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- <text id=93HT0490>
- <link 93XP0510>
- <title>
- 1981: The Brethren's First Sister
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1981 Highlights
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- July 20, 1981
- NATION
- The Brethren's First Sister
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>A Supreme Court nominee--and a triumph for common sense
- </p>
- <p> Ronald Reagan lived up to a campaign pledge last week, and the
- nation cheered. At a hastily arranged television appearance in
- the White House press room, the President referred to his
- promise as a candidate that he would name a woman to the Supreme
- Court, explaining: "That is not to say I would appoint a woman
- merely to do so. That would not be fair to women, nor to future
- generations of all Americans whose lives are so deeply affected
- by decisions of the court. Rather, I pledged to appoint a woman
- who meets the very high standards I demand of all court
- appointees." So saying, he introduced his nominee to succeed
- retiring Associate Justice Potter Stewart as "a person for all
- seasons," with "unique qualities of temperament, fairness,
- intellectual capacity." She was Sandra Day O'Connor, 51, the
- first woman to serve as majority leader of a U.S. state
- legislature and, since 1979, a judge in the Arizona State Court
- of Appeals.
- </p>
- <p> O'Connor's name had been floated about in rumors ever since
- Stewart, 66, announced his intention to retire last month, but
- her nomination, which must be approved by the Senate in
- September, was a stunning break with tradition. In its 191-year
- history, 101 judges have served on the nation's highest court,
- and all have been men. By giving the brethren their first
- sister, Reagan provided not only a breakthrough on the bench
- but a powerful push forward in the shamefully and needlessly
- tortuous march of women toward full equality in American
- society.
- </p>
- <p> To be sure, Reagan's announcement that he intended to elevate
- O'Connor to the highest U.S. Government post ever held by a
- woman had its roots in partisan politics. Mainly because he had
- been portrayed by Jimmy Carter as a man who might blunder the
- nation into war, Reagan had lacked strong support among women
- in last year's campaign. Moreover, his Administration's record
- of appointing women to office is very poor; only one highly
- visible Cabinet-level post (Ambassador to the United Nations
- Jeane Kirkpatrick); only 45 women among the 450 highest
- positions.
- </p>
- <p> There were also ironies aplenty in Reagan's choice of O'Connor.
- As a trueblue conservative, he had been widely expected to
- select a rigidly doctrinaire jurist in order to stamp his own
- political ideology on the court. Instead, he picked a
- meticulous legal thinker whose devotion to precedent and legal
- process holds clear priority over her personal politics, which
- are Republican conservative.
- </p>
- <p> Whether Reagan was playing shrewd politics, or merely following
- his own best instincts, almost did not matter. After naming
- O'Connor, the President suddenly found himself awash in praise
- from a wide range of political liberals, moderates and old-guard
- conservatives. At the same time, he was under harsh assault
- from the moral-issue zealots in the New Right who helped him
- reach the Oval Office. Although they had little chance of
- blocking the nomination, they charged that O'Connor was a
- closet supporter of the ERA and favored abortion.
- </p>
- <p> Other than on the far right, reaction to the nomination ranged
- from warm to estatic. Feminists generally were pleased.
- Eleanor Smeal, president of the National Organization for Women,
- termed the choice "a major victory for women's rights."
- Patricia Ireland, a Miami attorney and a regional director of
- NOW, said she was "thrilled and excited" by the selection,
- adding: "Nine older men do not have the same perspective on
- issues like sex discrimination, reproductive rights or the issues
- that affect women's rights directly." Declared former Texas
- Congresswoman Barbara Jordan, a black lawyer: "I congratulate
- the President. The Supreme Court was the last bastion of the
- male; a stale dark room that needed to be cracked open. I don't
- know the lady but if she's a good lawyer and believes in the
- Constitution, she'll be all right."
- </p>
- <p> Liberal politicians joined the praise. House Speaker Tip
- O'Neill, who has been feuding with Reagan over his budget cuts
- and tax policies, termed the choice "the best thing he's done
- since he was inaugurated." Said Democratic Senator Edward
- Kennedy, who sits on the Judiciary Committee that will hold
- hearings on O'Connor's nomination: "Every American can take
- pride in the President's commitment to select such a woman for
- this critical office."
