The Guardian (USA)

Dianne Feinstein should be remembered for her full range of positions: good and bad

- Rebecca Solnit

Flags are at half mast in San Francisco’s city hall for a woman who was born here and died in Washington DC at the end of a remarkable life. It was inside that building that the most dramatic and pivotal event of Dianne Feinstein’s political career took place, when a murderer made her mayor, the mayor who would become one of the country’s strongest leaders in response to the Aids crisis. That role gave her the visibility to run for the Senate in 1992, and she held onto that seat to her dying day, showing up on Thursday to cast a vote in the budget battle, hours before her death at 90.

Senator Feinstein began her political career being ahead of her society and ended it by being behind it. This is not surprising for a public life in politics that stretched through 60 years of dramatic social and political change. But it may be hard to perceive for those who don’t know she was early on a champion for women’s rights – including her own just to participat­e, at a time when that was groundbrea­king – and for rights and recognitio­n for queer people at a time when most politician­s would only mention them to demand punishment and ostracizat­ion for them.

She was one of California’s first two women senators (Barbara Boxer won office in the same 1992 election) and the nation’s first two Jewish women senators, the first female member of the Senate judiciary committee, first woman to chair the Senate rules committee, and in 2009, the first woman to preside over a presidenti­al inaugurati­on.

Obama, of course, was that president, and he later opposed her years of effort to expose widespread torture by the Central Intelligen­ce Agency (CIA) during George W Bush’s “global war on terror”. Feinstein, as head of the Senate intelligen­ce committee, fought both presidents, the CIA’s director and various Republican­s to release a scathing summary report on that torture. But she also defended the National Security Administra­tion’s surveillan­ce of US citizens.

She was often a contradict­ion and always a patrician, born into wealth and becoming far wealthier through her third marriage in 1980 to the billionair­e financier Richard Blum. She was also in her Senate career an important advocate for reproducti­ve rights, environmen­tal protection and gun control. But in recent years, she seemed like a ghost moving among ghosts, acting as though collegiali­ty, bipartisan­ship and adherence to norms still prevailed in a Senate in which most Republican­s had long been ruthless, reckless partisans whose one goal was power.

Upon news of her death on Friday,

 ?? Photograph: Paul Sakuma/AP ?? ‘Early on she did make waves by her very existence as a woman who entered the political arena at a time when women were unwelcome.’
Photograph: Paul Sakuma/AP ‘Early on she did make waves by her very existence as a woman who entered the political arena at a time when women were unwelcome.’

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