Northeastern University: Ruth Bader Ginsburg Leaves Behind an Unmatched Legacy
If there were a Mt. Rushmore dedicated to influential scholars and leaders of American law,
This would remain true, he says, even if she never served on the nation's highest court.
The 87-year-old, who died at her home in
"Ginsburg basically changed the way that the
Known for being a contemplative and precise lawyer, Ginsburg was well-respected by her peers, including those who disagreed with her ideologically (she was famously close friends with
Although she arguably represented a leading progressive voice from the bench--as a champion of rights for women and people of the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ) community--Ginsburg was more conservative than she appeared, Urman says.
"She always thought that legal change should follow social and political change," Urman says, pointing to her critique of the Court for the structure of its decision in Roe v. Wade. "This is someone who is very careful with her words, careful with her rulings. And that meant that she thought the best legal change was incremental, not sweeping."
One of her most notable majority decisions was
"She actually went back and spoke at VMI almost 20 years later and there were a lot of women graduates attending so it was this nice full-circle moment," he says.
Another highlight of her career was her sharp dissent in the 2013 landmark decision, Shelby County v. Holder, regarding the constitutionality of two provisions of the Voting Rights Act of 1965. The provisions, which required federal oversight for certain jurisdictions with a history of discrimination to enact any changes in voting procedure, were ruled unconstitutional in a 5-4 decision. In her dissent, Ginsburg wrote that "throwing out preclearance when it has worked and is continuing to work to stop discriminatory changes is like throwing away your umbrella in a rainstorm because you are not getting wet."
"That's another thing she was known for, especially later in her time on the Court: her sharp, passionate, and carefully-worded dissents," says Urman.
Ginsburg's death has sparked a debate over her vacancy because it gives President
With a 6-3 conservative majority, the expansion of the Second Amendment is also a possibility, he says. And if there is a second wave of COVID-19, we could see the Court reversing mandatory government shutdowns.
"You could just have a Court that strikes down most of the efforts by a newly elected
On Saturday, the president said that he expects to announce his nominee for Ginsburg's successor next week and that it will "most likely" be a woman. Emerging as front-runners on his shortlist are appeals court judges
Urman predicts that the president will nominate a replacement shortly, even within the week, in which case
"Trump has been described as salivating to replace Ginsburg," he says. "And if you're looking at the number of conservative judges he has successfully appointed, the courts are a place where
But a number of different scenarios could also play out, says Urman.
A
"The argument is that it focuses people on what this election is really about the future of the
In the event that a nominee is approved after the election and Democratic presidential candidate
The idea has been floated in response to Senate Majority Leader
But on Friday, hours after Ginsburg's death was announced, McConnell said that the
"McConnell is just going for power and switching the rules," Urman says. "Quite simply, he has no shame, and he gets rewarded for it."
It will be interesting to see, Urman says, whether Ginsburg's death will boost turnout in November, and which side benefits.
"This news has upended politics and concentrated it at a level you couldn't imagine," Urman says. "Before yesterday, it was the coronavirus, the struggling economy, and racial justice issues. Those were the election themes. Today it's the future of the



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