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Supreme Court Chief Justice Rehnquist Dies

by reposts
Chief Justice William Rehnquist, who helped shift the U.S. Supreme Court toward a more conservative ideology and strongly supported states' rights during his three decades on the bench, has died. Rehnquist was diagnosed with thyroid cancer in October 2004, not long after the 2004-2005 court session began, and received outpatient radiation and chemotherapy treatments.
http://www.cnn.com/2005/LAW/09/03/rehnquist.obit/index.html

hief Justice William H. Rehnquist died Saturday evening at his home in suburban Virginia, said Supreme Court spokeswoman Kathy Arberg.

A statement from the spokeswoman said he was surrounded by his three children when he died in Arlington.

"The Chief Justice battled thyroid cancer since being diagnosed last October and continued to perform his dues on the court until a precipitous decline in his health the last couple of days," she said.

Rehnquist was appointed to the Supreme Court as an associate justice in 1971 by President Nixon and took his seat on Jan. 7, 1982. He was elevated to chief justice by President Reagan in 1986.

http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/wireStory?id=1094992

by background
When President Richard Nixon was elected in 1968, Rehnquist returned to work in Washington. He served as Assistant Attorney General of the Office of Legal Counsel, from 1969 to 1971. In this role, he served as the chief lawyer to Attorney General John Mitchell. President Nixon mistakenly referred to him as "Renchburg" in several of the tapes of Oval Office conversations revealed during the Watergate investigations. Nixon nominated Rehnquist to replace John Marshall Harlan II on the Supreme Court upon Harlan's retirement, and after being confirmed by the Senate by a 68-26 vote on December 10, 1971, Rehnquist took his seat as an Associate Justice on January 7, 1972. There were two vacancies on the court at the time; Nixon nominated Lewis Franklin Powell, Jr. to fill the other.

On the Burger Court, Rehnquist promptly established himself as the most conservative of Nixon's appointees, taking a narrow view of the Fourteenth Amendment and a broad view of state power. He voted against the expansion of school desegregation plans and the establishment of legalized abortions (dissenting in the 1973 case Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113 (1973)) and in favor of school prayer, capital punishment and states' rights.

Rehnquist wrote the decision Diamond v. Diehr, which made a hole in the dike against software patents in the United States erected by Justice Stevens in Parker v. Flook; the dike collapsed within a few years and software patenting is now virtually unlimited. In the BetaMax case, again Justice Stevens authored the opinion upholding individual rights while Rehnquist joined the dissent who wished to strengthen copyright controls. In Eldred v. Ashcroft, Rehnquist was in the majority favoring the copyright holders, with Justice Stevens dissenting in favor of individuals.

When Chief Justice Warren Burger retired in 1986, then-President Ronald Reagan nominated Rehnquist to fill the position. Despite some controversy, he was confirmed by the Senate by a 65-33 vote and assumed the office on September 26. Rehnquist's associate justice seat was filled by Antonin Scalia.

Since becoming Chief Justice, Rehnquist has continued to lead the Court's move towards taking a broader view of state powers in the U.S. federal system. For example, he wrote for a 5-to-4 majority in United States v. Lopez, 514 U.S. 549 (1995), striking down a federal law as exceeding Congressional power under the commerce clause. Rehnquist has also led the way in establishing more governmental leniency towards state aid for religion, writing for another 5-to-4 majority in Zelman v. Simmons-Harris, 536 U.S. 639 (2002), approving a school voucher program that aided parochial schools.

Rehnquist also created a unique robe for himself as Chief Justice in 1994. It has four golden bars on each sleeve. In the past, Chief Justices had not dressed differently from any of the Associate Justices. Rehnquist's robe was modeled after a robe he had seen in a production of Gilbert and Sullivan's operetta Iolanthe, first staged in London in 1882. The costume that inspired Chief Justice Rehnquist, an acknowledged Gilbert and Sullivan fan, is worn by the Lord Chancellor, a character called upon to settle a dispute among a colony of fairies.

Rehnquist is only the second Chief Justice of the U.S. (after Salmon Portland Chase) to preside over a presidential impeachment, doing so in 1999 in the trial of President Bill Clinton.

