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Clint Bolick

Clint Bolick (born December 26, 1957) is a justice of the Arizona Supreme Court. Previously, he served as Vice President of Litigation at the conservative/libertarian Goldwater Institute. He co-founded the libertarian Institute for Justice, where he was the Vice President and Director of Litigation from 1991 until 2004. He led two cases that went before the Supreme Court of the United States. He has also defended state-based school choice programs in the Supreme Courts of Wisconsin and Ohio.

Clint Bolick
Justice of the Arizona Supreme Court
Assumed office
January 6, 2016
Appointed byDoug Ducey
Preceded byRebecca White Berch
Personal details
Born (1957-12-26) December 26, 1957 (age 65)
Elizabeth, New Jersey, U.S.
SpouseShawnna Bolick
EducationDrew University (BA)
University of California, Davis (JD)

Early life and education Edit

Bolick was born on December 26, 1957, in Elizabeth, New Jersey. Bolick grew up in nearby Hillside and graduated from Hillside High School in 1975.[1] He graduated from Drew University in 1979 and received his J.D. from the University of California Davis School of Law in 1982. As a law student, he supported laws and legal rulings that knocked down racial discrimination (calling Brown v. Board of Education a "triumph of the principle of equality"[2]), and was a vocal opponent of Affirmative Action-based admission policies.[3]

In 1980, he ran as a Libertarian for a seat in the California State Assembly. He lost to an incumbent Democrat, but garnered 7.1 percent of the vote. (In that election, the Libertarian presidential ticket earned about 1% of the vote nationwide.)[4]

Career Edit

Mountain States Legal Foundation Edit

In 1982, he joined a public interest law firm, the Mountain States Legal Foundation in Denver, Colorado. He was hired by the foundation's acting president, William H. "Chip" Mellor.[5] In 1984,[6] Mellor left the organization over a conflict with one of the foundation's sponsors.[5] Bolick also left, believing that the foundation was more interested in protecting business interests than in promoting economic freedom.[6] In 2005, he said,

Chip and I discovered that there is a world of difference between an organization that is pro-business and an organization that is pro-free enterprise.[5]

After their break with Mountain States, they began planning a free-enterprise public interest law firm that would follow a philosophy of "economic liberty."[6] These plans would lead to the founding of the Institute for Justice in 1991.[5][6]

Equal Employment Opportunity Commission Justice Department Edit

Bolick joined the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) in 1985. While he only stayed at the EEOC for a year, he became friends with its chairman, future Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas. (Thomas is the godfather to Bolick's second son.[7]) Thomas helped convince him that removing economic barriers for the poor was more important than fighting race-based "reverse discrimination."[8] In 1991, he would support adding punitive damages to Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. He explained, "It seemed to me that if you didn't want quotas, you had to have tough remedies and punitive damages against recalcitrant discriminators ... That very much came out of Thomas."[9] Thomas also shaped his preferred remedy for inequality: removing laws and regulations he viewed as preventing the poor from starting small businesses. Thomas did this in part by telling Bolick about his grandfather, who began with a hand-built pushcart and built a profitable delivery service that comfortably supported his family, only to encounter threats from regulations designed to destroy Black-owned businesses.[7]

Bolick left the EEOC to join the Justice Department in 1986. In 1988, he wrote his first book, Changing Course. In this book, he defined civil rights in part from the perspective of removing economic and regulatory barriers for the poor and disadvantaged.[6]

Landmark Center for Civil Rights Edit

In 1989, he left the Justice Department and, with a grant from the Landmark Legal Foundation, started a public advocacy law practice in Washington, D.C. In its first case, the Landmark Center for Civil Rights represented Washington shoeshine stand owner Ego Brown in his attempt to overturn a Jim Crow-era law against bootblack stands on public streets. The law was designed to restrict economic opportunities for African-Americans, but was still being enforced 85 years after its passage. He sued the District of Columbia on Brown's behalf, and the law was overturned in 1989.[8][10]

