'Sandra Day O'Connor' (born
March 26 1930) is an
American jurist who served as the first female
Associate Justice of the
Supreme Court of the United States from 1981 to 2006. Due to her case-by-case approach to
jurisprudence and her relatively moderate political views, she was the crucial
swing vote of the Court for many of her final years on the bench, though she objected to that characterization because she felt it painted her as an unprincipled jurist. In 2001, ''
Ladies' Home Journal'' ranked her as the second most powerful woman in America.
[1] In
2004 and
2005 ''
Forbes Magazine'' listed her as the sixth and thirty sixth most powerful woman in the world, respectively; the only female U.S. women preceding her on the list were
National Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice,
New York Senator and former
First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton, and
First Lady Laura Welch Bush.
[2].
Prior to joining the Supreme Court, she was a politician and jurist in
Arizona.
[3] She was nominated to the Court by President
Ronald Reagan and served for over twenty-four years. On
July 12005, she announced her intention to retire effective upon the confirmation of her successor. Justice
Samuel Alito, nominated to take her seat in October 2005, received confirmation on
January 31 2006. She is currently the Chancellor of the
College of William and Mary.
Personal life and education
O'Connor was born 'Sandra Day', in
El Paso, Texas, to Harry Alfred Day (a rancher) and Ada Mae Wilkey,
[4] and is of English descent.
[5] She grew up on a
cattle ranch in the southeastern
Arizona town of
Duncan. She later wrote a book with her brother, H. Alan Day, titled ''Lazy B : Growing up on a Cattle Ranch in the American Southwest'' about her
childhood experiences on the ranch. For schooling, she lived in El Paso with her maternal grandmother, and attended the Radford school for girls and Stephen F. Austin High School.
O'Connor attended
Stanford University, where she received her
B.A. in
economics in 1950. She continued at the
Stanford Law School for her
LL.B, serving on the
Stanford Law Review, and graduating toward the top of a class of 102, of which future
Chief Justice William Rehnquist was
valedictorian. O'Connor briefly dated Rehnquist during this time.
[6]
In
1952 she married
John Jay O'Connor III, with whom she has three sons: Scott, Brian, and Jay.
Early career
In spite of her accomplishments at law school, no law firm in California was willing to hire her as a
lawyer, although one firm did offer her a position as a legal secretary. She therefore turned to public service, taking a position as Deputy County Attorney of
San Mateo County, California from 1952–1953 and as a civilian attorney for Quartermaster Market Center,
Frankfurt,
Germany from 1954–1957. From 1958–1960, she practiced law in the Maryvale area of the
Phoenix metropolitan area, and served as Assistant Attorney General of Arizona from 1965–1969.
In 1969 she was appointed to the
Arizona State Senate and was subsequently re-elected as a
Republican to two two-year terms. In 1973, she became the first woman to serve as a state
senate majority leader in any state.
In 1975, she was elected judge of the
Maricopa County Superior Court and served until 1979, when she was appointed to the Arizona Court of Appeals by
Democratic governor
Bruce Babbitt. During her time in Arizona state government, she served in all
three branches.
Supreme Court career
Appointment
On
July 7 1981,
President Reagan, who had pledged during the
1980 presidential campaign to appoint the first woman to the Supreme Court, nominated her as an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court, replacing the retiring
Potter Stewart. O'Connor was confirmed by the Senate 99–0 on
September 21 and took her seat
September 25. In her first year on the Court, O'Connor received over sixty thousand letters from the public, more than any other justice in history. O'Connor was unprepared for the scrutiny that came with being the first woman on the Court, and was relieved when
Ruth Bader Ginsburg joined her in 1993.
Presence on the Court
In 1985, at a Washington Press Club dinner, an intoxicated
Washington Redskins player (
John Riggins) drew widespread scorn
[7] when he told O'Connor: "Come on, Sandy Baby, loosen up. You're too tight," then passed out on the floor. The next day, the women with whom she shared an early morning exercise class presented her with a T-shirt that read: "Loosen up at the Supreme Court." She apparently bore him no ill will; years later, when he made his acting debut at a local playhouse, she gave him a dozen roses on opening night. O'Connor made her own brief foray into acting one night in 1996 with a surprise appearance as Queen Isabel in a Shakespeare Theatre production of ''
Henry V''.
In 1989, a letter O'Connor wrote regarding three Court rulings on
Christian heritage was used by a group of conservative Arizona Republicans in their claim that America was a "Christian nation". O'Connor, an
Episcopalian, said, "It was not my intention to express a personal view on the subject of the inquiry."