- </p>
- <p> Many conservative Republican Senators added their endorsement.
- Utah's Orrin Hatch called it "a fine choice." Reagan's close
- friend, Nevada Senator Paul Laxalt, was enthusiastic, and Senate
- Majority Leader Howard Baker said he was "delighted by the
- nomination." But South Carolina's Strom Thurmond, chairman of
- the Judiciary Committee, was a bit more restrained. "I intend
- to support her," he said, "unless something comes up."
- </p>
- <p> No one championed O'Connor more forcefully than her longtime
- Arizona friend, Senator Barry Goldwater, whose early urging had
- helped her gain White House support. Noting the opposition to
- O'Connor from the far-right groups, Goldwater declared: "I
- don't like getting kicked around by people who call themselves
- conservatives on a nonconservative matter. It is a question of
- who is best for the court. If there is going to be a fight in
- the Senate, you are going to find `Old Goldy' fighting like
- hell." Goldwater attacked directly a claim by the Rev. Jerry
- Falwell, head of the fundamentalist Moral Majority, that all
- "good Christians" should be concerned about the appointment.
- Scoffed Old Goldy: "Every good Christian ought to kick Falwell
- right in the ass."
- </p>
- <p> But the protests from the New Right were blistering. "We feel
- we've been betrayed," charged Paul Brown, head of the
- antiabortion Life Amendment Political Action Committee. Brown
- claimed that Reagan had violated a Republican Party platform
- plank, which declared that only people who believe in
- "traditional family values and the sanctity of the innocent
- human life" should be made judges. "We took the G.O.P. platform
- to be the Bible," he said. Carolyn Gerster, former president
- of the National Right to Life Committee and a physician from
- Scottsdale, Ariz., who knows O'Connor well, argued that the
- judge "is unqualified because she's proabortion. We're going
- to fight this one on the beaches." Also leading the charge from
- the right were Howard Phillips, head of the Conservative Caucus,
- and Richard Viguerie, publisher of Conservative Digest. Declared
- Viguerie: "We've been challenged. The White House has said
- we're a paper tiger. They've left us no choice but to fight."
- </p>
- <p> Despite the outcry, the rightists had no effective leader in
- the Senate who could influence the outcome of O'Connor's
- confirmation hearings and floor vote. North Carolina Republican
- Jesse Helms was urged to take up the cause, but remained aloof
- last week. Trying to stamp out the brushfire, Reagan met with
- Helms to assure him that O'Connor's legislative record was not
- clearly pro-ERA and pro-choice on abortion, as her opponents had
- charged. Reagan declared that "I am completely satisfied" with
- O'Connor's attitude. In a 45-minute meeting with the President
- at the White House on July 1, O'Connor had told Reagan that she
- found abortion "personally repugnant," and that she considered
- abortion "an appropriate subject for state regulation."
- </p>
- <p> Much of the furor was based on O'Connor's votes in the Arizona
- senate. Far more important than her stand on abortion--an issue
- on which virtually no current woman jurist could fully satisfy
- the New Right--was whether she was qualified to serve on the
- Supreme Court. On that point, legal scholars acquainted with
- her past and lawyers who had worked with her in Arizona were in
- wide agreement; while she had much to learn about federal
- judicial issues, she was a brilliant lawyer with a capacity to
- learn quickly. Indeed, her legislative background gives her a
- working knowledge of the lawmaking process that none of the
- current Justices can match.
- </p>
- <p> "She's entirely competent, a nominee of potentially great
- distinction," said Harvard Law Professor Laurence Tribe. Yale
- Law Professor Paul Gewirtz termed O'Connor "smart, fair,
- self-confident and altogether at home with technical issues."
- Michigan Law's Yale Kamisar, a judicial liberal, said of
- Reagan: "Give the devil his due; it was a pretty good
- appointment."
- </p>
- <p> In Arizona, lawyers described her as a painstakingly careful
- attorney and a judge who ran her courtroom with taut discipline
- and a clear disdain for lawyers who had not done their homework.