Rehnquist was mentioned for many years as a possibility for the source known as Deep Throat during the 1970s Watergate scandal. In February 2005, it was revealed that Deep Throat was gravely ill, and, due to Rehnquist's advanced form of thyroid cancer, speculation intensified that Rehnquist was Deep Throat. However, on May 31, 2005, Bob Woodward confirmed that Deep Throat was W. Mark Felt.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rehnquist
by wsws (reposted)
William Rehnquist (1924-2005): Key figure in Washington’s rightward trajectory dies at 80
By John Andrews
5 September 2005

William H. Rehnquist, a member of the US Supreme Court since 1972 and chief justice since 1986, died at his Arlington, Virginia, home Saturday night, eleven months after being diagnosed with thyroid cancer. During his 33 years on the Supreme Court, Rehnquist played a key role in rolling back the limited political and judicial reforms which accompanied the post-World War II economic boom and solidifying the right wing’s grip on all three branches of the federal government.

Following last July’s announced resignation of Associate Justice Sandra Day O’Connor and the nomination of United States Court of Appeals Judge John G. Roberts, Jr. to replace her, this second vacancy on the high court provides the Bush administration even more opportunity for to solidify extreme right-wing control over the nation’s judiciary.

Born in Wisconsin of Swedish immigrant parents, Rehnquist completed two masters degrees in political science before earning his law degree from Stanford University, coincidentally graduating in the same class as O’Connor. Unquestionably bright, affable and prolific, Rehnquist exhibited his right-wing views from the outset of his legal career.

In 1952, while a law clerk for Supreme Court Justice Robert H. Jackson, he wrote that the infamous “separate but equal” doctrine announced by the Supreme Court in Plessy v. Ferguson (1892), which sanctioned Jim Crow segregation in the American South, “was right and should be affirmed.” Two years later, however, the Supreme Court ruled unanimously in Brown v. the Board of Education that governmental-sponsored racial discrimination violated the equal protection clause of the Constitution.

Moving to Phoenix, Arizona to practice law, Rehnquist became a protegé of conservative icon Barry Goldwater, heading up a Republican Party operation known as “Eagle Eye,” a deliberate attempt to disenfranchise minority voters in South Phoenix. Several witnesses have recounted that they watched Rehnquist personally interfere with black and Latino voters.

In 1969, Rehnquist joined the administration of President Richard Nixon as a Justice Department lawyer. He approved the notorious plan, drafted by White House aide Tom Huston, under which concentration camps were to be set up to incarcerate hundreds of thousands of opponents of the Vietnam War. He frequently testified on behalf of the Nixon administration in Congress, including once before a Senate committee in support of domestic spying against anti-war protesters by US Army Intelligence.

In one of the more amusing passages on the White House tapes made public after Watergate, Nixon is heard calling “Renchburg” a “Jew,” one of a “group of clowns” in the Justice Department. Nixon nevertheless nominated him, along with Lewis Powell, in late 1971 to fill two high court vacancies. During his five-day confirmation hearing, Rehnquist was denounced as a right-wing extremist. Nevertheless, with the support of a majority of Democratic senators, the 47-year-old Rehnquist was confirmed and took his seat as an associate justice in January 1972.

At first, Rehnquist was somewhat isolated on the Supreme Court’s right wing. He dissented along with Justice Byron White from 1973’s Roe v. Wade, which affirmed 7-2 a woman’s constitutional right to terminate her pregnancy, and wrote so many dissenting opinions in 8-1 cases—including one from the Supreme Court decision which upheld the Internal Revenue Service’s decision to deny a tax exemption to Bob Jones University because it banned interracial dating among students—that he became known as the “Lone Ranger.”

Many of Rehnquist’s lone dissents, where he was able to express his personal views without regard for the sensibilities of other justices, reveal a jaded and insensitive view of humanity. For example, venting frustration at the legal protections afforded people facing execution, Rehnquist wrote that “virtually nothing happens except endlessly drawn out legal proceedings.”

Nevertheless, Rehnquist increasingly mustered majorities for decisions curtailing personal rights and freedoms. In the 1970s, he authored majority opinions limiting the right to sue police departments that falsely accuse people of criminal conduct, governmental agencies that permit children to be abused, and jails that imprison people awaiting trial in cramped and oppressive conditions.

President Ronald Reagan selected Rehnquist to replace Warren Burger when Burger retired as chief justice in 1986. At the same time, Antonin Scalia was appointed to fill the associate justice’s seat Rehnquist was vacating. After another acrimonious hearing, Rehnquist was confirmed by a vote of 65 to 33. Scalia, although equally right-wing, was confirmed unanimously.

With control of the court as chief justice and the support of right-wing associate justices Scalia and Clarence Thomas, who was appointed by the elder George Bush and confirmed in 1991, Rehnquist succeeded in achieving many of his goals, including gutting federal workers’ protections and civil rights legislation under the guise of states’ rights, limiting environmental protections by constricting Congressional power under the Constitution’s Commerce Clause, and rolling back the right to counsel and other important liberties of people accused of crimes.

