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    Back to Left, Right & Center

    Left, Right & Center

    Ruth Bader Ginsburg and the future of the Supreme Court

    Josh Barro speaks with Michael Brendan Dougherty, Jamelle Bouie and Emily Bazelon about the legacy of Ruth Bader Ginsburg and the future of the Supreme Court.

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    KCRW placeholderBy Jamelle Bouie • Sep 25, 2020 • 50m Listen

    Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg is dead at 87. She leaves a legacy as a liberal icon, from her time litigating for equal rights before the court and from her 27 years serving on the bench.

    In the midst of fierce objections from Democrats in Congress, Republicans intend to replace her with a conservative, which will shift the Supreme Court firmly to the right. How would this affect American law in the long run, and more immediately, the challenge to the Affordable Care Act that the justices intend to hear right after the election? Should the Supreme Court — and its individual justices — have this much power? Josh Barro talks with Michael Brendan Dougherty, Jamelle Bouie and Emily Bazelon to talk about Justice Ginsburg’s legacy, what happens when the Supreme Court moves away from American public opinion, and how the Supreme Court’s power could be limited, and if it should be.

    Then: one of the Louisville police officers involved in the fatal raid on Breonna Taylor’s apartment has been indicted, but not for killing her. We’ll look at whether there was a viable avenue to prosecute, and whether reforms in Louisville will prevent similar botched raids in the future.

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      Jamelle Bouie

      New York Times opinion columnist

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      Josh Barro

      Former host of Left, Right & Center

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      Michael Brendan Dougherty

      the National Review

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      Sara Fay

      Former producer of Left, Right and Center

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      Emily Bazelon

      Staff writer, New York Times; co-host, Slate Political Gabfest podcast

      NewsNationalPolitics
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