by Arlos » Sun Feb 14, 2016 9:44 pm
Eh, I wouldn't say that. By all accounts on a personal level he was a great person. Friendly, incredibly smart, etc. All the lawyers I know, even those who disagree with his opinions, universally say he was brilliant legally. Even the most liberal justices on the Supreme Court are quite obviously saddened by his death. His wife, kids and the rest of his family also are obviously devastated. So, on a human level, I am sure he is a great loss to a great many people. I'm not a fan of celebrating death, no matter how much I may have disliked the person.
On a public and political level, however, I am glad he's gone, because I completely disagreed with most of the legal positions, and I feel that there's now a chance to swing the balance of the court back away from the far right wing. There's no way Obama gets a real liberal justice confirmed before he's out of office, period, though. So, either he has to support a centrist candidate that could get enough GOP senators voting for him that there'd be enough in order to override a veto. (which means 14 GOP senators would have to agree to vote for the candidate, which they'd never do for a thoroughgoing liberal). Or, the alternate option, submit a more liberal justice (though still fairly centrist), and use the GOP's refusal to allow a vote as a hammer in the media to try and get more Democrats elected to the Senate and get another Democrat in the White House, and let THEM appoint someone. Of course, the obvious risk is if the GOP wins the presidency, we might see a justice nominated by Cruz or Trump, which is a horrifying thought.
I guess we'll see which way Obama will go with this before too long.