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  • Hillary Clinton on a Law Career in Public Service

    Equal Justice Works | Aug 16, 2006 02:18 PM
     
     
    U.S. Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-NY)...
    Reflecting on all of my experiences since law school, it's hard for me to imagine any other path. I have been blessed with so many opportunities: being part of the newly-created Children's Defense Fund, becoming a staff attorney in Congress and partner at a law firm, serving our nation as First Lady and serving New York in the United States Senate. And, of course, I met my husband when we were both students at Yale Law School.

    But the truth is my decision to attend law school was by no means assured. I felt pulled in a million different directions. My graduating class at Wellesley was the class of 1969, a time of great change and anguish for America. My time as an undergraduate coincided with years of cultural tumult, controversy, and tragedy, including the escalation of the Vietnam War, the withdrawal of President Johnson from the presidential race and the assassinations of Martin Luther King, Jr. and Robert Kennedy.

    All you had to do was turn on a television set to see that there was so much going wrong in America. But in my young and idealistic mind, that meant there were so many different ways a young person like me could make something right. There was a spirit of civic involvement—of civic action—that permeated the campus and filled me with a sense of possibility, despite the social upheaval that marked the late 1960s.

    There was, however, one thing I knew for sure. I wanted to participate in public life as an activist and a citizen. I believed in our country and our democratic institutions—and that you could achieve a lot of good by participating. In the years since, as a lawyer, as First Lady and as senator from New York, that faith has only grown. In the end, the decision to apply and attend law school was for me an expression of that belief: the system can be changed from within.

    The law can be an incredible vehicle for social change—and lawyers are at the wheel. I think of Brown v. Board of Education and the Supreme Court cases that would follow, of the Voting Rights Act. In fact, in the Senate, we just renewed the Voting Rights Act, a reminder of the work that remains to ensure that every citizen's constitutional rights are safeguarded. (Alas, the work of public-interest lawyers is never done.)

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