In early June, President Obama took a long overdue step on judicial nominees: with three vacancies on the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, arguably the nation’s second most important federal bench, he sent the Senate three qualified and uncontroversial jurists to fill those slots.
Ever since, Republican officials have responded with structural criticisms — arguing, for example, that the D.C. Circuit should have fewer seats and that the White House is trying a “court-packing” scheme. (Republicans have apparently forgotten the meaning of the word.)
But in recent days, the GOP line has shifted. The right has apparently decided one of Obama’s nominees — Cornelia “Nina” Pillard — is simply too radical to be confirmed. Why? Because as Dahlia Lithwick explained, Pillard is a feminist.
She is a well-respected professor at Georgetown Law School; co-director of its Supreme Court Institute; a former lawyer at the ACLU, the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, and the Justice Department; and a successful Supreme Court litigator.
She is also a “feminist.”
A “feminist” insofar as she has spent part of her career advocating for women’s equality (including a successful brief challenging the men-only admissions policy at the Virginia Military Institute, and a successful challenge to gender-biased family leave policies). Pillard’s “radical feminism” appears largely to take the form of seeking equality for women, which would certainly be a disqualifying feature of her advocacy work. If it were 1854.
In the not-too-distant past, no one seriously expected judicial nominees to reach the Senate confirmation phase as blank slates, never having expressed an opinion on anything. As Ian Millhiser noted the other day, Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg warned in 2011 that her ACLU work on behalf of women’s rights before becoming a judge “would probably disqualify” her if she were nominated today.
And while that’s very likely true, it doesn’t make the right’s criticism of Pillard any less ridiculous.









