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- <text id=91TT1535>
- <title>
- July 08, 1991: Filling a Legal Giant's Shoes
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- July 08, 1991 Who Are We?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 22
- THE SUPREME COURT
- Filling a Legal Giant's Shoes
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Thurgood Marshall retires, setting the stage for Bush to
- strengthen a conservative majority that could dominate the high
- bench for decades
- </p>
- <p>By Nancy Gibbs--Reported by Dan Goodgame and Julie Johnson/
- Washington
- </p>
- <p> Thurgood Marshall did his best to outlast the Republican
- Presidents he frequently calls "those bastards." But his 83rd
- birthday was approaching, his health was so poor that he said
- he was "coming apart," and there was not much hope that a
- liberal Democrat would recapture the White House and name his
- successor. Last week Marshall, the only African American ever
- to serve as a Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court, gave up the
- seat he had held since 1967.
- </p>
- <p> Despite his physical frailty and growing philosophical
- isolation from his fellow Justices, Marshall's was no meek or
- defeated departure. His last words from the bench were a
- stinging rebuke to the court's conservative majority. In a
- 6-to-3 decision, the Justices ruled that prosecutors in
- death-penalty cases could introduce evidence about the character
- of the victim and the suffering caused by the crime--thereby
- reversing a precedent that was only four years old. In his
- majority decision, Chief Justice William Rehnquist argued that
- while adhering to precedent "is usually the wise policy," it was
- not an inexorable command, especially when decisions were
- "unworkable or badly reasoned."
- </p>
- <p> This brought thunder from Marshall. "Power, not reason, is
- the new currency of this court's decision making," Marshall
- wrote. In the cases overturned, "neither the law nor the facts...underwent any change in the last four years. Only the
- personnel of this court did." The implications of discarding
- established legal principles to pursue a political agenda, he
- charged, were staggering. High on his list of "endangered
- precedents" are cases involving the right to abortion,
- affirmative action, limitations on the death penalty, and
- separation of church and state. The new approach, he added,
- "will squander the authority and legitimacy of this court as a
- protector of the powerless."
- </p>
- <p> There was some irony in this clash of judicial views.
- Rehnquist was appointed to the court by Richard Nixon and
- promoted to Chief Justice by Ronald Reagan, both harsh critics
- of activist judges. As a civil rights attorney, Marshall won
- landmark rulings that overturned long-standing precedents
- upholding legal segregation. Now Rehnquist and his like-minded
- colleagues seemed bent on pursuing an aggressive conservative
- agenda, while Marshall was fighting to uphold the decisions of
- the past.
- </p>
- <p> The rulings of the Rehnquist court have sent liberal
- activists scrambling to Congress and the states to defend rights
- that are increasingly under attack. In May, in Rust v.
- Sullivan, the court ruled that the government could cut off
- federal funds from health clinics that provided abortion
- counseling; last week Congress struck back with a bill to
- restore the funding. The civil rights bill is Congress's
- response to last year's court rulings that made it harder for
- employees to prove that they had suffered discrimination on the
- job. "We are no longer seeking out the Supreme Court to review
- decisions," says Nadine Strossen, president of the A.C.L.U.
- (American Civil Liberties Union). "Now we're constantly asking
- Congress to take corrective action to restore the individual
- liberties that the Supreme Court has taken away."
- </p>
- <p> Though Marshall's retirement gives President Bush another
- chance to shape the direction of the high court, there was
- little rejoicing at the White House. The departure last year of
- Justice William Brennan, who had been the leader of the court's
- liberal wing, tipped the balance and allowed Bush to install a
- conservative majority at last by appointing David Souter.
- Replacing Marshall will not have the same impact; it will mainly
- mean that what would have been 5-to-4 decisions are likely to
- be 6 to 3. But even so, the search for a successor to the
- court's only black justice could be a political minefield.
- "Choosing a brilliant and unexpected nominee like David Souter
- and getting him confirmed--that was fun, for the President and
- for all of us," said a top Administration official. "But this
- one is going to be a bear."