While working for the Landmark Legal Foundation, he defended the first Wisconsin school voucher program in court.[11][12]

He supported Thomas during his confirmation hearings for the Supreme Court. On July 31, 1991, about 45 people from Thomas' hometown of Pin Point, Georgia visited Washington to show support for the nominee. At the time, Bolick told The Washington Post that the Landmark Center for Civil Rights raised $3,000 to pay for bus rental and contributed another $1,100 for hotel charges.[13]

Institute for Justice Edit

In 1991, Bolick and Chip Mellor (his former boss from the Mountain States Legal Foundation) co-founded the Institute for Justice with funding from billionaire Charles Koch.[14] He was the Vice President and Director of Litigation from 1991 until 2004. The organization litigates on behalf of small businesses faced with regulations that it views as unjustified or anti-competitive. It also promotes school choice, property rights, and free speech.[8][15][16] Bolick and the institute were active in defending a Cleveland, Ohio school voucher program, which was declared constitutional in a 2002 Supreme Court case, Zelman v. Simmons-Harris[17] The court ruled in favor of a Cincinnati, Ohio school voucher program, allowing the use of public money to pay tuition at private and parochial schools.[18] He led the case Swedenburg v. Kelly while at the institute. This case was consolidated with Granholm v. Heald and considered by the U.S. Supreme Court in 2005. Bolick argued the case before the court, along with attorney Kathleen Sullivan.[19] The court struck down regulatory barriers to direct interstate shipment of wine to consumers.[20]

In April 1993, he wrote an op-ed for The Wall Street Journal opposing two appointments by the Clinton administration (Lani Guinier to assistant attorney general for civil rights and Norma V. Cantu to assistant secretary for civil rights in the Department of Education). The Journal ran the piece under the headline "Clinton's Quota Queens."[21][22] After the piece was published, he distributed information about Guinier's writings and interpreted them for reporters. He also appeared on Nightline and Crossfire to oppose her appointment. The article and Bolick's subsequent efforts were credited with helping end Guinier's appointment.[23] On June 3, 1993, President Bill Clinton withdrew her nomination. Clinton stated that he had not read Guinier's writings at the time of her nomination, and called some of them "anti-democratic".[24] Clinton went on to describe the effort to stop Guinier's appointment as "a campaign of right-wing distortion and vilification", and according to press reports referred to Bolick's editorial with "particular scorn".[25] Other critics accused Bolick and conservatives who opposed Guinier of racism and sexism, often citing the phrase "quota queen" as evidence.[23][26][27]

Alliance for School Choice Edit

In 2004, Bolick joined the Alliance for School Choice, a national non-profit educational policy group advocating school choice programs across the United States. He was that organization's first President and General Counsel.[28]

Goldwater Institute Edit

 
Bolick speaking at the 2014 Goldwater Dinner in Scottsdale, Arizona

In 2007, he became the Vice President for Litigation at the Goldwater Institute when that organization added a litigation group.[29]

Bolick helped to draft model legislation known as the 'Health Care Freedom Act' that would prohibit health insurers from accepting federal subsidies under the Affordable Care Act that trigger the employer mandate.[30] Arizona and Oklahoma voters approved a version of the Health Care Freedom Act in their respective November 2010 general elections.[31][32]} Also in November 2010, voters in Arizona, South Carolina, South Dakota and Utah adopted a measure he drafted called Save Our Secret Ballot, which guarantees workers the right to a secret-ballot vote in union-organizing elections.[31][33][34]

In 2012, he was an attorney for a Mesa tattoo parlor that had been denied a business license by the city. The case resulted in the Arizona Supreme Court declaring tattoos Constitutionally protected free speech. Bolick marked his victory by getting a small tattoo of a scorpion on his index finger.[35][36]

