Obama's Feminist Touch
Elena Kagan’s gender isn’t an issue
Beyond the
inevitable and proper inquiries about the character and views of his latest
nominee, Obama's decision tells us something important about him, too. Surely
he appreciates her reputation as a conciliator who listens to all sides. He is
probably reassured by the fact that the Senate easily confirmed her last year
as solicitor general. But what this nomination reminds us is that he is not
only the first African-American in the Oval Office, but the first president
raised on feminist principles, as well.
As he stood
next to Kagan in announcing her selection, Obama referred to her late mother, a
teacher at a public elementary school who worked to strengthen the education of
girls as well as boys.
"I
think she would relish, as do I," said the president, "the prospect
of three women taking their seat on the nation's highest court for the first
time in history—a court that would be more inclusive, more representative, more
reflective of us as a people than ever before."
Certain
exceptions on the far right aside, the potential elevation of Kagan has been
met with admirable restraint so far. Critics have noted that her written record
is thin compared with previous nominees, especially for a former Harvard Law Review editor and Harvard Law School
dean. At 50, she is relatively young, lacks extensive experience in a courtroom
and has none as a judge (thanks to the Republican senators who refused to
permit a hearing when President Clinton nominated her to the federal bench).
The daughter of immigrant parents, a lawyer and a teacher, she was a highly
talented girl who won admission to the finest colleges and universities,
strictly on merit.
Young
Obama Surrounded by Strong Women
We may have
reached a milestone when nobody complains that she was chosen as an affirmative
action candidate. Perhaps any Democratic president would have nominated two
women in succession to the court. Perhaps a Republican president will
eventually do likewise. But it is nevertheless worth noting that this president
did so now—and that he grew up in a family of independent-minded feminist women
who were unfazed by a culture of male domination.
Remember
that his mother, Ann, though unlucky in marriage, was deeply persistent,
adventurous and professional in her career as an anthropologist. This
"girl from Kansas"
brought her children with her to distant lands, and even left teenage Barry
with his grandparents for a time while she worked abroad.
Recall also
that his beloved grandmother Madelyn Dunham, whom he knew as "Toot,"
was a working woman who rose daily before dawn to arrive at the bank where she
toiled for more than 20 years until, at long last, she won promotion to vice
president. Owing to her gender, her advancement came far more slowly than she
deserved—and the fact that she earned more than her husband was often a source
of friction at home.
Today, there
is nothing unusual about a bank vice president—or a peripatetic academic—who
happens to be female. Back when Obama was growing up, however, those two brave
women shaped his outlook profoundly. We cannot yet know how three female
justices will change the culture of the court and the jurisprudence of the
nation. But the dream that Elena Kagan cherished and pursued just became a
little easier for other girls to imagine.
2010 Creators.com.



No Joe, you're mistaken. There was a bigoted outcry- from the left. The Wall Street Journal published a photo of Kagan playing softball. It was a great photo of her (relatively speaking) in that she looked happy, spry, and somewhat accessible- in contrast to the ivory tower academic that she actually is. The left immediately cried foul (so to speak) and claimed that the WSJ was implying that Kagan is a lesbian by publishing the photo. Only the bigoted, divisive left could possible automatically connect softball and a lesbian lifestyle. And yet these are the bigots who constantly lecture us about "rising above the things that would divide us". Try it yourselves, for once, bigoted liberals...