With the onslaught of the great recession and the ascendance
of the liberal wing of the Democratic Party, Washington and its politics have
massively expanded.
This has been good news for the regional employment, real
estate and Georgetown Law School.
Although Washington’s main business of government never contracts, the
growth since 2008 has few comparable eras, possibly Roosevelt’s New Deal and
WWII and Johnson’s Great Society and Vietnam.
But, Bush’s War on Terror, now augmented by Obama’s Afghan surge,
the 2009 stimulus, health care legislation and financial industry regulations,
makes Washington the premiere education and career choice for those who want to
work in government, affect public policy or plan a career in politics.
Georgetown Law not only trains many of the future attorneys
who will work in the elite law firms and bill $800 to $1,000, but it will
produce even more of the attorneys and policy directors who will staff and
manage the White House (including the current Chief of Staff and Counsel to the
President) committees on the Hill, the special and public interest groups, and
think tanks that service and resist the new super state.
Location, location, location is Georgetown Law’s particular
strength. It combines one of the
nation’s top law schools with a view of the U.S. Capitol and a short walk to
the Supreme Court.
The health care debate highlighted the advantage Georgetown
Law has from its proximity to and engagement in the legislation and the
litigation dominating the nation’s policy debates. The school provided both a forum and much of
the intellectual firepower for both sides of the case.
Justice Antonin Scalia quoted in his questioning Professor
Randy Barnett’s “can they make you eat broccoli” metaphor and, of course,
professor and former U.S. Solicitor General Paul Clement argued the plaintiff’s
case (26 state attorney generals, including Colorado’s John Suthers).
And the administration’s case was well-represented by Georgetown
Law graduates serving on the Hill and professors who helped design the
legislation. The biggest winners were
students who were able to hear numerous moot courts and panel presentations and
interact with the professors.
It’s commendatory to see an institution that benefits from the growth
of the super state maintain the level of intellectual diversity that can
effectively argue the pros and cons of the trend – an attribute missing from some
other top law schools.
See blogs:
Obama vs. Supreme Court - Who Won?
Federalism Lives
See blogs:
Obama vs. Supreme Court - Who Won?
Federalism Lives
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