On July 30, 2015, Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump called for the deportation of all of the estimated 11 million illegal immigrants in the United States. Bolick called Trump's idea "impractical and opposed by a large majority of Americans."[37]

Appointment to Arizona Supreme Court Edit

On January 6, 2016, Governor Doug Ducey appointed Bolick to the Arizona Supreme Court.[38]

Works Edit

Nonfiction books Edit

  • Changing Course: Civil Rights at the Crossroads (1988) ISBN 978-0887381799
  • Unfinished Business: A Civil Rights Strategy for America's Third Century (1990) ISBN 978-0936488356
  • Grassroots Tyranny: The Limits of Federalism (1993) ISBN 978-1882577019
  • The Affirmative Action Fraud: Can We Restore the American Civil Rights Vision? (1996) ISBN 978-1882577279
  • Transformation: The Promise and Politics of Empowerment (1998) ISBN 978-1558155060
  • Voucher Wars: Waging the Legal Battle Over School Choice (2003) ISBN 978-1930865372
  • Leviathan: The Growth of Local Government and the Erosion of Liberty (2004) ISBN 978-0817945527
  • David's Hammer: The Case for an Activist Judiciary (2007) ISBN 978-1933995038
  • Death Grip: Loosening the Law's Stranglehold over Economic Liberty (2011) ISBN 978-0817913144
  • Two-Fer: Electing a President and a Supreme Court (2012) ISBN 978-0817914646
  • Immigration Wars: Forging an American Solution (Jeb Bush) (2013) ISBN 978-1476713458

Fiction books Edit

Other Edit

Bolick has authored and co-authored numerous other paperbacks, ebooks and audiobooks.

Awards Edit

In 2006, he won one of the four Bradley Prizes given that year. The Bradley Prize included a one-time $250,000 stipend.[39] He is currently a Research Fellow at Stanford University's Hoover Institution.[40] American Lawyer magazine named him one of three Lawyers of the Year in 2003. In 2009, Legal Times included him in their list of the "90 greatest Washington lawyers of the past 30 years".[40]