- "She handled her work with a certain meticulousness, an eye for
- legal detail," recalled Phoenix Lawyer John Frank. Added John
- McGowan, another Phoenix attorney: "She's a very conscientious,
- very careful lawyer." Some defense lawyers, however, found
- O'Connor's strict demeanor on the bench so intimidating that
- they dubbed her "the bitch queen."
- </p>
- <p> Those who have read her 125 decisions on the Arizona appeals
- court, which deal with such routine legal issues as workmen's
- compensation, divorce settlements and tort actions, see her in
- the mold of judges who exercise "judicial restraint." "She
- tends to be a literalist with acute respect for statutes," said
- Frank. O'Connor's colleagues consider her decisions crisp and
- well written. "Mercifully brief and cogent," said McGowan.
- "Clear, lucid and orderly," said Frank. But one Supreme Court
- clerk finds her writing "perfectly ordinary--not different from
- any other 2,000 judges around the country."
- </p>
- <p> How did Reagan happen to pluck O'Connor out of the relative
- obscurity of a state court? For one thing, he had plenty of
- time to order a thorough search for prospects. Reagan learned
- of Stewart's intention to resign on April 21, as he recuperated
- from the assassination attempt. When Attorney General William
- French Smith and Presidential Counsellor Edwin Meese gave Reagan
- the news, he promptly reminded them of his promise to appoint
- a woman.
- </p>
- <p> O'Connor's name had initially surfaced early at Justice as a
- possible choice to head the department's civil division. The
- old-boy network of Stanford had brought her to Smith's
- attention. Among those who recommended O'Connor, as the search
- for a new Justice intensified; Stanford Law Dean Charles Myers,
- former Stanford Professor William Baxter, who now heads the
- Justice Department's antitrust division, and one of Stanford
- Law's most eminent alumni, Justice William Rehnquist. He is
- clearly the court's most consistent and activist conservative,
- so his advice that O'Connor was the best woman for the court
- carried clout. When Goldwater weighed in, too, O'Connor's cause
- flourished.
- </p>
- <p> At a White House meeting on June 23, Smith handed the President
- a list of roughly 25 candidates; about half of them were women.
- Some White House aides, in the words of a female Reagan
- admirer, "have a big problem in coping with professional women,"
- and were neither enthusiastic or optimistic about finding a
- qualified woman judge. The President however, again conveyed
- his "clear preference" for a woman. By then, speculation about
- his possible choice of a woman was spreading. The nomination
- of a doctrinaire male conservative, which might have been his
- inclination, would have brought sharp criticism. Beyond that,
- passing over a qualified female candidate now would put even
- more pressure on Reagan to find one for the next vacancy--and
- he would get much less credit by doing it later rather than
- earlier.
- </p>
- <p> Another factor seemed significant; one member of the Supreme
- Court quietly passed word to the Justice Department that some
- of his aging colleagues were watching the selection carefully.
- If it was a reasonable choice, someone they could respect, they
- might decide there was little to fear from Reagan's attitude
- toward the court and follow Stewart into retirement. Otherwise
- they might hang on as long as they were physically able. Two
- of the Justices, William Brennan, 75, and Thurgood Marshall, 73,
- are liberals Reagan might like to replace.
- </p>
- <p> Regardless of the motives, Reagan's men moved expeditiously to
- seek out a woman who met the President's main criteria. She had
- to be both a political conservative, meaning that she had a
- record of support for all kinds of issues Reagan favors, and
- judicial conservative, meaning that she had a strong sense of
- the court's institutional limitations and would not read her own
- views into the law. The President even cautioned his search
- team that he did not want any single-issue litmus test, such as
- a prospect's views on abortion or E.R.A., to exclude her
- automatically from further consideration. That, of course, is
- precisely what critics of the O'Connor nomination wished the
- President had done.
- </p>
- <p> By late June the list of women candidates had dwindled to four;
- O'Connor; Michigan's Cornelia Kennedy, 57, a Carter-appointed
- judge on the Sixth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals; Mary Coleman,
- 66, chief justice of the Michigan Supreme Court; and Amalya L.
