The View From 1987

Newsweek

His name has become a verb, one so crisp and eloquent that it was added to the Oxford English Dictionary: if you’ve been blocked from appointment to public office, you’ve been "borked." The term’s namesake is Robert Bork, whose path to the Supreme Court was derailed in 1…

His name has become a verb, one so crisp and eloquent that it was added to the Oxford English Dictionary: if you’ve been blocked from appointment to public office, you’ve been "borked." The term’s namesake is Robert Bork, whose path to the Supreme Court was derailed in 1987 by a hostile Senate. As Sonia Sotomayor braces for the same firing line, Bork, 82, sat down with NEWSWEEK for a rare interview. Excerpts:

His name has become a verb, one so crisp and eloquent that it was added to the Oxford English Dictionary: if you’ve been blocked from appointment to public office, you’ve been "borked." The term’s namesake is Robert Bork, whose path to the Supreme Court was derailed in 1987 by a hostile Senate. As Sonia Sotomayor braces for the same firing line, Bork, 82, sat down with NEWSWEEK for a rare interview. Excerpts:

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