- </p>
- <p> The President has spent the spring crusading against the
- civil rights bill, which he claims would lead to the use of
- racial quotas. But his aides say he is considering applying a
- form of reverse discrimination to the nation's highest court.
- "There's a part of George Bush that's very stubborn and that
- bridles at the idea that he is expected to appoint a black man
- to replace a black man," says a senior White House official. But
- in private, the President's advisers are almost unanimous in
- predicting that he will not appoint another white male. "We can
- certainly get away, politically, with a good Hispanic nominee,"
- says another Bush adviser. "We can probably get away with a
- woman. What would cost us would be picking another white guy."
- </p>
- <p> In weighing his decision, Bush said on Friday, "I want to
- go for excellence. I want to keep in mind the representation of
- all Americans." He might do well to recognize that it was not
- Marshall's race alone that gave Marshall a unique perspective on
- issues before the court. More than any other Justice of his era,
- Marshall brought an experience of the real world, of growing up
- poor, of fighting for principle in the trenches. His views on
- the death penalty, for instance, were shaped by the lessons he
- learned defending people charged with murder. He is the only one
- to have put his own life at risk by trying volatile cases in the
- segregated South. "There was nothing bloodless about his
- decisions," says Professor A.E. Dick Howard of the University of
- Virginia Law School. "He identified with the little people in
- a way that few Justices do."
- </p>
- <p> It is not only racial pressures that the President will be
- feeling. Just as loud are cries from the right to seize this
- chance to target abortion. Already this term the court had
- grazed the issue by upholding the Administration's ban on
- abortion counseling in federally funded clinics. But though
- Souter joined in that vote, his views on a total ban on abortion
- are unknown, and Sandra Day O'Connor has implied a reluctance
- to toss out Roe v. Wade altogether. Thus pressure is building
- on the President to nail down an antiabortion majority once and
- for all--or, says a pro-life leader, "there'll be hell to
- pay."
- </p>
- <p> At the same time, moderate Republicans in Congress, with
- their eye on the 1992 elections, are worried that if the court
- does throw out Roe sometime next year, pro-choice voters will
- take out their anger at the polls. The safest course for Bush
- might be for him to unearth another "stealth" nominee like
- Souter, who has impressive judicial credentials but no paper
- trail on abortion or other divisive issues. Then the nominee
- could follow Souter's lead and refuse to discuss how he or she
- might vote on cases likely to come before the court.
- </p>
- <p> The White House has a short list of candidates that was
- compiled and updated when Brennan stepped down. Among the names
- most often mentioned--all conservative Republicans--are
- Clarence Thomas, 43, a black federal appeals judge from
- Washington; Ricardo Hinojosa, 40, a Mexican-American federal
- district judge from Texas; and Edith Jones, 41, a white federal
- appeals judge from Houston. But Bush has a penchant for surprise
- nominations--witness his choice of Dan Quayle as a running
- mate--and he might indulge it this time.
- </p>
- <p> The last thing the President wants is a brawl with the
- Judiciary Committee over confirmation. The committee's chemistry
- is already explosive enough, with such liberals as chairman
- Joseph Biden and Ted Kennedy squaring off against conservatives
- Orrin Hatch of Utah and Strom Thurmond of South Carolina on
- issues like the crime and civil rights bills. "The Democrats
- aren't beating us anywhere right now, and we want to keep it
- that way," says a senior White House official. "The President
- has them beaten in approval ratings. When he vetoes a bill,
- we're able to sustain it. When he wants to go to war, we're able
- to force Congress to go along. The only place the Democrats have
- really been able to hurt us is in the confirmation of
- appointees, as they did with John Tower. So we'd obviously like
- to avoid giving them more of that kind of opportunity."
- </p>
- <p> Bush doesn't want a replay of 1987, when Ronald Reagan
- named Judge Robert Bork in July and then had to wait until after
- Labor Day for the Judiciary Committee to start confirmation
- proceedings. The delay gave Bork's critics ample time to study
- his record and marshal arguments against him. "As long as you're
- as close as we are, it's better to get the choice made so you
- don't get a lot of needless lobbying and pressure," Bush
- declared before heading for Kennebunkport. He clearly implied
- that he might announce his choice as early as this week.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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