[Mb-civic] An 'Activist' Justice - George F. Will - Washington Post
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Mon Sep 5 08:02:41 PDT 2005
An 'Activist' Justice
By George F. Will
Monday, September 5, 2005; Page A31
When the 1964 presidential candidacy of Arizona's Sen. Barry Goldwater
carried only six states, many commentators concluded that conservatism,
and especially his southwestern sort, would not be heard from again. But
many conservatives said to themselves, "Well, we'll just see about that."
One of those was a young Phoenix attorney, William Rehnquist. After
graduating at the top of his Stanford Law School class in which another
Arizonan, Sandra Day O'Connor, finished third, his political interests
were quickened by Goldwater's campaign.
Another conservative undiscouraged by 1964 was a Californian who came to
the nation's attention as a political figure by giving a nationally
telecast speech for Goldwater. Twenty-two years later, Ronald Reagan
nominated Associate Justice Rehnquist to move along the Supreme Court's
bench, where President Richard M. Nixon had placed him, to the center
chair -- the chief justice's -- a few feet from where Reagan's first
Supreme Court nominee, O'Connor, sat.
Rehnquist's life of public service, which began when he clerked for
Justice Robert Jackson, ended three days before the scheduled beginning
of Senate hearings on the nomination to the court of Rehnquist's former
clerk, John Roberts. If Rehnquist's death occasions a proper assessment
of his jurisprudence, the assessment will be a suitable coda to his
lifelong reverence for the court and will dispel some confusion about it.
Our language is, just now, fogging our intelligence. It is said that
Rehnquist was an "activist." That is true, but not especially
illuminating, absent a caveat and a distinction.
The caveat is that although Rehnquist was a conservative activist, he
was not a radical. He was averse to overturning settled practices, and
he knew how to honorably accept defeat -- how to bring closure to an
argument about the Constitution had his side lost.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/09/04/AR2005090400912.html?nav=hcmodule
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://www.islandlists.com/pipermail/mb-civic/attachments/20050905/a6d18ca2/attachment.htm
More information about the Mb-civic
mailing list