Personal life Edit

Bolick is married to former Arizona State Representative Shawnna Bolick.[41][42] They have two children.[43]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Bolick, Clint. "Remedial Education (Clint Bolick)", Center for Education Reform. Accessed July 5, 2017. "I grew up in Hillside, a suburb of Newark, in a single-parent, working-class family. In 1975, Hillside High School graduated me with enough skills to secure a scholarship at an excellent college and go on to a successful career in law and public policy."
  2. ^ Easton, Nina J. (2000). Gang of Five: Leaders at the Center of the Conservative Crusade. New York City: Simon & Schuster. pp. 91. ISBN 0743203208. triumph of the principle of equality.
  3. ^ Easton, p. 96
  4. ^ Easton, pp. 105–106
  5. ^ a b c d Rosen, Jeffrey (17 April 2005). "The Unregulated Offensive". The New York Times. Retrieved 8 February 2014.
  6. ^ a b c d e Easton, pp. 193, 198
  7. ^ a b Easton, p. 196
  8. ^ a b c Easton, Nina J. (20 April 1997). "Welcome to the Clint Bolick Revolution". The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 8 February 2014.
  9. ^ Easton, p. 197
  10. ^ "Shoeshine Businessman Standing Tall in Victory". The New York Times. 19 April 1989. Retrieved 9 December 2013.
  11. ^ "Blackboard Jungle". American Lawyer. May 2000.
  12. ^ Walsh, Mark (April 1, 1998). "Bolick v. Chanin". Education Week. Retrieved May 19, 2016.
  13. ^ LaFraniere, Sharon (1 August 1991). "Hometown Wellwishers Take Bus To Breakfast With a Favorite Son; Supporters From Pin Point, Ga., Meet With Supreme Court Nominee". The Washington Post.
  14. ^ Jane, Mayer (2016). Dark Money: the Hidden History of the Billionaires Behind the rise of the radical right (First ed.). New York City. ISBN 978-0385535601. OCLC 935638944.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  15. ^ Gillespie, Nick (2 March 2008). "Litigating for Liberty". Reason. Retrieved 9 December 2013.
  16. ^ Levy, Collin (7 January 2012). "Litigating for Liberty". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 9 December 2013.(subscription required)
  17. ^ Zelman v. Simmons-Harris, 536 U.S. 639 (2002).
  18. ^ Elsasser, Glen (26 September 2001). "High court to rule on vouchers for religious schools". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 22 December 2013.
  19. ^ Mauro, Tony (17 April 2006). "High Court Victors Feel Grapes of Wrath". Legal Times. Retrieved 18 February 2014.
  20. ^ Granholm v. Heald, 544 U.S. 460 (2005), Oyez
  21. ^ Easton, p. 262
  22. ^ Bolick, Clint (30 April 1993). "Clinton's Quota Queens". The Wall Street Journal.
  23. ^ a b Easton, p. 263
  24. ^ Locin, Mitchell (4 June 1993). "Clinton Dumps Nominee". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 12 February 2014.
  25. ^ Apple, R.W. (5 June 1993). "THE GUINIER BATTLE: President Blames Himself for Furor Over Nominee". The New York Times. Retrieved 12 February 2014.
  26. ^ Feldmann, Linda (7 June 1993). "Failure to Combat Labels Sunk Justice Nominee". The Christian Science Monitor. Retrieved 12 February 2014.
  27. ^ "Don't Let Guinier Choice Be Scuttled". The Philadelphia Inquirer. 1 June 1993. Retrieved 12 February 2014.
  28. ^ Dillon, Sam (6 January 2006). "Florida Supreme Court Blocks School Vouchers". The New York Times. Retrieved 30 April 2015.
  29. ^ Lacey, Marc (25 December 2011). "A Watchdog for Conservative Ideals". The New York Times. Retrieved 8 February 2014.
  30. ^ "The Health Care Freedom Act: Questions & Answers" (PDF). The Goldwater Institute. Retrieved May 20, 2022.
  31. ^ a b Hunnicutt, John (January 22, 2016). "The Verdict Should B Out On Bollick". Arizona Daily Independent. Retrieved May 19, 2016.
  32. ^ "Health Care Freedom Act passes in Arizona, Oklahoma". Natural Healing News. February 25, 2012. Retrieved May 19, 2016.
  33. ^ Haider-Markel, Donald P. (Apr 3, 2014). The Oxford Handbook of State and Local Government. OUP Oxford.
  34. ^ "Federal Court Upholds "Save Our Secret Ballot" Amendment". Nevada News and Views. September 6, 2012. Retrieved May 19, 2016.
  35. ^ Lacey, Marc (December 26, 2011). "A Watchdog for Conservative Ideals". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved November 30, 2021.
  36. ^ Favate, Sam (September 10, 2012). "Arizona Supreme Court Says Tattoos Are Free Speech". The Wall Street Journal. ISSN 0099-9660. Retrieved November 30, 2021.
  37. ^ Colvin, Jill; Caldwell, Alicia A. (July 31, 2015). "Trump calls for mass deportations: Wants all 11 million people living in the country illegally out". Laredo Morning Times. Associated Press. pp. 1, 14A.
  38. ^ Wockhit, Wochit (January 6, 2016). "Gov. Ducey appoints Clint Bolick to AZ Supreme Court". USA Today.
  39. ^ "Dissenting voices rewarded". The Washington Times. 28 May 2006. Retrieved 8 February 2014.
  40. ^ a b "Clint Bolick, Research Fellow". The Hoover Institution web site. Retrieved 8 February 2014.
  41. ^ Pineda, Paulina (November 8, 2017). "Shawnna Bolick launches third run for state legislature". The Arizona Capitol Times. Retrieved January 14, 2019.
  42. ^ Fischer, Howard (January 30, 2021). "Proposed law would allow Arizona Legislature to overturn presidential election results". Arizona Daily Star. Retrieved January 30, 2021.
  43. ^ Oxford, Andrew (June 22, 2021). "Shawnna Bolick enters crowded race for Arizona secretary of state". The Arizona Republic. Retrieved June 25, 2021.

