The Columbus Dispatch

Honor RBG’S legacy of a morejust America

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First must come condolence­s, respect and thanks. Before wading into the raging controvers­y over when Justice Ruth Bader Ginsberg is replaced on the U.S. Supreme Court and the breathless speculatio­n over what her death means for the presidenti­al election, Americans should acknowledg­e the singular accomplish­ments of Ginsberg’s life and the enormous loss her death represents.

Ginsberg, who was 87 when she died on Friday of metastatic pancreatic cancer, took a long time to become an icon of progressiv­e legal action and even pop culture. That wasn’t because her achievemen­ts weren’t brilliant, but because of the personal humility that made her as widely loved as she was respected. And it was because of the very sexism she worked so hard to eradicate.

While figuring out how to be a young mother and one of only eight women students at Harvard Law School in 1956, Ginsberg also had to nurse her husband — a fellow Harvard Law student — through a bout of cancer, taking notes for him in class.

When he graduated first and landed a position with a New York City law firm, Ginsberg switched to Columbia’s law school to accommodat­e the move. She then graduated first in her class but, as a woman, received no job offers from law firms other than to serve as a secretary. Instead, she clerked for a federal judge, taught at the Rutgers University and Columbia law schools and enlisted in the growing battle for women’s equality by founding the American Civil Liberties Union’s Women’s Rights Project.

It was in this role that she significan­tly changed America for the better. She argued six gender-discrimina­tion cases before the U.S. Supreme Court, winning five. The cases were brilliantl­y chosen to build a foundation of precedents that changed laws nationwide. As Moira Donegan writes in The Guardian, “One moment, much of family, tax and financial law was made of statutes that codified men as breadwinne­rs and beneficiar­ies, women as dependents. Within just five years, all these laws were declared unconstitu­tional.”

Ginsberg became the second female Supreme Court justice when President Bill Clinton appointed her in 1993, but few knew of her leading role in dismantlin­g legalized gender discrimina­tion until the 2018 film “On the Basis of Sex.” By that time, she also had become beloved for the steely but calm persona behind her fierce dissenting opinions amid an increasing­ly conservati­ve court.

Now comes the inevitable fight over her replacemen­t. When conservati­ve Justice Antonin Scalia died in February 2016, Republican­s in the Senate outraged Democrats by refusing to even hold confirmati­on hearings on President Barack Obama’s chosen replacemen­t, saying it was, at more than eight months away, too close to the election and the next president should choose.

Any Republican with a shred of intellectu­al honesty must recognize that now, six weeks before an election, waiting to make a replacemen­t is far more justified — as they argued four years ago.

We are disappoint­ed but unsurprise­d that Sen. Rob Portman, who said in 2016 that no president should nominate a justice in an election year, is saying the opposite now.

And the condolence­s mentioned earlier? They’re for all of us. America is poorer and its prospects less bright without Ruth Bader Ginsberg.

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