Supreme Court jurisprudence
Sandra O'Connor was part of the
federalism movement and approached each case as narrowly as possible, avoiding generalizations that might later "paint her into a corner" for future cases. Many critics of her tenure on the bench pointed out that her case-by-case approach to jurisprudence allowed her to make arbitrary decisions and shift her principles according to political expediency. Although she formed part of the conservative axis during the later years of the
Burger Court, with the departure of the last members of the liberal
Warren Court, she was later regarded as occupying the ideological center. It was both O'Connor's dedication to asserting her judicial power over that of other federal institutions and her pragmatic circumspection that gave her a deciding centrist vote for many of the
Rehnquist Court's cases.
Here are just some of the cases in which O'Connor was the deciding vote:
; ''
McConnell v. FEC'', : This was the ruling that upheld the constitutionality of most of the McCain-Feingold campaign finance bill regulating "soft money" contributions.
; ''
Grutter v. Bollinger'', and ''
Gratz v. Bollinger'', : O'Connor wrote the opinion of the court in ''Grutter'' and joined the majority in ''Gratz''. In this pair of cases, the
University of Michigan's undergraduate admissions program was held to have engaged in unconstitutional reverse discrimination, but the more limited type of affirmative action in the University of Michigan Law School's admissions program was held to have been constitutional.
; ''
Zelman v. Simmons-Harris'', : O'Connor joined the majority holding that the use of school vouchers for religious schools did not violate the First Amendment's Establishment Clause.
; ''
Boy Scouts of America v. Dale'', : O'Connor joined the majority in holding that New Jersey violated the Boy Scouts' freedom of association by prohibiting it from discriminating against its troop leaders on the basis of sexual orientation.
; ''
United States v. Lopez'', : O'Connor joined a majority holding unconstitutional Gun-Free School Zones Act as beyond Congress's
Commerce Clause power.
On
December 12,
2000, O'Connor joined with six other (ruling to stop the ongoing Florida recount) and four other (ruling to allow no further recounts) justices to rule on the ''
Bush v. Gore'' case that ceased challenges to the results of the
2000 election. Some charged that the Supreme Court interceded unfairly in a political issue. Others noted that the Court specifically restricted the precedent-setting effect of the decision by holding, "Our consideration is limited to the present circumstances, for the problem of equal protection in election processes generally presents many complexities."
Justice O'Connor played an important role in other notable cases, such as:
; ''
Webster v. Reproductive Health Services'', : This decision held that state regulation of abortion was constitutional if it provided exceptions for the health of the mother and if it didn't ban abortions contrary to the trimester regime of ''
Roe v. Wade''. Although O'Connor joined the majority, which also included Rehnquist, Scalia, Kennedy, and White, in a concurring opinion she refused to explicitly overturn ''Roe''.
; ''
Lawrence v. Texas'', : O'Connor wrote a concurring opinion contending that state laws that prohibited homosexual
sodomy, but not heterosexual sodomy, violated the
Equal Protection Clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. Although she agreed with the majority in holding such laws unconstitutional, she did not join in the opinion that they violated the substantive due process afforded by the
Due Process Clause. Under a ruling under the
Equal Protection Clause, states could still prohibit
sodomy, provided they prohibited both homosexual sodomy and heterosexual sodomy.
On
February 22,
2005, with Chief Justice Rehnquist and Justice
John Paul Stevens (who was senior to her) absent, O'Connor presided over oral arguments in the case of ''
Kelo v. City of New London'', becoming the first woman to preside over an oral argument before the Supreme Court.
Critique
O'Connor's case-by-case approach routinely placed her in the center of the court, and drew both criticism and praise. ''
Washington Post'' conservative columnist
Charles Krauthammer, for instance, described her as lacking a judicial philosophy and instead displaying "political positioning embedded in a social agenda."
[8] Another conservative commentator,
Ramesh Ponnuru, wrote that, though O'Connor "has voted reasonably well" from a conservative standpoint, her tendency to issue very case-specific rulings "undermines the predictability of the law and aggrandizes the judicial role."
[9]
In contrast,
Willamette University College of Law Professor
Steven Green, who served for nine years as general counsel for
Americans United for Separation of Church and State and has argued before the Court numerous times stated, "She was a moderating voice on the court and was very hesitant to expand the law in either direction." Green also noted that, unlike some other Supreme Court justices, O'Connor "seemed to look at each case with an open mind."
