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  1. 10. Juni 2022 · Some women's rights supporters blame Ginsburg for not retiring during Obama's presidency, enabling Trump to appoint a conservative justice who may overturn Roe v Wade. The article explores the mixed feelings of former colleagues, peers and fans of the late Supreme Court justice.

    • Ginsburg Could Have Retired at Any Time
    • Clear Choice Not to Retire
    • Would Obama Have Gotten An ultra-progressive Nominee Confirmed?
    • Our Rating: Missing Context
    • Our Fact-Check Sources

    It's true that Ginsburg, like any justice on the court, could have chosen to retire at any point. Ginsburg wasnominated to the high court by President Bill Clinton and assumed the role on Aug. 10, 1993, when she was 60 years old. Two decades later, early in Obama's second term, calls for Ginsburg's retirement began, according to The New York Times....

    Although she could have done so at any point, Ginsburg repeatedly made it clear she did not plan to retire anytime soon. In fact, in 2019, she defended her decision to stay on the Supreme Court, despite some suggesting she should have stepped down during Obama's second term. "When that suggestion is made, I ask the question: Who do you think that t...

    A question remains, too, whether Obama could or would have nominated an "ultra-progressive" judge to the high court, and whether the Senate would have approved such a person. A Democratic majority in the Senate lasted until the 2014 midterm elections, giving Obama nearly two years of legislative control that could, in theory, have been used to push...

    While it's true that Ginsburg could have retired at age 80, or at any time, there is little evidence to support or deny that an "ultra-progressive" jurist in their 40s would have been nominated or confirmed during Obama's administration, even with a Democratic Senate majority. We rate this claim as MISSING CONTEXT because it presents a conclusion n...

    Interview with Suzanna Sherry, constitutional law and Supreme Court expert, Herman O. Loewenstein Professor of Law at Vanderbilt University.
    USA TODAY, Sept. 21, Fact check: Ruth Bader Ginsburg planned to stay on Supreme Court at least a few more years
    Ross M. Stolzenberg and James Lindgren, Demography and National Center for Biotechnology Information, U.S. National Library of Medicine, May 2010, Retirement and Death in Office of U.S. Supreme Cou...
    Washington Post, Aug. 28, 2019,When do Supreme Court justices retire? When the politics are right.
    • Justice Reporter
  2. The timing of Ginsburgs death on Friday at 87, from complications of a recurrence of pancreatic cancer, and President Trump’s determination to quickly confirm a successor, have prompted a...

  3. Ruth Bader Ginsberg retirement: Did staying on until death endanger her legacy? A Playful Exploration. Follow Us. Jurisprudence. Let’s Talk About Whether RBG Should Have Retired. The...

    • Mike Pesca
  4. 18. Sept. 2021 · CNN — One year after the death of Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, schools and hospitals have been christened for her, scholarly awards created in her name and artworks designed...

  5. Joan Ruth Bader Ginsburg (* 15. März 1933 in Brooklyn, New York City, New York als Joan Ruth Bader; † 18. September 2020 in Washington, D.C. [1] [2]) war eine US-amerikanische Juristin und ab 1993 Beisitzende Richterin (Associate Justice) am Supreme Court der Vereinigten Staaten. Dort wurde sie dem „linken“ (liberalen) Flügel zugerechnet.

  6. 19. Sept. 2020 · September 2020, 9:48 Uhr. 215. Auf einer Seite lesen. Inhalt. Seite 1Eine Stimme, die nicht zu ersetzen ist. Seite 2Trump will Ginsburgs Nachfolger sofort berufen. Es war nicht ihr Plan, jetzt zu...