Some liberals are calling on one of the most respected liberals on the Supreme Court to step down.
That might sound backwards, but that’s the case made by respected legal scholar Erwin Chemerinsky, dean of the University of California at Irvine Law School:
“Only by resigning this summer can [Ginsburg] ensure that a Democratic president will be able to choose a successor who shares her views and values.”
He argues this is the only way to guarantee that President Obama can replace her with another progressive, rather than making the Court play electoral roulette in 2016. And Chemerinsky worries that Democrats could lose the Senate in the midterms and make a lame-duck confirmation of an Obama nominee especially difficult.
The idea has some legs. Jeffrey Toobin, an influential legal expert for The New Yorker, jumped right in, publishing a list of potential replacements for aging members of the Court. But this haste to replace has drawn a useful backlash from many legal experts and liberals.
The best headline came from Gawker: “If You Admire Ruth Bader Ginsburg So Much, Stop Asking Her to Quit.” That nails perhaps the weirdest assumption in this debate — that Ginsburg can just be replaced by another cookie-cutter Democratic pick. In fact, she probably can’t.