External links Edit

Legal offices
Preceded by Justice of the Arizona Supreme Court
2016–present
Incumbent

clint, bolick, born, december, 1957, justice, arizona, supreme, court, previously, served, vice, president, litigation, conservative, libertarian, goldwater, institute, founded, libertarian, institute, justice, where, vice, president, director, litigation, fro. Clint Bolick born December 26 1957 is a justice of the Arizona Supreme Court Previously he served as Vice President of Litigation at the conservative libertarian Goldwater Institute He co founded the libertarian Institute for Justice where he was the Vice President and Director of Litigation from 1991 until 2004 He led two cases that went before the Supreme Court of the United States He has also defended state based school choice programs in the Supreme Courts of Wisconsin and Ohio Clint BolickJustice of the Arizona Supreme CourtIncumbentAssumed office January 6 2016Appointed byDoug DuceyPreceded byRebecca White BerchPersonal detailsBorn 1957 12 26 December 26 1957 age 65 Elizabeth New Jersey U S SpouseShawnna BolickEducationDrew University BA University of California Davis JD Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 2 1 Mountain States Legal Foundation 2 2 Equal Employment Opportunity Commission Justice Department 2 3 Landmark Center for Civil Rights 2 4 Institute for Justice 2 5 Alliance for School Choice 2 6 Goldwater Institute 2 7 Appointment to Arizona Supreme Court 3 Works 3 1 Nonfiction books 3 2 Fiction books 3 3 Other 4 Awards 5 Personal life 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksEarly life and education EditBolick was born on December 26 1957 in Elizabeth New Jersey Bolick grew up in nearby Hillside and graduated from Hillside High School in 1975 1 He graduated from Drew University in 1979 and received his J D from the University of California Davis School of Law in 1982 As a law student he supported laws and legal rulings that knocked down racial discrimination calling Brown v Board of Education a triumph of the principle of equality 2 and was a vocal opponent of Affirmative Action based admission policies 3 In 1980 he ran as a Libertarian for a seat in the California State Assembly He lost to an incumbent Democrat but garnered 7 1 percent of the vote In that election the Libertarian presidential ticket earned about 1 of the vote nationwide 4 Career EditMountain States Legal Foundation Edit In 1982 he joined a public interest law firm the Mountain States Legal Foundation in Denver Colorado He was hired by the foundation s acting president William H Chip Mellor 5 In 1984 6 Mellor left the organization over a conflict with one of the foundation s sponsors 5 Bolick also left believing that the foundation was more interested in protecting business interests than in promoting economic freedom 6 In 2005 he said Chip and I discovered that there is a world of difference between an organization that is pro business and an organization that is pro free enterprise 5 After their break with Mountain States they began planning a free enterprise public interest law firm that would follow a philosophy of economic liberty 6 These plans would lead to the founding of the Institute for Justice in 1991 5 6 Equal Employment Opportunity Commission Justice Department Edit Bolick joined the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission EEOC in 1985 While he only stayed at the EEOC for a year he became friends with its chairman future Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas Thomas is the godfather to Bolick s second son 7 Thomas helped convince him that removing economic barriers for the poor was more important than fighting race based reverse discrimination 8 In 1991 he would support adding punitive damages to Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 He explained It seemed to me that if you didn t want quotas you had to have tough remedies and punitive damages against recalcitrant discriminators That very much came out of Thomas 9 Thomas also shaped his preferred remedy for inequality removing laws and regulations he viewed as preventing the poor from starting