- Kearse, 44, a black who sits on New York's Second Circuit Court
- of Appeals. At this point none of the men was still in serious
- contention.
- </p>
- <p> Smith sent his chief counselor, Kenneth Starr, and Jonathan
- Rose, an Assistant Attorney General, to Phoenix on June 27 to
- interview O'Connor and Arizonans who knew her well. Reporting
- back, Starr and Rose cited her experience as a legislator, a
- state government lawyer, and a trial and appellate judge, which
- made her aware of the practicalities of each branch of
- government. Smith liked her judicial inclination to defer to the
- legislative and executive branches. She was also seen as tough
- on law-and-order and reluctant to rule against police on
- technicalities. "She really made it easy," recalled one
- participant in the search. "She was the right age, had the
- right philosophy, the right combination of experience, the right
- political affiliation, the right backing. She just stood out
- among the women."
- </p>
- <p> O'Connor flew to Washington on June 29 for a breakfast the next
- morning with Smith in a secret hotel hideaway. That same day
- she met with Reagan's senior staff, including the troika of
- Meese, James Baker and Michael Deaver. On July 1 she was
- invited to the Oval Office by Reagan. The 10 a.m. meeting was
- unannounced and, like countless other private presidential
- meetings, went unnoticed by reporters. She moved quickly to
- break any tension in the talks by reminding the President that
- they had met a decade ago, when he was Governor of California
- and she was in the Arizona senate. They had talked about the
- kinds of limitations on spending being considered in both
- states, she recalled. Quipped Reagan with a smile; "Yours
- passed, but mine didn't." Then Reagan and O'Connor settled into
- two wing-back armchairs and chatted for 45 minutes. "She puts
- you at ease," observed one admiring participant in the meeting.
- "She's a real charmer."
- </p>
- <p> Like Reagan, Sandra O'Connor has spent many of her happiest days
- on a Western ranch, riding horses and even roping steers. Her
- parents, Harry and Ada Mae Day, operated a 260-sq.-mi. cattle
- spread straddling the New Mexico-Arizona border. Called the
- Lazy B, it had been in the Day family since 1881--three decades
- before Arizona became a state. Her grandfather had traveled from
- Vermont to found it. Sandra, first of the Days' three children,
- was born in am El Paso hospital because the remote area in which
- they lived had no medical facilities; their ranch house had
- neither electricity nor running water. Greenlee County also had
- no schools that met her parents' standards, so Sandra spent much
- of her youth with a grandmother in El Paso, attending the
- private Radford School and later a public high school there.
- </p>
- <p> "I was always homesick," O'Connor told TIME last week. But she
- loved her summers on the ranch, where she had plenty of time to
- read. A dog-eared Book of Knowledge encyclopedia, copies of the
- National Geographic Magazine and her father's assorted volumes
- from the Book-of-the-Month Club fed her curiosity. By the age
- of ten, she could drive both a truck and a tractor. "I didn't
- do all the things boys did, but I fixed windmills and repaired
- fences." Recalls her girlhood friend and cousin, Flournoy
- Manzo: "We played with dolls, but we knew what to do with
- screwdrivers and nails too. Living on a ranch made us very
- self-sufficient."
- </p>
- <p> Sandra finished high school at the age of 16 and did something
- her father had always longed to do; attend Stanford. He had
- been forced to give up his college plans and take over the
- family ranch when Sandra's grandfather died. "I only applied
- to Stanford and no place else," said Sandra. She rushed through
- her undergraduate work and law studies in just five years,
- graduating magna cum laude and joining the honorary Society of
- the Coif, which accepts only the best law students. She won a
- post on the Stanford Law Review, where she met her future
- husband John, who was one class behind her. She ranked in the
- top ten in her class scholastically. So too did Rehnquist, who
- had graduated six months earlier.
