The Denver Post

The Ginsburg- Scalia act was not a farce

- By Jennifer Senior

For the second time in five years, a sitting Supreme Court justice has died, and for the second time in five years, Sen. Mitch McConnell has befouled the process to replace that justice with his signature blend of fresh greed and rancid partisansh­ip. A Ruth- less court, answered with ruthlessne­ss.

As many have endlessly — almost tediously — noted, the irony of this two- part drama is that both seats were occupied by individual­s who overcame the very rancor that McConnell hopes to exploit. Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Antonin Scalia were famously good friends, one of Washington’s storied odd couples; by now, many of the details of their two- headed vaudeville act are well known — they went to the opera together, they spent New Year’s Eve together, they once spent time together atop an elephant.

But me? I can’t stop thinking about the civil, uncomplica­ted nature of Ginsburg and Scalia’s own appointmen­ts to the bench. They were supported with a kind of bipartisan enthusiasm that’s unthinkabl­e in today’s gladiatori­al politics.

If you were to guess, how many senators would you say voted to confirm Ginsburg, whose dissent jabots would go on to launch a thousand mugs, tattoos and Halloween costumes, whose initials would become a liberal feminist supersigni­fier? And how many would you say voted to confirm Scalia, hero of the Federalist Society, defender of originalis­m, dreaded foe of progressiv­e arglebargl­e?

Answers:

Ginsburg was confirmed in 1993 by a vote of 96- 3.

Scalia was confirmed in 1986 by a vote of 98- 0.

Among those who voted for Ginsburg: Bob Dole, who would be the Republican nominee for president three years later; Strom Thurmond, who once ran for president as a Dixiecrat supporting segregatio­n; and, yes, Mitch McConnell.

Among those who voted for Scalia: Al Gore, John Kerry and Joe Biden, all of whom would go on to become the Democratic Party’s nominee for president. Also Ted Kennedy, at the time the party’s standard- bearer for approximat­ely forever.

Under such circumstan­ces, is it any wonder that bipartisan friendship­s weren’t just possible but even typical?

It has sometimes been said that the media loved the friendship between Ginsburg and Scalia even more than the justices themselves. But it was quite real. As the awful news of Ginsburg’s death spread, one of Scalia’s sons shared a story I’d never heard before, about how his father once bought her two dozen roses on her birthday. When one of Scalia’s former clerks, Jeffrey Sutton, asked him why, given that she never gave him the vote he needed on a 5- 4 case of any significan­ce, Scalia replied: “Some things are more important than votes.”

It’s hard to remember sometimes that political disagreeme­nts, in the not- too- distant past, weren’t necessaril­y cause to retreat into our respective corners, and that ideologica­l difference­s weren’t viewed as moral defects.

This is not to say that Scalia did not write pitiless opinions, at times so searing they could grill their own steak. But Ginsburg chose to not take them personally, and sometimes viewed them appreciati­vely, of all things. In the 1996 case, U. S. v. Virginia, which finally allowed women to attend Virginia Military Institute, Scalia made a point of sending Ginsburg his dissent as quickly as possible, so that she might better reckon with it in her majority opinion.

It is not a surprise that before the political got viciously personal, our democratic institutio­ns functioned better. As recently as a decade ago, the Senate was confirming Supreme Court nominees with some measure of bipartisan good will. The vote for Elena Kagan in 2010 was 63- 37 ( Lindsey Graham and four other Republican­s, including Susan Collins, voted yea). The vote for Sonia Sotomayor the year before was 68- 31 ( including nine Republican­s that time).

Of course, it’s important not to idealize the recent past either. One year after Scalia was confirmed, the Senate got embroiled in an operatic feud over the nomination of Robert Bork to the Supreme Court, where the nominee ultimately lost in a vote of 58- 42.

In 2000, Scalia violated his own beliefs about the sanctity of states’ rights in Bush v. Gore, helping to end the Florida recount. ( To anyone who challenged his decision, he’d simply say, “Get over it.”)

Two years later, in his dissenting opinion on Obergefell v. Hodges, the landmark decision that deemed same- sex marriage a constituti­onal right, Scalia railed against the disproport­ionate representa­tion of coastal elites on the bench, pointedly adding it contained not a single evangelica­l Christian or Protestant.

Yet still, the friendship between Ginsburg and Scalia persisted.

Just as powerful as their shared love of opera and jurisprude­nce may have been their upbringing in the outer boroughs of New York. Scalia was a conservati­ve from a liberal metropolis; Ginsburg was a liberal who worked, increasing­ly, in a conservati­ve court. It’s a good reminder that heterodox environmen­ts are essential to keeping our common humanity top of mind. The Supreme Court is a family of nine whether it wants to be or not; it has no choice if it wants to function. The place may be the ultimate purple state.

 ??  ?? Jennifer Senior has been an op- ed columnist since 2018.
Jennifer Senior has been an op- ed columnist since 2018.

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