small businesses Thomas did this in part by telling Bolick about his grandfather who began with a hand built pushcart and built a profitable delivery service that comfortably supported his family only to encounter threats from regulations designed to destroy Black owned businesses 7 Bolick left the EEOC to join the Justice Department in 1986 In 1988 he wrote his first book Changing Course In this book he defined civil rights in part from the perspective of removing economic and regulatory barriers for the poor and disadvantaged 6 Landmark Center for Civil Rights Edit In 1989 he left the Justice Department and with a grant from the Landmark Legal Foundation started a public advocacy law practice in Washington D C In its first case the Landmark Center for Civil Rights represented Washington shoeshine stand owner Ego Brown in his attempt to overturn a Jim Crow era law against bootblack stands on public streets The law was designed to restrict economic opportunities for African Americans but was still being enforced 85 years after its passage He sued the District of Columbia on Brown s behalf and the law was overturned in 1989 8 10 While working for the Landmark Legal Foundation he defended the first Wisconsin school voucher program in court 11 12 He supported Thomas during his confirmation hearings for the Supreme Court On July 31 1991 about 45 people from Thomas hometown of Pin Point Georgia visited Washington to show support for the nominee At the time Bolick told The Washington Post that the Landmark Center for Civil Rights raised 3 000 to pay for bus rental and contributed another 1 100 for hotel charges 13 Institute for Justice Edit In 1991 Bolick and Chip Mellor his former boss from the Mountain States Legal Foundation co founded the Institute for Justice with funding from billionaire Charles Koch 14 He was the Vice President and Director of Litigation from 1991 until 2004 The organization litigates on behalf of small businesses faced with regulations that it views as unjustified or anti competitive It also promotes school choice property rights and free speech 8 15 16 Bolick and the institute were active in defending a Cleveland Ohio school voucher program which was declared constitutional in a 2002 Supreme Court case Zelman v Simmons Harris 17 The court ruled in favor of a Cincinnati Ohio school voucher program allowing the use of public money to pay tuition at private and parochial schools 18 He led the case Swedenburg v Kelly while at the institute This case was consolidated with Granholm v Heald and considered by the U S Supreme Court in 2005 Bolick argued the case before the court along with attorney Kathleen Sullivan 19 The court struck down regulatory barriers to direct interstate shipment of wine to consumers 20 In April 1993 he wrote an op ed for The Wall Street Journal opposing two appointments by the Clinton administration Lani Guinier to assistant attorney general for civil rights and Norma V Cantu to assistant secretary for civil rights in the Department of Education The Journal ran the piece under the headline Clinton s Quota Queens 21 22 After the piece was published he distributed information about Guinier s writings and interpreted them for reporters He also appeared on Nightline and Crossfire to oppose her appointment The article and Bolick s subsequent efforts were credited with helping end Guinier s appointment 23 On June 3 1993 President Bill Clinton withdrew her nomination Clinton stated that he had not read Guinier s writings at the time of her nomination and called some of them anti democratic 24 Clinton went on to describe the effort to stop Guinier s appointment as a campaign of right wing distortion and vilification and according to press reports referred to Bolick s editorial with particular scorn 25 Other critics accused Bolick and conservatives who opposed Guinier of racism and sexism often citing the phrase quota queen as evidence 23 26 27 Alliance for School Choice Edit In 2004 Bolick joined the Alliance for School Choice a national non profit educational policy group advocating school choice programs across the United States He was