Muncie Times, Muncie, Delaware County, 4 August 2005 — Page 19
The Muncie Times • August 4, 2005 • Page 19
TO BE EQUAL
President should choose, four moderate Supreme Court justice
Justice Sandra Day O’Connor’s retirement from the U.S. Supreme Court gives President Bush the opportunity to make the first new appointment of a Supreme Court justice in years. Who cares? We should all care for the president’s choice will affect the lives of every single /Americans, no matter his/ her race, class, age, education, status. African Americans have special reasons to scrutinize the nominee, whom the president said he will name shortly, with the greatest of concern. Some might think that it makes no difference to them who ends up on thecourts because they themselves have never had to appear before a judge. They couldn’t be more wrong. Federal judges have enormous influence over all of us because the decisions they make often go far beyond just the case in front of them. Their decisions set precedents that are followed by other courts, law enforcement, state legislatures and city and town councils, businesses, schools, and other institutions that
touch upon every facet of our lives. These judges, appointed by the president and confirmed by the Senate, serve for life the only federal appointees who can’t be fired or voted out of office except through impeachment and whose terms don’t end after a set number of years or when the president leaves office. The nine Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court have the most power because their opinions cannot be appealed: they represent the last word on the issues they decide. Once “the supreme” speak, that’s it unless the Supreme Court later overturns itself, as it did in the landmark 1954 Brown school segregation decision that struck down the Court’s 1896 endorsement of racial segregation. The Supreme Court does most of its work behind the scenes and out of the limelight, speaking mostly through written opinions. But these written opinions even if we never read them, affect every aspect of American society. They determine whether affirmative action stays or goes. They decide if our
right to vote is a mere concept or is effectively enforced. It’s up to them whether workers discriminated against because of race or gender or age or disability can seek redress in court or can be turned away. And on and on. Because Sandra Day O’Connor was the socalled “swing vote” on issues that reached the court, she was one of its most important figures. While clearly a conservative, O’Connor didn’t always vote in lockstep with the court’s right wing, and she sometimes cast the vote that “swung” the decision the other way. For example, it was Justice O’Connor who saved the day for affirmative action 2 years ago, tipping the scale in favor of upholding the constitutionality of the University of Michigan Law School’s affirmative action program. Had Justice O’Connor sided with Thomas, Scalia, Rehnquist and Kennedy, the policy and practice of affirmative action would likely be gone today. We did not always agree with Justice O’Connor, however. In our view, she sometimes cast the wrong vote, sliding with the
court’s extreme right wing to invalidate or restrict important civil right measures. And it was her vote that decided the outcome of the 2000 presidential election, in which the Supreme Court stepped in and stopped the counting of ballots in Florida, thereby disenfranchising millions of African American Voters. Thus, O’Connor’s record on the court shows that one justice does make a tremendous difference and shows why the selection of the next justice is so important. Bush has said that he wants to appoint justices in the mold of Thomas and Scalia. But the last thing this country needs is more extremist right wing justices. We need justices and we cal upon the president to choose O’Connor’s replacement from among that group.
Marc H. Morial president and CEO of the National Urban League.
This is a defining moment for the president and the U.S. Senate, one that in significant ways will determine not only the law but the political tore of American society for years to come. The National Urban League will carefully examine the record of any nominee the president puts forward. That nominee must be open minded and fair and he or she must have a strong, positive and demonstrated commitment to upholding the protection of civil rights in American society. In that regard, political ideology cannot be a license for going backward. Marc H. Morial is president and CEO of the National Urban Leaque. You can write to him at To Be Equal, 120 Wall St. New York City, NY 10005