[10]
Abortion
O'Connor's rulings on the issue of abortion were those that were perhaps most widely considered controversial. In her confirmation hearings and early days on the court, she was carefully ambiguous on the issue, as some conservatives questioned her anti-abortion credentials on the basis of certain of her votes in the Arizona legislature. O'Connor generally dissented from opinions in the 1980s which took an expansive view of ''Roe v. Wade'' and criticized that decision's "trimester approach" sharply in her dissent in 1983's ''Akron v. Akron Center for Reproductive Health''.
In ''
Planned Parenthood v. Casey'', O'Connor's opinion introduced a new test that reined in the unrestricted freedom from regulation during the first trimester as proscribed by ''
Roe v. Wade''. Whereas before the regulatory powers of the State could not intervene so early in the pregnancy, O'Connor opened a regulatory portal where a State could enact measures so long as they did not place an "undue burden" on a woman's right to an abortion.
Foreign law
O'Connor was a vigorous defender of the citing of foreign laws in judicial decisions. In a well-publicized
October 28 2003 speech at the
Southern Center for International Studies, O'Connor said:
:The impressions we create in this world are important and can leave their mark... There is talk today about the "internationalization of legal relations." We are already seeing this in American courts, and should see it increasingly in the future. This does not mean, of course, that our courts can or should abandon their character as domestic institutions. But conclusions reached by other countries and by the international community, although not formally binding upon our decisions, should at times constitute persuasive authority in American courts—what is sometimes called "transjudicialism".
[11]
In the speech she noted the
2002 Supreme Court case ''
Atkins v. Virginia'', in which the majority decision (which included her) cited disapproval of the
death penalty in
Europe as part of its argument.
This speech, and the general concept of relying on foreign law and opinion, was widely criticized by conservatives.
[12] In May
2004, the
House of Representatives responded by passing a non-binding resolution, the "
Reaffirmation of American Independence Resolution", stating that "U.S. judicial decisions should not be based on any foreign laws, court decisions, or pronouncements of foreign governments unless they are relevant to determining the meaning of American constitutional and statutory law."
[13]
Retirement
Justice O'Connor was successfully treated for
breast cancer in 1988 (she also had her
appendix removed that year). One side effect of this experience was that there was perennial speculation over the next seventeen years that she might retire from the Court.
On
December 12 2000, the ''Wall Street Journal'' reported O'Connor was reluctant to retire with a Democrat in office:

Retired Associate Justice O'Connor and her husband, John O'Connor take a photo with President
George W. Bush after giving her resignation letter.

Justice O'Connor's letter to President Bush dated
July 1 2005, announcing her retirement
By 2005, the membership of the Supreme Court had been static for eleven years, the second longest period without a change in the Court's composition in American history.
Chief Justice William Rehnquist was widely expected to be the first justice to retire during President
George W. Bush's term, due to his age and his battle with cancer. However, on
July 1 2005 it was O'Connor who announced her retirement. In her letter to President Bush she stated that her retirement from active service would take effect upon the confirmation of her successor.
On
July 19, President Bush nominated
D.C. Circuit Judge
John G. Roberts, Jr. to succeed Justice O'Connor, answering months of speculation as to
Bush Supreme Court candidates. O'Connor heard the news over the car radio on the way back from a fishing trip. She felt he was an excellent and highly qualified choice—he had argued
numerous cases before the Court during her tenure—but was somewhat disappointed her replacement was not a woman.
On
July 21, O'Connor spoke
[14] to a
9th U.S. Circuit conference and blamed the televising of
Senate Judiciary Committee hearings for escalated conflicts over judges. She expressed sadness over attacks on the independent
judiciary, and praised President Reagan for opening doors for women.
O'Connor had expected to leave the high court before the start of the next term on
October 3 2005. However, on
September 3, Rehnquist died (O'Connor spoke at his funeral). Two days later, President Bush withdrew Roberts as his nominee for O'Connor's seat and instead appointed him to fill the vacant office of Chief Justice. O'Connor agreed to stay on the court until her replacement was confirmed. On
October 3, President Bush nominated
White House Counsel Harriet Miers to replace O'Connor. On
October 27, Miers asked President Bush to withdraw her nomination; Bush accepted her request later the same day. On
October 31, President Bush nominated
Third Circuit Judge
Samuel Alito to replace O'Connor; Alito was confirmed and sworn in on
January 31 2006.
Her last opinion, ''
Ayotte v. Planned Parenthood of New England'', written for a unanimous court, was a procedural decision that involved abortion.
