Ginsburg's 'Style Problems'
Ruth Bader Ginsburg, when she was simply a Supreme Court nominee, had a number of “performance problems,” a newly released White House memo from 1993 notes.
Written by Ron Klain, who handled President Bill Clinton’s judicial nominations, Ginsburg – just a week away from testifying before the Senate Judiciary Committee – defended the American Civil Liberties Union way too much. “She has an instinct for defending some rather extreme liberal views,” offered Klain to David Gergen, then a counselor to the president and now a talking head on CNN.
Ginsburg also showed disdain for the confirmation process and didn’t like the White House presenting her as a moderate, Klain noted.
She had “style problems” as well. “Judge Ginsburg’s technique – and her failure to make eye contact, her halting speech, her ‘laconic’ nature (to use Jim Hamilton’s phrase) – is not helpful," Klain's memo said.
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