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Rbg photos
Rbg photos







rbg photos

Shortly before her death, Ginsburg dictated a statement to her granddaughter: “My most fervent wish is that I will not be replaced until a new president is installed.” Ginsburg hugged President Barack Obama before he delivered his State of the Union speech in February, 2013. Ginsburg’s nomination to the nation’s top court required a sustained campaign organized by her husband, who fought to overcome the perception among feminists that Ginsburg might be too conservative. Ginsburg and her late husband Marty attended a gala opening night dinner following a Washington Opera performance, in October 2000. Despite writing nearly 200 opinions during her tenure on the court, Ginsburg leaves behind few such landmark majority opinions, because she spent virtually all of her career as part of the court’s liberal minority. Virginia, in which the court held that the male-only admissions policy at the Virginia Military Institute violated the Constitution’s Equal Protection Clause. Just three years after her appointment, she wrote the majority opinion in United States v. Supreme Court pose for a group portrait in Washington, in December 1993. Born in 1933 in New York City, Ginsburg was the second woman to ever serve on the Supreme Court. Supreme Court Chief Justice William Rehnquist, right, administered the oath to defend the Constitution to Ruth Bader Ginsburg, as President Bill Clinton looked on, in the East Room of the White House, on August 10, 1993. Here’s a pictorial look back at some of the defining moments from Bader Ginsburg’s barrier-breaking career. This legacy was cemented later, in the Twitter Age, as a symbol of judicial resistance, under the moniker gifted to her by legions of fans, world-wide, for her strident dissents: the Notorious RBG. Throughout her career, she burnished her credentials as a fierce advocate for women’s rights, a reputation she developed while working for the ACLU on landmark gender discrimination cases.

rbg photos

Before that, President Jimmy Carter nominated her to a 13-year tenure on the D.C.

rbg photos

The liberal feminist icon made history by becoming the second woman to ever serve on the Supreme Court, to which she was nominated by President Bill Clinton in 1993. Trailblazing Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg has died at 87. Fight disinformation: Sign up for the free Mother Jones Daily newsletter and follow the news that matters.









Rbg photos