Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg on Women, Immigration and the Nominee by marilyn salenger

Ruth bader ginsburg formal.png

Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg has been called frail, old, and too old for her job on the Supreme Court. Don't tell her that. "I’m feeling fine," she said crediting her trainer during a February 23 appearance at George Washington University in Washington, D.C. "I'll do this job as long as I can do it at full speed." At 83 her voice may be soft, but her words are strong.

Justice Ginsburg is a judicial pioneer who became the second female justice on the Supreme Court when she was appointed by President Bill Clinton in 1993. As a powerful legal advocate for women’s equality, gender and racial equality throughout her career, she has now sits on the bench with Justices Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan. "Three women on the court makes a great difference,” she told her audience. “We're one third of the Court and it looks like we're there to stay. Now school children can visit the court and say this is something to which I can aspire."

In the world of formality that the Supreme Court of the United States inhabits, Justice Ginsburg's university stage provided a more casual setting for some serious thoughts that were frequently intertwined with personal anecdotes.

Ginsburg made no direct mention of President Donald Trump or his immigration policies, but made clear how she feels. "We are not as mindful of what makes America great. One example is the right to speak one’s mind, and the idea of our nation being receptive to all, welcoming all people." She added, "The notion that in our nation we are many and yet we are one." That last comment reads as if it were part of a Supreme Court decision.

With Trump's executive order banning travel from seven Muslim countries now temporarily stopped by a federal court order, the role the courts will play on immigration has just begun. Justice Ginsburg provided an important clue should the case reach the Supreme Court.

She spoke warmly of her own heritage as a direct example of personal experience concerning immigration. “I am the beneficiary myself of my father being able to leave the Old World where the conditions were not good, to come here and make a living and raise a family,” Ginsburg said. “That is America to me.” Using her personal experiences to make an important point, we began to see, in part, how she shapes her opinions.

As for the President's Supreme Court nominee, Judge Neil Gorsuch, she was once again surprisingly candid saying, "I've worked with him and I think he's very easy to get along with." She then paused before adding, "He writes very well." Justice Ginsburg's voice trailed off, and it was clear that the sentence was ended at that point very purposely.

Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg left the stage to a rousing round of applause. It was a pleasure spending part of the afternoon with her. She is, after all, “The Notorious R.B.G.”

 

 

"Evolving and Eroding Trust" by marilyn salenger

Photo by Gage Skidmore/CC BY SA2.0

Photo by Gage Skidmore/CC BY SA2.0

The flagrant disregard for ethics and laws is catching up with President Donald Trump less than one month into his term of office. Richard Nixon's paranoia did him in. Donald Trump's self- righteous self-absorption may do the same to him.

The resignation of National Security Advisor Michael Flynn is just the beginning. It happened at this point in time because of superb journalistic reporting by The Washington Post exposing Flynn’s connections to Russia. On February 9, the Post broke the story revealing that Flynn privately discussed sanctions against Russia with the Russian Ambassador to the United States, Sergey Kislyak, weeks before Trump took office. This was contrary to public statements made by Trump officials and Vice President Mike Pence. Reports now state that Pence did not find out the truth until February 9, well after his Face the Nation appearance defending Flynn on January 15.

The Post took the story a step further when it reported that acting Attorney General Sally Yates informed the Trump White House late last month that she believed Flynn not only misled senior administration officials about the nature of his communications with the Russian ambassador, but warned them that he was potentially vulnerable to Russian blackmail. 

White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer let us know his version of what the President knew and when he knew it, but left more questions unanswered. He said Trump knew "for weeks" that his National Security Advisor had misled White House officials and Vice President Mike Pence before he was forced to resign.

If the White House knew about Flynn and Russia weeks earlier why did they do nothing about it until a major newspaper broke the story?

Trump only dug himself in deeper on Friday, February 10, the day after The Washington Post story first appeared. When questioned about the Flynn story by reporters onboard Air Force One, the president responded,

"I don't know about that. I haven't seen it. What report is that? I haven't seen that. I'll look into that,"

But Trump did know about it. The truth was withheld.

White House Counsel Don McGahn reportedly told Trump the details in a briefing late last month after he was informed by acting attorney general Sally Yates on Jan. 26. Spicer now says the president and a small group of senior aides were briefed by McGahn about Flynn that same day.  

Trump's relationship with Russia has raised serious questions since the early days of his campaign. Flynn's contacts with the Russian Ambassador initially became of interest because their timing centered around the latest sanctions against Russia. Those sanctions were imposed when U.S. intelligence agencies concluded that Russia had waged a cyber campaign to help elect Donald Trump.

Speaking for the White House about Flynn's departure, Sean Spicer said "the evolving and eroding level of trust" is what led the president to ask for Flynn's resignation. Those same words - evolving and eroding level of trust - could be applied to the Trump presidency.  

Russia and the White House have not gone away.