Ruth Bader Ginsburg will be honored with a statue in Brooklyn, the New York City borough where she was born and grew up.
Ruth Bader Ginsburg: death of liberal justice gives Trump chance to reshape the US for generations
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The supreme court justice died on Friday at the age of 87, 27 years after her nomination by Bill Clinton.
Donald Trump, former presidents, governors, federal jurists and lawmakers led tributes. In New York, Governor Andrew Cuomo announced that the state would erect the statue.
“She redefined gender equity and civil rights and ensured America lived up to her founding ideals,” Cuomo said in a statement. “She was a monumental figure of equality, and we can all agree that she deserves a monument in her honor.”
In Washington DC, hundreds gathered on the steps of the court overnight, marking the passing of a justice who became a hero to liberals.
Elizabeth LaBerge, a lawyer, said Ginsburg’s death was another blow for people who have made “serious law and order a mission of their lives”.
She never forgot where she came from, or those who sacrificed to help her grow into the historic icon we came to revere
Kamala Harris
“Who is going to take care of us?’ ” LaBerge, 36, told the Washington Post. “It just feels like such a deep loss at this particular time. It’s a lot to put on a woman of her age to keep us safe and functioning as a constitutional democracy.”
The California senator Kamala Harris, Joe Biden’s running mate in the presidential election, called Ginsburg a “titan”, “a relentless defender of justice” and “a legal mind for the ages”.
“Justice Ginsburg,” she said, “was known to pose the question, ‘What is the difference between a bookkeeper in the Garment District and a supreme court justice?’ Her answer: ‘One generation.’ She never forgot where she came from, or those who sacrificed to help her grow into the historic icon we all came to revere.”
On Saturday morning, Harris too visited the steps of the court.
“The stakes of this election couldn’t be higher,” she wrote. “Millions of Americans are counting on us to win and protect the supreme court – for their health, for their families, and for their rights.”
Trump, who now has a chance to tip the court firmly to the right, was at first caught off guard on Friday night. After stepping off stage at a campaign rally in Minnesota, he described the justice as “an amazing woman who led an amazing life”.
The president later issued a formal proclamation that remembered Ginsburg “for her brilliant mind and her powerful dissents at the supreme court”, and ordered flags flown at half-staff until sunset on the day of her interment.
On Saturday, Trump signaled that he would move quickly to nominate a replacement, setting up a Senate fight just weeks before the election.
Biden said: “Ruth Bader Ginsburg stood for all of us. She was an American hero, a giant of legal doctrine, and a relentless voice in the pursuit of that highest American ideal: Equal Justice Under Law.”
He also posted: “Let me be clear: the voters should pick a president, and that president should select a successor to Justice Ginsburg.”
Barack Obama, who nominated two women to follow Ginsburg on to the court, wrote: “Justice Ginsburg helped us see that discrimination on the basis of sex isn’t about an abstract ideal of equality; that it doesn’t only harm women; that it has real consequences for all of us. It’s about who we are – and who we can be.”
Justice Ginsburg paved the way for so many women, including me. There will never be another like her
Hillary Clinton
Bill Clinton, who nominated Ginsburg to the court in 1993, said: “America has lost one of the most extraordinary justices ever to serve on the supreme court. She was a magnificent judge and a wonderful person – a brilliant lawyer with a caring heart, common sense, fierce devotion to fairness and equality, and boundless courage in the face of her own adversity.
“Her landmark opinions advancing gender equality, marriage equality, the rights of people with disabilities, the rights of immigrants, and so many more moved us closer to ‘a more perfect union’.”
Hillary Clinton said: “Justice Ginsburg paved the way for so many women, including me. There will never be another like her. Thank you RBG.”
The supreme court’s chief justice, John Roberts, mourned “a jurist of historic stature [and] a cherished colleague”. Senator Lindsey Graham, the Republican chairman of the judiciary committee, a key figure in the looming battle over Ginsburg’s replacement, called her “a trailblazer” and said: “While I had many differences with her on legal philosophy, I appreciate her service to our nation.”
Among legal scholars, Amanda Tyler, a professor at the University of California, Berkeley, who clerked for Ginsburg, said she “was defined by her brilliance, her dedication to her work, her resilience, and her unwavering devotion to taking up the founders’ calling, set out in the preamble to our constitution, to make ours a ‘more perfect union’”.
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Erin Murphy, a law professor at New York University, remarked on Ginsburg’s friendship with the conservative justice Antonin Scalia, who died in 2016 and whose seat was held open by the Senate majority leader, Mitch McConnell, in defiance of political convention, until a new president could pick a replacement.
“What irony,” Murphy wrote, “that the deaths of Scalia and Ginsburg – the two revered justices from opposite ends of the political spectrum, famously best buds notwithstanding ideological difference – precipitated our extreme free fall into rancor and partisanship.”
Recently receiving the National Constitution Center’s Liberty Medal on the 100th anniversary of the ratification of the 19th amendment which gave women the right to vote, Ginsburg said she felt lucky to have joined the fight.
“It was my great good fortune to have the opportunity to participate in the long effort to place equal citizenship stature for women on the basic human rights agenda,” Ginsburg said. “In that regard, I was scarcely an innovator.”
The justice will be buried at Arlington national cemetery.
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