Jul 8, 2010 - Issue 383 |
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The Marshall Legacy Shows |
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At
Elena Kagan’s Senate nomination hearings to be the next Supreme
Court Justice, I admit to being somewhat surprised when Senator Kyle saw
her clerkship with Justice Thurgood Marshall
as an opening to define her as being a potentially “activist judge.” Although
conservatives had often made that charge, they had not been explicit in
naming Justices they believed acted in that manner. Although Senator Dick
Durbin strongly defended I first met Thurgood Marshall in 1959 when he was a special guest at the
Race Relations Institute at It seems that
the “activist judges” on the The other problem they have with Justice Marshall is his unrelenting criticism of the growing conservatism of the Court that challenged the recent victories of the Civil Rights movement. The 1978 Bakke case found racial set-asides unconstitutional and his dissent asserted that “bringing the Negro into the mainstream of American life should be a state interest of the highest order” and cautioned that failing to do so would forever make America a divided society. When Nixon-appointed Chief Justice Warren Burger made a speech elevating the rights of victims as a new conservative direction of the court in February of 1981, Marshall struck back in a brilliant speech that May, “The Sword and the Robe,” in which he talked about the role of judging in humanistic terms, saying at one point: “We have seen what happens when the courts have permitted themselves to be moved by prevailing political pressures and have deferred to the mob rather than interpret the Constitution, “ naming Dred Scott, Plessey and others. His role in opposition to this movement earned him the status of “the great dissenter,” as he fought a furious battle to keep the legacy of civil rights alive with more than 150 dissenting opinions. The coming of conservative governments, beginning with Ronald Reagan however, presented such a challenge to the legacy of civil rights that he often spoke out publicly, saying in a 1989 interview that, “I wouldn’t do the job of dogcatcher for Ronald Reagan.” In another place he said about George (H. W.) Bush, that, “…if you can’t say something good about a dead person, don’t say it. Well, I consider him dead.” When the A delicious irony here is that Justice Sandra Day O’Connor was a leader in striking down some of these past precedents that upheld the legacy of civil rights, but when Justice Marshall retired in 1992, she confirmed the fact that his role - and by inference other justices - on the High Court was not just to mechanically interpret the Constitution, but in doing so to bring about justice. In a moving tribute to him, she said in part: “His was the eye of a lawyer who saw the deepest wounds in the social fabric and used law to heal them. His was the ear of a counselor who understood the vulnerabilities of the accused and established safeguards for their protection. He was the mouth of a man who knew the anguish of the silenced and gave them a voice.” He was an activist for justice, but then, this is what Supreme Court JUSTICES should be. BlackCommentator.com Editorial
Board member, Dr. Ron
Walters, PhD is a Political Analyst, Author and Professor Emeritus of Government and Politics at the University of Maryland, College Park. One of his latest
books is: The Price of Racial Reconciliation (The Politics of Race and Ethnicity)
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