Sandra Day O Connor Research Paper

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Sandra Day O’Connor once said, “The power I exert on the court depends on the power of my arguments, not on my gender.”1 Here Sandra exemplifies her believes the power she has on the court is not based on the fact that she is a girl, but in the power that comes from her arguments. This example of confidence resonates as people often think that woman cannot do the same thing as men, but from the day she was appointed to the Supreme Court O’Connor changed politics forever. From growing up on a ranch in El Paso, to becoming the first woman to be appointed to the Supreme Court, she opened so many doors for women in male-dominated professions that were thought to be unattainable.
Sandra Day O’Connor was born on March 26, 1930 in El Paso, Texas.2 …show more content…

Due to the lack of job offers at the time, she made the decision to transition in to a career in public service as a deputy attorney general in California for San Mateo County.9 At the time, her late husband John O’Connor who also happened to be a lawyer was drafted to the Judge Advocate General’s court during 1953, so the family had to make the move to Frankfurt Germany where she served as a civilian attorney for the quarter Market Center.10 Once the couple returned from Germany, they decided to settle down in Arizona, where O’Connor decided to begin her own private law firm and also at the time began becoming familiar with the Republican Party. By 1965, O’Connor was an assistant attorney general for Arizona and not long after that, she was appointed to the Arizona State Senate.11 After being re-elected again twice and becoming a Republican majority leader, she was elected as the judge of the Maricopa County Superior Court where she served for five years until she was granted the job of Arizona court of Appeals.12 In July of 1981, President Ronald Reagan decided to carry out his campaign promise, which was to appoint the first woman to the Supreme Court. When Justice Potter Stewart had retired, President Reagan had gladly appointed Sandra Day O’Connor to the Supreme Court. The U.S. senate unanimously confirmed her

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