- </p>
- <p> Degree in hand, O'Connor collided head-on with the legal
- profession's prejudice against women: "I interviewed with law
- firms in Los Angeles and San Francisco, but none had ever hired
- a woman before as a lawyer, and they were not prepared to do
- so." Among the firms to which she applied was Los Angeles'
- Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher. One of its partners was William French
- Smith. The firm offered to hire her--as a legal secretary.
- </p>
- <p> O'Connor took a job as a deputy county attorney in San Mateo,
- Calif., while John, whom she had married in 1952, finished law
- school. When he joined the Army's Judge Advocate General's
- Corps. the two lived in Frankfurt, West Germany, for three years,
- where she worked as a civilian lawyer for the Quartermaster
- Corps. They returned to the U.S., moving to Phoenix in 1957,
- when the first of their three sons was born. All the children
- attended a Jesuit-run high school in Phoenix (Sandra O'Connor
- is an Episcopalian, her husband a former Roman Catholic). Scott,
- 23, graduated from Stanford last year; Brian, 21, attends
- Colorado College; and Jay, 19, is a sophomore at Stanford. After
- a brief fling at running her own law firm in a Phoenix suburb,
- where she handled everything from leases to drunken driving
- cases, she spent five years as a fulltime housewife. She was a
- typical joiner; president of the Junior League, adviser to the
- Salvation Army, auxiliary volunteer at a school for blacks and
- Hispanics, member of both town and country private clubs.
- "Finally," she recalled, "I decided I needed a paid job so that
- my life would be more orderly."
- </p>
- <p> That was in 1965. She spent four years as an assistant
- attorney general in Arizona. Appointed by the Maricopa County
- Board of Supervisors to fill a vacancy as a state senator in
- 1969, she ran successfully for the senate in 1970 and 1972. Her
- 17 admiring Republican colleagues (all but two were men) elected
- her majority leader in 1972.
- </p>
- <p> O'Connor's devotion to detail soon became legendary. She once
- offered an amendment to bill merely to insert a missing, but
- important, comma. As majority leader, she learned to use both
- tact and toughness to cajole colleagues into achieving consensus
- on divisive issues. When the usual flurry of eleventh-hour
- legislation delayed adjournment of the Arizona legislature in
- 1974, one committee chairman was furious at what he considered
- O'Connor's failure to finish up the senate's business. Said he
- to O'Connor: "If you were a man, I'd punch you in the mouth."
- Snapped the lady right back: "If you were a man, you could."
- </p>
- <p> While critics focus on her E.R.A. and abortion votes. O'Connor
- notes that her legislative achievements ranged from tax relief
- to flood-control funding to restoring the death penalty. "She
- worked interminable hours and read everything there was," says
- Democratic State Senator Alfredo Gutierrez, "It was impossible
- to win a debate with her. We'd go on the floor with a few facts
- and let rhetoric do the rest. Not Sandy. She would overwhelm
- you with her knowledge."
- </p>
- <p> Although highly successful in the senate, O'Connor grew restless
- and decided to return to law. She ran and won a spot on the
- Maricopa County Superior Court bench in 1974. Explained her
- senate colleague Anne Lindeman: "At the end of her term she was
- at a crossroads. She had to choose between politics and the
- law." Said O'Connor about the law: "It is marvelous because
- it is always changing."
- </p>
- <p> As a trial judge, O'Connor was stern but fair. At least twice,
- colleagues recall, she advised defendants to get new attorneys
- because their lawyers had been unprepared. After a Scottsdale
- mother of two infants pleaded guilty to passing four bad checks
- totalling $3,500, she begged for mercy from O'Connor, claiming
- the children would become wards of the state. The father had
- abandoned the family, O'Connor calmly sentenced the middleclass
- woman to five to ten years in prison, saying, "You should have
- known better." But when she got back to her chambers she broke
- into tears.
- </p>
- <p> Judge O'Connor did not hesitate to order the death penalty for
- Mark Koch, then 23, who had been found guilty of murder for
- agreeing to knife another man in return for a $3,300 fee. The
- contract killing stemmed from a dispute over drugs. (Koch has
- since appealed the verdict and been granted a new trial.)
- </p>
- <p> When state Republican leaders urged her to run against
- Democratic Governor Bruce Babbitt in 1978, she declined.