that organization s first President and General Counsel 28 Goldwater Institute Edit nbsp Bolick speaking at the 2014 Goldwater Dinner in Scottsdale ArizonaIn 2007 he became the Vice President for Litigation at the Goldwater Institute when that organization added a litigation group 29 Bolick helped to draft model legislation known as the Health Care Freedom Act that would prohibit health insurers from accepting federal subsidies under the Affordable Care Act that trigger the employer mandate 30 Arizona and Oklahoma voters approved a version of the Health Care Freedom Act in their respective November 2010 general elections 31 32 Also in November 2010 voters in Arizona South Carolina South Dakota and Utah adopted a measure he drafted called Save Our Secret Ballot which guarantees workers the right to a secret ballot vote in union organizing elections 31 33 34 In 2012 he was an attorney for a Mesa tattoo parlor that had been denied a business license by the city The case resulted in the Arizona Supreme Court declaring tattoos Constitutionally protected free speech Bolick marked his victory by getting a small tattoo of a scorpion on his index finger 35 36 On July 30 2015 Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump called for the deportation of all of the estimated 11 million illegal immigrants in the United States Bolick called Trump s idea impractical and opposed by a large majority of Americans 37 Appointment to Arizona Supreme Court Edit On January 6 2016 Governor Doug Ducey appointed Bolick to the Arizona Supreme Court 38 Works EditNonfiction books Edit Changing Course Civil Rights at the Crossroads 1988 ISBN 978 0887381799 Unfinished Business A Civil Rights Strategy for America s Third Century 1990 ISBN 978 0936488356 Grassroots Tyranny The Limits of Federalism 1993 ISBN 978 1882577019 The Affirmative Action Fraud Can We Restore the American Civil Rights Vision 1996 ISBN 978 1882577279 Transformation The Promise and Politics of Empowerment 1998 ISBN 978 1558155060 Voucher Wars Waging the Legal Battle Over School Choice 2003 ISBN 978 1930865372 Leviathan The Growth of Local Government and the Erosion of Liberty 2004 ISBN 978 0817945527 David s Hammer The Case for an Activist Judiciary 2007 ISBN 978 1933995038 Death Grip Loosening the Law s Stranglehold over Economic Liberty 2011 ISBN 978 0817913144 Two Fer Electing a President and a Supreme Court 2012 ISBN 978 0817914646 Immigration Wars Forging an American Solution Jeb Bush 2013 ISBN 978 1476713458Fiction books Edit Nicki s Girl 2007 ISBN 978 1587367038Other Edit Bolick has authored and co authored numerous other paperbacks ebooks and audiobooks Awards EditIn 2006 he won one of the four Bradley Prizes given that year The Bradley Prize included a one time 250 000 stipend 39 He is currently a Research Fellow at Stanford University s Hoover Institution 40 American Lawyer magazine named him one of three Lawyers of the Year in 2003 In 2009 Legal Times included him in their list of the 90 greatest Washington lawyers of the past 30 years 40 Personal life EditBolick is married to former Arizona State Representative Shawnna Bolick 41 42 They have two children 43 See also EditLibertarian theories of lawReferences Edit Bolick Clint Remedial Education Clint Bolick Center for Education Reform Accessed July 5 2017 I grew up in Hillside a suburb of Newark in a single parent working class family In 1975 Hillside High School graduated me with enough skills to secure a scholarship at an excellent college and go on to a successful career in law and public policy Easton Nina J 2000 Gang of Five Leaders at the Center of the Conservative Crusade New York City Simon amp Schuster pp 91 ISBN 0743203208 triumph of the principle of equality Easton p 96 Easton pp 105 106 a b c d Rosen Jeffrey 17 April 2005 The Unregulated Offensive The New York Times Retrieved 8 February 2014 a b c d e Easton pp 193 198 a b Easton p 196 a b c Easton Nina J 20 April 1997 Welcome to the Clint Bolick Revolution The Los Angeles Times Retrieved 8 February 2014 Easton p 197 Shoeshine Businessman Standing Tall in Victory The New York Times 19 April 1989 Retrieved 