She has stated that after leaving the high court, she plans to travel, spend time with family, and, due to her fear of the attacks on judges by legislators, will work with the
American Bar Association on a commission to help explain the separation of powers and the role of judges. She has also announced that she is working on a new book, which will focus on the early history of the Supreme Court. She is currently a trustee on the board of the
Rockefeller Foundation. She would have preferred to stay on the Supreme Court for several more years until she was ill and "really in bad shape" but stepped down to spend more time with her husband, who has been diagnosed with early stage Alzheimer's Disease. O'Connor, who is still physically and mentally fit, said it was her plan to follow the tradition of previous justices, who enjoy lifetime appointments. "Most of them get ill and are really in bad shape, which I would've done at the end of the day myself, I suppose, except my husband was ill and I needed to take action there".
[15]
Current activities and memberships
Speeches on independent judiciary
On
March 9 2006, during a speech at
Georgetown University in
Washington, D.C., O'Connor said some political attacks on the independence of the courts pose a direct threat to the constitutional freedoms of Americans. She said any reform of system is debatable as long as it is not motivated by "nakedly partisan reasoning" retaliation because congressmen or senators dislike the result of the cases. Courts interpret the law as it was written, not as the congressmen might have wished it was written, and "it takes a lot of degeneration before a country falls into dictatorship, but we should avoid these ends by avoiding these beginnings."
On
September 19 2006, Justice O'Connor echoed her concerns for an independent judiciary during the Dedication Address at the
Elon University School of Law.
On
September 27 2006, Justice O'Connor published an op-ed in
Wall Street Journal titled "
The Threat to Judicial Independence", in which she decried recent efforts to curtail the independence of the judiciary (such as South Dakota's
J.A.I.L. 4 Judges initiative and the attempts by some members of Congress to
strip the federal judiciary of its jurisdictional ability to hear certain Constitutional claims). The next day, Justice O'Connor co-hosted and
spoke at a conference at
Georgetown University Law Center titled "Fair and Independent Courts: A Conference on the State of the Judiciary."
[16]
Judge
William H. Pryor, Jr., an extreme right-wing jurist who claims that the Christian bible is the "sovereign source of our law," has criticized these O'Connor speeches and op-eds for hyperbole and factual inaccuracy, based in part on O'Connor's opinions as to whether judges face a rougher time in the public eye today than in the past, and used his attack on O'Connor to preach his ultra-conservative theories of jurisprudence.
[17][18]
College of William and Mary
On
October 4 2005, President
Gene Nichol of the
College of William and Mary announced that O'Connor had accepted
[19] the largely ceremonial role of becoming the 23rd Chancellor of the College, replacing
Henry Kissinger, and following in the position held by
Margaret Thatcher, Chief Justice
Warren Burger, and President
George Washington. The Investiture Ceremony was held
April 7 2006.
Jamestown 2007
The retired Justice chaired the
Jamestown 2007 celebration at
Jamestown, Virginia, which commemorated the 400th anniversary of the founding of the Jamestown Settlement in 1607. Her appearances in Jamestown dovetailed with her appearances and speeches as chancellor at the nearby
College of William and Mary.
Retirement and service on United States Courts of Appeals
As a Retired Supreme Court Justice (roughly equivalent to
senior status for judges of lower federal courts), Justice O'Connor is entitled to receive a full salary, maintain a staffed office with at least one law clerk, and to hear cases on a part-time basis in the federal
District Courts and
Courts of Appeals.
In
October 2006, Justice O'Connor sat as a member of panels of the
United States Courts of Appeals for the
Second,
Eighth, and
Ninth Circuits, to hear arguments in one day's cases in each court.
[20]
In
December 2006, Arizona State University renamed its law school the
Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law.
Justice O'Connor and W. Scott Bales are currently (Fall 2007) teaching a course at Sandra Day O'Connor College of law at Arizona State University.
Iraq Study Group
Justice O'Connor is a member of the
Iraq Study Group of the
United States Institute of Peace.
[21]
Other facts and information
★ O'Connor is an avid
golfer who scored a
hole-in-one in 2000 at the
Paradise Valley Country Club in Arizona.
[22][23]
★ In 2002, O'Connor was inducted into the
National Cowgirl Hall of Fame.
[24]
★ In 2004, she gave a reading during the
state funeral of Ronald Reagan.
★ On September 8, 2004,
Redwood City, California dedicated the courtroom of the renovated
historical courthouse (now a museum) to O'Connor.
[25]
★ In 2005, she wrote a children's book titled ''Chico'' (ISBN 0-525-47452-8), which gives an autobiographical description of her childhood.
★ For her commitment to the ideals of "Duty, Honor, Country," she was awarded the prestigious
Sylvanus Thayer Award by the
United States Military Academy in 2005, becoming only the third woman to receive the award.
