[Mb-civic] The Ginsburg Fallacy - Ruth Marcus - Washington Post
Op-Ed
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Tue Nov 15 04:05:27 PST 2005
The Ginsburg Fallacy
By Ruth Marcus
Tuesday, November 15, 2005; Page A21
To hear some Republicans tell it, letting Ruth Bader Ginsburg onto the
Supreme Court was a tough pill to swallow. She was an ACLU-loving,
bra-burning feminazi, but they supported her anyway, dutifully
respecting the president's right to put his own stamp on the high court.
Therefore, Democrats now owe President Bush the same deference when
weighing his choice of Samuel Alito.
Ginsburg had "supported taxpayer funding for abortion, constitutional
right to prostitution and polygamy," Texas Sen. John Cornyn (R) said at
the confirmation hearings for Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. "And she
opposed Mother's and Father's Days as discriminatory occasions. But
nevertheless, Republicans . . . put that aside and supported her
nomination because she had terrific credentials, and because President
Clinton was entitled to nominate someone to the Supreme Court of his
choosing."
Ginsburg, according to Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), "said the age of
consent for sexual activity for women should be 12. In her writings she
said we need co-ed prisons because separate prisons are discriminatory
against women. . . . Where I come from in South Carolina, that's about
as far out of the mainstream as you can get, but it wasn't about whether
or not . . . the Republicans agreed with her philosophy."
Strong argument -- if only it had happened that way. Either those
peddling this conveniently muddled version of events don't remember it
correctly or they are betting that others won't. Listeners beware: Those
who don't remember history are condemned to be spun by it.
In fact, then-Judge Ginsburg was a consensus choice, pushed by
Republicans and accepted by the president in large part because he
didn't want to take on a big fight. Far from being a crazed radical,
Ginsburg had staked out a centrist role on a closely divided appeals
court. Don't take it from me -- take it from Sen. Orrin G. Hatch
(R-Utah). In his autobiography, the Utah Republican describes how he
suggested Ginsburg -- along with Clinton's second pick, Stephen G.
Breyer -- to the president. "From my perspective, they were far better
than the other likely candidates from a liberal Democratic
administration," Hatch writes.
Was he conned by a polygamy-loving leftist? On the count of being
associated with the American Civil Liberties Union, Ginsburg is guilty
as charged: She helped shape the law on sex discrimination as head of
the group's Women's Rights Project. Yet if her views were as far out as
critics suggest, how did she manage to win five of the six cases she
brought to the Supreme Court?
The nuttier positions were all mined from a 1974 report she co-authored:
"The Legal Status of Women Under Federal Law." Did Ginsburg really think
the age of consent should be lowered to 12? Conservative UCLA law
professor Eugene Volokh has concluded that Ginsburg probably "was the
victim of a drafting error." As to the rest, it's fair to say that
Ginsburg flirted with such views in the report; the document said, for
example, that "prostitution, as a consensual act between adults, is
arguably within the zone of privacy protected by recent constitutional
decisions" and recommended repealing federal prostitution laws.
But even if Ginsburg took that position, it doesn't tell you all that
much -- which is no doubt why she got just one question about the report
during her confirmation hearings. She hadn't made getting rid of
Mother's Day her life's work. And in any event, she had a much more
recent body of work -- her dozen years as an appeals court judge -- that
belied any notion that she was a raging lefty.
According to a Legal Times study of voting patterns on the appeals court
in 1987, for instance, Ginsburg sided more often with
Republican-appointed judges than with those chosen by Democrats. In
cases that divided the court, she joined most often with then-Judge
Kenneth W. Starr and Reagan appointee Laurence H. Silberman; in split
cases, she agreed 85 percent of the time with then-Judge Robert H. Bork
-- compared with just 38 percent of the time with her fellow Carter
appointee, Patricia M. Wald.
By contrast, University of Chicago law professor Cass Sunstein found
that Alito, in the overwhelming majority of cases in which he dissented,
took a more conservative stance than his colleagues. In short, if this
were an SAT analogy, Ginsburg would not be to liberal as Alito is to
conservative. Nor could her tenure on the high court be called "Ginsburg
Gone Wild."
Not that conservatives aren't trying to make it look that way. On the
night of the Alito nomination, for instance, Fox News's Sean Hannity
pushed this argument. "You knew the very extreme positions of Ruth Bader
Ginsburg, but you gave the benefit of the doubt to President Clinton,"
he prompted Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.).
None of this, of course, answers the hard questions posed by the Alito
nomination: Is his judicial philosophy within the ideological goalposts?
Do those goalposts shift depending on the balance of the court, or the
ideology of the departing justice? In grappling with those questions,
though, no one should be taken in by the Ginsburg fallacy. It's what the
justice herself might call a straw person.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/11/14/AR2005111401021.html?nav=hcmodule
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