9 December 2013 Blackboard Jungle American Lawyer May 2000 Walsh Mark April 1 1998 Bolick v Chanin Education Week Retrieved May 19 2016 LaFraniere Sharon 1 August 1991 Hometown Wellwishers Take Bus To Breakfast With a Favorite Son Supporters From Pin Point Ga Meet With Supreme Court Nominee The Washington Post Jane Mayer 2016 Dark Money the Hidden History of the Billionaires Behind the rise of the radical right First ed New York City ISBN 978 0385535601 OCLC 935638944 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Gillespie Nick 2 March 2008 Litigating for Liberty Reason Retrieved 9 December 2013 Levy Collin 7 January 2012 Litigating for Liberty The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 9 December 2013 subscription required Zelman v Simmons Harris 536 U S 639 2002 Elsasser Glen 26 September 2001 High court to rule on vouchers for religious schools Chicago Tribune Retrieved 22 December 2013 Mauro Tony 17 April 2006 High Court Victors Feel Grapes of Wrath Legal Times Retrieved 18 February 2014 Granholm v Heald 544 U S 460 2005 Oyez Easton p 262 Bolick Clint 30 April 1993 Clinton s Quota Queens The Wall Street Journal a b Easton p 263 Locin Mitchell 4 June 1993 Clinton Dumps Nominee Chicago Tribune Retrieved 12 February 2014 Apple R W 5 June 1993 THE GUINIER BATTLE President Blames Himself for Furor Over Nominee The New York Times Retrieved 12 February 2014 Feldmann Linda 7 June 1993 Failure to Combat Labels Sunk Justice Nominee The Christian Science Monitor Retrieved 12 February 2014 Don t Let Guinier Choice Be Scuttled The Philadelphia Inquirer 1 June 1993 Retrieved 12 February 2014 Dillon Sam 6 January 2006 Florida Supreme Court Blocks School Vouchers The New York Times Retrieved 30 April 2015 Lacey Marc 25 December 2011 A Watchdog for Conservative Ideals The New York Times Retrieved 8 February 2014 The Health Care Freedom Act Questions amp Answers PDF The Goldwater Institute Retrieved May 20 2022 a b Hunnicutt John January 22 2016 The Verdict Should B Out On Bollick Arizona Daily Independent Retrieved May 19 2016 Health Care Freedom Act passes in Arizona Oklahoma Natural Healing News February 25 2012 Retrieved May 19 2016 Haider Markel Donald P Apr 3 2014 The Oxford Handbook of State and Local Government OUP Oxford Federal Court Upholds Save Our Secret Ballot Amendment Nevada News and Views September 6 2012 Retrieved May 19 2016 Lacey Marc December 26 2011 A Watchdog for Conservative Ideals The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 30 2021 Favate Sam September 10 2012 Arizona Supreme Court Says Tattoos Are Free Speech The Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Retrieved November 30 2021 Colvin Jill Caldwell Alicia A July 31 2015 Trump calls for mass deportations Wants all 11 million people living in the country illegally out Laredo Morning Times Associated Press pp 1 14A Wockhit Wochit January 6 2016 Gov Ducey appoints Clint Bolick to AZ Supreme Court USA Today Dissenting voices rewarded The Washington Times 28 May 2006 Retrieved 8 February 2014 a b Clint Bolick Research Fellow The Hoover Institution web site Retrieved 8 February 2014 Pineda Paulina November 8 2017 Shawnna Bolick launches third run for state legislature The Arizona Capitol Times Retrieved January 14 2019 Fischer Howard January 30 2021 Proposed law would allow Arizona Legislature to overturn presidential election results Arizona Daily Star Retrieved January 30 2021 Oxford Andrew June 22 2021 Shawnna Bolick enters crowded race for Arizona secretary of state The Arizona Republic Retrieved June 25 2021 External links EditAppearances at the U S Supreme Court from the Oyez Project Appearances on C SPAN Roberts Russ October 31 2006 Clint Bolick Defends Judicial Activism EconTalk Library of Economics and Liberty Legal officesPreceded byRebecca White Berch Justice of the Arizona Supreme Court2016 present Incumbent Portals nbsp Arizona nbsp Biography nbsp Law nbsp Libertarianism Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Clint Bolick amp oldid 1179038449, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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