A state senator, an 84-year-old retiree, and a Supreme Court justice. National fights this week for women’s rights, racial justice, and sexual equality had one thing in common: they were fought by powerful women who refused to sit down and shut up.
The end of the Defense of Marriage Act is one of the most significant Supreme Court decisions of this term, and this victory for LGBT rights would not have been possible without Edith Windsor. Windsor’s wife and partner of 40 years, Thea Speyer, died in 2009. If Windsor’s spouse had been a man, she would have owed no estate taxes; but because she had a wife, Windsor was left with a $300,000 tax bill. Windsor sued, arguing that DOMA violated the Fifth Amendment’s guarantee of equal protection.
On Wednesday, the Supreme Court ruled in her favor.
“We had every right to win. I thought our arguments were sound and everyone else’s were insane,” she said.
Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg was a part of the majority that overturned DOMA, but on Tuesday she was the voice of dissent against the court’s ruling that struck down a key provision of the Voting Rights Act. Ginsburg, a former ACLU lawyer, is one of the court’s strongest civil rights and social justice backers, a stance that could not have been clearer in her scathing dissent against what she called the “demolition of the VRA.”
Ginsburg compared the long battle against racial discrimination in voting to “battling the Hydra.” The VRA was “one of the most consequential, efficacious, and amply justified exercises of federal legislative power in our Nation’s history.” Moreover, she wrote: “The court makes no genuine attempt to engage with the massive legislative record that Congress assembled,” when it reauthorized the VRA in 2006.
The Voting Rights case was not the only one of this term on which Ginsburg’s opinion was part of a heated exchange. On Monday, Justice Samuel Alito visibly mocked her as she read her dissent in a workplace discrimination case. Despite the obvious gesture of disrespect, Ginsburg continued undeterred and called on Congress to “correct this court’s wayward interpretations.”
Ginsburg’s fierce words and refusal to be intimidated have inspired a new generation of fans to pay tribute to her jurisprudence. Chief Justice John Roberts is unlikely to end up on a t-shirt after next year’s term.









![Wendy Davis, Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Edith Windsor (Photos by Eric Gay/AP [Davis], Mario Anzuoni/Reuters [Ginsburg], Jonathan Ernst/Reuters [Windsor])](https://www.ms.now/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/womenoftheweek_130627.jpg?w=830)