Among the opinions authored by Rehnquist was a May 2000 decision striking down the provision of the 1994 Violence Against Women Act which gave victims of rape and domestic violence the right to sue their attackers in federal court, and a June decision that same year prohibiting states from using their anti-discrimination laws to prevent the Boy Scouts from discriminating against gays. Rehnquist justified his ruling in the latter case with the argument that a gay scoutmaster “would, at the very least, force the organization to send a message, both to youth members and the world, that the Boy Scouts accepts homosexual conduct as a legitimate form of behavior.”

Rehnquist consistently attacked the foundations of US democracy. He called Thomas Jefferson’s claim that the First Amendment stood as “a wall of separation between church and state” a “misguided metaphor based on bad history.” In 2002, Rehnquist “took a pile driver to that wall of separation,” as the World Socialist Web Site wrote at the time, authoring the majority opinion upholding the use of government vouchers to fund parochial school tuitions. (See “US Supreme Court authorizes school vouchers: a simultaneous assault on freedom of thought and public education”).

In what turned out to be his last opinion, Van Orden v. Perry, Rehnquist wrote for a plurality of justices that the State of Texas could display a granite monument bearing the Ten Commandments on the grounds of its capitol building. (See “US Supreme Court weakens church/state separation in Ten Commandments rulings”).

Rehnquist never succeeded in reaching at least one of his goals—obtaining the fifth vote necessary to overrule Roe v. Wade. With the opening of two vacancies on the high court, however, increasingly onerous inroads against abortion rights are inevitable, and the overruling of Roe itself more likely.

Perhaps even more critical in the long run than his legacy of reactionary legal decisions, Rehnquist played a decisive role in the Republican right’s destabilization campaign against the Clinton administration, and then in subverting the 2000 presidential election and stealing it for Bush.

When allegations were first raised about financial improprieties relating to the Clintons’ investment in the Whitewater real estate transactions, Attorney General Janet Reno appointed a prominent New York Republican, Robert Fiske, as special prosecutor. After Fiske indicated that he would likely end the inquiry without taking any action against Clinton, Rehnquist used his authority under the Independent Counsel Act to appoint Court of Appeals Judge David Sentelle, a close associate of the extreme right-wing senator from North Carolina, Jesse Helms, and a well-known Republican Party operative, to head the three-judge panel overseeing the independent counsel. There were 11 more senior judges in line for the appointment.

Sentelle’s panel terminated Fiske and replaced him with Kenneth W. Starr, another longtime operative of the Republican right. (Starr was the US solicitor general under Bush the elder, and his chief deputy was Bush’s current nominee for Supreme Court associate justice, John Roberts.) After the Supreme Court ruled in 1997 that Paula Jones’ sexual harassment suit could continue against a sitting president, Starr used Clinton’s evasive answers about Monica Lewinsky during deposition testimony to concoct a perjury claim and submit a bill of impeachment, which was adopted by the House of Representatives on a party-line vote.

As chief justice of the United States, Rehnquist presided over the 1999 Senate impeachment trial. Putting his quirky personality on display, Rehnquist modified the standard black judicial robe for the occasion by adding four gold stripes to each sleeve, emulating a costume he saw in the Gilbert and Sullivan operetta, “Iolanthe.” Rehnquist continued to wear the modified robe for the remainder of his time on the court. The prosecutors of Clinton failed to obtain the two-thirds vote in the Senate necessary to convict, and Clinton served out the rest of his term.

Despite voting repeatedly in favor of “states’ rights” and “sovereign immunity” to limit the reach of federal laws intended to protect civil rights, workers and the environment, Rehnquist spearheaded the Supreme Court’s unprecedented intervention into the actions of the state of Florida and its courts to stop the counting of ballots in the 2000 presidential election. The result was to install George Bush, who lost the popular vote by more than 500,000, in the White House. In an opinion joined by Scalia and Thomas, Rehnquist wrote that US citizens have no constitutional right to vote for the president.

The Supreme Court is scheduled to begin its next term in four weeks. One possibility under discussion is that Bush will re-nominate John Roberts as Chief Justice, instead of as an associate justice, and O’Connor will delay her resignation. Otherwise, even if Roberts is confirmed before the end of the month, the new term will begin with just 8 justices, and Justice John Paul Stevens, the high court’s senior member and one of its most liberal votes, will serve as the acting chief justice.

http://wsws.org/articles/2005/sep2005/rehn-s05.shtml
by Glad the piece of shit is dead
Walking sack of garbage, he was.
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