🇺🇸👩‍⚖️⚖️👏 JUSTICE SANDRA DAY O’CONNOR (1930 – 2023): GUTSY LEGAL TRAIL BLAZER OPENED DOORS, CHANGED LEGAL LANDSCAPE — Brought Practicality, Humanity, Civility To High Court!

Hon. Sandra Day O’Connor (1930 - 2023)Associate Justice, Supreme Court (1981 - 2006) PHOTO: Wikimedia Commons
Hon. Sandra Day O’Connor (1930 – 2023)
Associate Justice, Supreme Court (1981 – 2006)
PHOTO: Wikimedia Commons

A retrospective by Sara Bondoili on HuffPost:

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/sandra-day-oconnor-dead_n_561c0f00e4b0e66ad4c8d5a4

Sandra Day O’Connor, the first woman to serve on the Supreme Court, died at age 93, the court announced Friday.

The woman who often referred to herself as FWOTSC (First Woman on the Supreme Court) was a justice for 26 years, serving as the swing vote in cases addressing abortion and affirmative action. (O’Connor, however, hated the term “swing vote,” saying it suggested a person who made their rulings on a whim.) She retired from the court in 2006.

“My appointment just opened the doors, and it was not only in the United States,” O’Connor said in 2012. “It immediately had an effect in other parts of the world, with opportunities for women. It was quite amazing to see.”

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Read the rest of the tribute at the link.

She was a pioneer and a legal giant who put thoughtful judging, fairness, problem solving, and collegiality above ideology. She changed America for the better. Not many judges today can say that!

Interestingly, Justice O’Connor’s story is similar to that of one of my law professors at U.W. Law (1970-73), Hon. Shirley Abrahamson who went on to serve as Chief Justice of the Wisconsin Supreme Court. Despite graduating at the top of her class at Indiana Law, like Justice O’Connor, Chief Justice Abrahamson got no job offers other than as a legal secretary. Like Justice O’Connor, Chief Justice Abrahamson refused to accept the arrogant, misogynistic “verdict” of the then male-dominated legal system “establishment.” Like Justice O’Connor, she fought her way the top of our profession by virtue of her intellectual excellence, performance, and persistance. 

While opening doors for many, unfortunately, as she herself acknowledged, Justice O’Connor is also symbolic of a bygone era — one where practical experience and common sense in our judges was valued over ideology. It’s impossible to imagine any candidate for the Supremes being unanimously confirmed by the Senate, as it is that any future Republican President would even consider someone like Justice O’Connor for the job.

🇺🇸 Due Process Forever!

PWS

12-02-23