- Instead, she was retained as a judge in Maricopa County and,
- after only eleven months, was nominated to the Arizona Court of
- Appeals by Babbitt, who denies trying to sidetrack a potentially
- dangerous opponent. Says Babbitt: "I had to find the finest
- talent available to create confidence in our new merit system.
- Her intellectual ability and her judgment are astonishing."
- </p>
- <p> On the appeals court, O'Connor faced no landmark cases. But she
- did manage to cut the court's case load by persuading her
- former colleagues in the senate to modify laws involving
- workmen's compensation and unemployment insurance. Generally,
- she upheld trial judges, dismissing appeals from defendants who
- claimed they had been denied a speedy trial, refused
- transcripts, and other technicalities. In an article for the
- current issue of the William and Mary Law Review, she urged
- federal judges to give greater weight to the factual findings
- of state courts, contending that when a state judge moves up to
- the federal bench, "he or she does not become immediately
- better equipped intellectually to do the job."
- </p>
- <p> But if O'Connor's own intellectual gifts are widely praised, the
- self-assured woman, who is of medium height and wears such
- sensible clothes as suits with silk blouses and matching ascots,
- is neither dull company nor dour. "She never forgets she's a
- lady--and she'll never let you forget," says Attorney McGowan.
- Yet Stanford Vice President Joel P. Smith recalls her as "the
- best dancer I've danced with" when he knew her as a member of
- the Stanford Board of Trustees. She does a nifty two-step and
- enjoys country music. A superb cook specializing in Mexican
- dishes, she, along with her husband, is a popular partygiver and
- -goer. While the prosperous Phoenix lawyer regales guests with
- Irish jokes told in a brogue, she jumps in to lift stories
- along, without ever stepping on the punch lines. She golfs
- weekly (her handicap is 18), plays an average game of tennis
- and, typically, works intensely at both.
- </p>
- <p> It is that striving for perfection that most impresses
- acquaintances. When she and John helped complete their lavish
- home in suburban Paradise Valley, where houses cost $500,000 or
- more, one friend was amazed to find them both soaking adobe
- bricks in coat after coat of milk. "It's an old technique,"
- O'Connor explained. "But I don't know why you use skim and not
- homogenized milk. "Her father, who is 83, jokes about her
- diligence. "She's so damned conscientious," he says, "she
- wouldn't even give me a legal opinion. As a judge she can't,
- so she refers me to her husband." Still, her mother sees a
- humility in Sandra, despite her accomplishments, explaining,
- "She isn't the type who would try to high-hat anyone." A friend
- recalls an example. When O'Connor was president of Heard Indian
- Museum, which holds an annual and overcrowded handcraft sale,
- her son Scott wanted one item badly but had broken his leg in
- a skiing accident. Instead of using her clout to bypass a long
- line of buyers, his mother spent several hours sitting on a camp
- stool to await her turn.
- </p>
- <p> How will O'Connor's appointment, assuming she is confirmed,
- affect the decisions of the high court? The security of
- lifetime tenure can liberate Justices to see themselves in a new
- perspective, unencumbered by the pressures of climbing toward
- the top. They are there. Justices have often confounded the
- Presidents who appointed them with unpredictable decisions.
- After Oliver Wendell Holmes ruled against Teddy Roosevelt in a
- key antitrust case, the President, who had appointed Holmes,
- fumed; "I could carve out of a banana a judge with more
- backbone than that." Said Dwight Eisenhower about his
- selection of Earl Warren: "The worst damn fool mistake I ever
- made." Harry Blackmun stunned Richard Nixon by writing the
- court's majority opinion in Roe vs. Wade (1973), the decision
- that legalized abortion.
- </p>
- <p> Based on what little they know about O'Connor, legal scholars
- expect her to fit in neatly with a court that is sharply split
- in philosophy, tends to analyze each case on strictly legal
- merits, and has pioneered only in selected areas of the law.
- A Justice Department official says approvingly of O'Connor:
- "She is not leaping out to overrule trial court judges or state
- lawyers or to craft novel theories. Her opinions are sensible
- and scholarly."
