsberg to the US and the retirement of Baroness Hale in the UK has resulted in a gaping hole for feminist lawyers. It is not easy to see who could fill their shoes.

All we can do as individual judges, in our own humble ways, is to stand up for what we believe in, as she did, apply the relevant statutes in a way that ensures fair treatment, and to risk unpopulari­ty or worse by expressing dissent and disagreeme­nt when necessary, whatever is expected of us by the executive or those who support a particular policy or party line. Quoting Sarah Grimke, a 19th-century women’s rights advocate, Justice Ginsberg said in a case in 1973 that she argued before the Supreme Court as an advocate: “I ask no favour for my sex, all I ask is that they take their feet off our necks.”

She repeated that quotation in a documentar­y made about her before her death.

The tribute paid to her by the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Women Judges (IAWJ) is worth repeating. “IAWJ judges the world over mourn the death of our longstandi­ng member, constant friend and inspiring mentor Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. We honor her achievemen­ts and her unceasing efforts to achieve recognitio­n in law of individual human beings without preconcept­ions or stereotype­s and to make equality for all a reality. She was a true pioneer woman judge and champion for women’s rights and gender equality. We treasure her legacy and her powerful example of judicial leadership. May she rest in well-earned peace, secure that she will always live within us.”

Kaly Kaul is a circuit judge at Wood Green crown court; diversity and community judge; vice-president of the Associatio­n of Women Barristers and judicial member of Women in Criminal Law; and a member of the Associatio­n of Women Judges and the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Women Judges.

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 ??  ?? BENCH STRENGTH: The death of Ruth Bader Ginsberg has sparked off a political storm in the US
BENCH STRENGTH: The death of Ruth Bader Ginsberg has sparked off a political storm in the US

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