★ On
October 18 2005, Justice O'Connor was appointed
Grand Marshal of the Tournament of Roses. She participated in the 117th annual
Tournament of Roses Parade in
Pasadena, California on
January 2 2006 and started the 92nd
Rose Bowl game with a
coin toss on
January 4. Coincidentally, the parade was conducted in heavy rain for the first time since 1955, when the Grand Marshal had been
Chief Justice Earl Warren.
★ On April 5, 2006,
Arizona State University's College of Law was renamed the
Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law in her honor.
[26]
★ On
May 14 2006, Justice O'Connor was the commencement speaker at
William and Mary Law School, where she is also university chancellor.
★ On
May 22 2006,
Yale University granted Justice O'Connor an honorary doctoral degree at
Yale's 305th commencement.
★ On
September 19 2006, Justice O'Connor delivered the Dedication Address for the
Elon University School of Law and accept an Honorary Doctor of Laws degree. Earlier that day, she delivered the Fall Convocation Address at
Elon University, where she accepted a Doctor of Laws degree.
★ In
1990, Justice O'Connor was present, along with
Warren Burger at the dedication of the Warren Burger Law Library at Burger's alma mater,
William Mitchell College of Law.
★ As of Spring 2006, Justice O'Connor teaches a two week course called "The Supreme Court" at the
University of Arizona James E. Rogers College of Law every Spring semester.
References
★ Steve Lash.
Trailblazer for women determined big issues
★ The Pointer View.
Academy names O'Connor as this year's Thayer Award recipient
★ E.J. Montini. "Rehnquist is No. 1, O'Connor is No. 3, Baloney is No. 2.", ''
Arizona Republic'', (
July 12,
2005).
[1]
★
Lazy B: Growing Up on a Cattle Ranch in the American Southwest, Sandra Day O'Connor and H. Alan Day, , , Random House, 2002, ISBN 0-375-50724-8
Notes
1. http://www.townhall.com/columnists/JohnMcCaslin/2001/11/07/mccaslins_beltway_beat
2. http://www.forbes.com/lists/2006/11/06women_The-100-Most-Powerful-Women_land.html
3. Sandra Day O'Connor, Judges of the United States Courts, Federal Judicial Center
4. http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=geolarson2&id=I143900
5. http://www.oyez.org/oyez/resource/legal_entity/102/print
6. http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,161325,00.html
7. TimesDispatch.com : Riggins' uncourtly words created no hard feelings
8. Philosophy for a Judge Charles Krauthammer
9. Sandra’s Day
10. Retired But Remembered: ''Oregon lawyers reminisce about Justice Sandra Day O’Connor''
11. Remarks at the Southern Center for International Studies, Sandra Day O'Connor, October 28, 2003
12. "Is Relying on Foreign Law Impeachable?", Phyllis Schlafly, ''The Phyllis Schlafly Report'', May 2005
13. "Reaffirmation of American Independence Resolution Approved", May 13, 2004
14. O'Connor Saddened by Attacks on Judiciary
15. "Former Justice O'Connor:'I Would Have Stayed Longer'". Associated Press, February 5, 2007.
16.
17. "'Neither Force Nor Will, But Merely Judgment'", ''Wall Street Journal'', 4 Oct 2006
18. "Judge Pryor on Judicial Independence", ''Harvard Law Record'', 15 Mar 2007
19. College of William and Mary announcement of O'Connor's appointment to Chancellor post
20. Paper Chase: O'Connor to hear Second Circuit cases
21. Iraq Study Group Members
22. TIME Magazine Archive Article — Off The Bench? — Feb. 26, 2001
23. Digest.com - Will Augusta come calling?
24. Cowgirl Hall of Fame
25. Sanda Day O'Connor at courthouse
26. http://www.law.asu.edu/?id=9761
External links
;General biographical information
:
★
Official Supreme Court biographies of all current justices (
PDF format)
:
★
The OYEZ Project's biography by a
Northwestern University law professor
;Additional information
:
★
:
★
Read Congressional Research Service (CRS) Reports regarding Justice O'Connor
:
★
"O'Connor not bothered by delayed retirement.", ''
Associated Press''
September 28,
2005.
:
★
"Sandra Day O'Connor prepares for final days on Supreme Court.", ''
Associated Press''
September 19,
2005.
:
★
Cases in which O'Connor has been the deciding vote (
July 1,
2005)
:
★
Farewell comments from her fellow justices (
July 1,
2005)
:
★
Centrist justice sought 'social stability'
:
★ Yahoo!:
Sandra Day O'Connor directory category