- </p>
- <p> O'Connor shares with Rehnquist more than a Stanford background;
- both are Republicans from Arizona who have Barry Goldwater's
- favor. Nonetheless, legal scholars doubt that O'Connor will
- become a clone of the court's leading conservative. They do not
- expect a pair of "Arizona twins" to develop and to hang together
- any more consistently than have the now-splintered "Minnesota
- twins," Burger and Blackmun. Broadly speaking, the court now has
- two liberals, Brennan and Marshall, in a standoff facing two
- conservatives, Rehnquist and Burger. The decisions thus often
- depend on how the other so-called fluid five divide on a given
- case. And that rarely can be foreseen.
- </p>
- <p> Blackmun, who has moved increasingly to the left, probably
- works harder than the other judges on his decisions, which often
- reflect his ad hoc, personal sense of right and wrong. The
- courtly Virginian, Lewis Powell, is regarded as the great
- balancer, in the middle on almost every case. John Paul
- Stevens, the most original thinker on the court, is an
- iconoclastic loner who likes to file separate opinions that
- challenge old assumptions even when his conclusions coincide
- with those of his brothers. Byron White, the best pure lawyer
- on the court, is unpredictably conservative, but meticulously
- careful about facts and precedent. O'Connor is generally
- expected to fit into that shifting middle, as her predecessor
- Stewart did; thus her appointment, at least initially, is likely
- to be less decisive a factor than if she replaced one of the men
- on either the left or the right.
- </p>
- <p> At the very least, some court observers hope that this
- consensus-building experience as a legislator, with its premium
- on dealing with personalities, as well as the fact that she is
- a woman, will dissolve some of the aloofness among the brethren.
- There is little personal rapport and togetherness on the
- current court--and the Justices tend to communicate with one
- another only in writing. The result is often a series of
- individual opinions based on conflicting rationales that confuse
- the impact of a majority decision. Powell has called the court
- "nine one-man law firms." A touch of warmth and sociability
- could improve the court's effectiveness, no matter what
- direction it takes.
- </p>
- <p> Some experts see the current court as a transitional tribunal
- poised between the social activism of the distinctly liberal
- Warren court and whatever might lie ahead. Despite four
- appointments made by Richard Nixon and one by Gerald Ford, the
- Burger bench has retreated surprisingly little from the
- pioneering decisions on school integration, procedural rights
- for criminals defendants, and the "one man, one vote" principle
- of legislative apportionate. Moreover, the Burger court has
- broken some new ground. It was unanimous in restricting Nixon's
- Watergate-era claims of Executive privilege. It has upheld
- affirmative action to correct past racial inequities in a
- moderate way. It has advanced women's rights against
- discrimination in employment to a notable degree.
- </p>
- <p> Former Deputy Solicitor General Frank Easterbrook, professor of
- law at the University of Chicago, cites some less familiar areas
- where the Justices put their stamp. "They have completely
- overhauled antitrust law, by unanimous votes in many cases," he
- says. "They have turned securities law upside down. They have
- greatly clarified the law of private rights of action--who can
- sue whom. They have done wonders at rationalizing the law on
- double jeopardy." Easterbrook, however, is less happy with
- court rulings on Fourth Amendment questions dealing with search
- and seizure: "They're all over the lot. They haven't the
- foggiest notion of what they're doing."
- </p>
- <p> In presenting Sandra O'Connor to the press, Reagan described his
- right to nominate Supreme Court Justices as the presidency's
- "most awesome appointment" power. True enough, and chances are
- that he will have the opportunity to exercise that power again.
- Whether or not Reagan is able to shape "his" court is as
- problematical as it was for most of his predecessors. What is
- important is that he had the imagination and good sense to break
- down a useless discriminatory barrier by naming a woman to the
- nation's Supreme Court--at last. America waits to see what
- place in legal history will be carved out by this daunting
- daughter of Arizona pioneers.
- </p>
- <p>-- By Ed Magnuson. Reported by Joseph J. Kane/Phoenix and Evan
- Thomas/Washington
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-