The Signpost

Blog

Antonin Scalia and the editor tracking his legacy

The following content has been republished from the Wikimedia Blog. Any views expressed in this piece are not necessarily shared by the Signpost; responses and critical commentary are invited in the comments. For more information on this partnership, see our content guidelines.
Since its creation in 2003, Scalia’s article has attracted some 3,500 edits (as of publishing time on 17 February).

“I was inspired to improve his Wikipedia article by reading a biography of him, and having long admired his dissents, which were blunt, often funny, and never minced words,” he says. “I attended a talk he gave at my law school, George Washington, in the late 80s. The place was packed, but I found a perch on a garbage can. All I remember of what he said is the constitution which was stuffed with the greatest guarantee of rights was the Soviet one.”

Wikipedia’s article on Scalia was updated as news of his death broke. An anonymous editor was the first to edit the article to reflect the death, with an interesting choice of edit summary. In part due to the high quality and importance of the article, the update took some time to mix into the prose; Wikipedia works on verifiability, so editors waited for respected publication to report on the death.

“I quickly realized that [Scalia’s death] would put a whole new intensity into this year’s election, but more immediate need was trying to keep the article from going out of control,” Greenbaum recalls. “There are times when the public truly takes over a Wikipedia article, and this is one of those times.

“Think of it as a huge heavy object sliding across ice. You don’t want to get in front of it because you’ll wind up underneath, but by pushing and hitting it at an angle, you can sometimes keep the article from exploding.”

Readers certainly did flock to Scalia and other related articles in the wake of his death. Pageviews on his article jumped by 33,710% and 49,730%—or in actual terms, from about 1,876 per day to over 634,269 and 934,798 on February 13 and 14, respectively. You can see and play with this (and related) data yourself on Wikimedia Labs.

With Scalia’s death, it is widely commented that Obama, as a fairly liberal President, would likely nominate a liberal-minded justice to fill Scalia’s conservative seat. The Republicans, however, have threatened to block Obama’s nomination, arguing that Obama’s selection would not represent the wishes of voters (and that, instead, that of his successor, to be elected in November, would). The Republicans run the Senate, making Obama’s job harder still.

The American press has already identified several potential candidates for the role, all of which you can read about on Wikipedia. The highest-profile include Sri Srinivasan, Merrick Garland, and Paul Watford.

Barack Obama has a lot of thinking to do to fill this vacant seat.

Greenbaum suggests that, whomever he opts for, Obama will likely get his way based on the history of these situations. “The stakes are very high, and [the Senate] might prefer just refusing to confirm and hoping for the next president,” he explains. “I don’t see Obama compromising though, he doesn’t in this sort of thing. Whoever it is, it will be uncomfortable for the Republicans to refuse.

“The record of the nominee will be gone over in very close detail and the nomination will be tried in the public eye before ever the Senate weighs in.” Indeed, the Senate’s Committee on the Judiciary, which debates the president’s nominated candidate, holds its hearings on television as of 1987.

“Basically it will be a war of public relations,” he adds.

The situation is complex, but throws another issue into what has already proven a quite remarkable presidential race. Candidates not given much chance only months ago are giving once runaway favorites a run for their money.

“In my younger days, I enjoyed political novels such as those of Allen Drury,” Greenbaum says. “But he would have strained to imagine someone like Justice Scalia, and strained even more to invent a situation like this. But we are living it, and there is no way to flip to the end early.”

"Antonin Scalia and the editor tracking his legacy" is part of the "News on Wikipedia" series. You can read them on the Wikimedia Blog.
+ Add a comment

Discuss this story

These comments are automatically transcluded from this article's talk page. To follow comments, add the page to your watchlist. If your comment has not appeared here, you can try purging the cache.

I nominate NewYorkBrad. All the best: Rich Farmbrough, 21:34, 19 February 2016 (UTC).[reply]

No offense to Scalia's legal mind but I had to laugh at the idea of Antonin Scalia making any concept "sexy". That's not an adjective that I would ever believe applied to him or his role on the Supreme Court. And that has to do with his personality, not his gender. Liz Read! Talk! 21:44, 19 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]

I was never sure whether Jabba the Hutt was male or female. It seemed impolite to ask. Hawkeye7 (talk) 23:43, 20 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
@Hawkeye7: If you go by the old Expanded Universe (now Legends), all Hutts are hermaphrodites capable of reproducing asexually. jcgoble3 (talk) 07:31, 26 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]

I am often confronted with out-of-the-blue edits on BLPs announcing promotions, appointments or deaths. Usually I wait them out; a media release normally follows in a matter of hours. I guess we have to balance Wikipedia being first with the news against the danger of a short-term hoax. Hawkeye7 (talk) 23:43, 20 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Hi Hawkeye7, we alluded to that problem in an earlier blog post, "Millions read Bowie biography following sudden death." Specifically: "Bowie had been subjected to a number of death hoaxes in the months leading up to Blackstar's release, so when his official social media profiles announced his sudden passing, the information was treated with scepticism. For the most part, editors elected to wait for verified sources to confirm the accuracy of the information coming from social media; the edits were made permanent minutes after Bowie’s son, Duncan Jones, confirmed the news on Twitter: “Very sorry and sad to say it’s true, I’ll be offline for a while. Love to all.”" Ed Erhart (WMF) (talk) 17:44, 21 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
I think I alluded to it in this post as well. It's important to note that Wikipedians take a very dim view on hoaxes. As Bowie's death broke, there was something of an edit war on the article as Twitter was ablaze with rumour and hearsay (not helped, of course, by the fact Bowie was already the target of death hoaxes on virtually a daily basis). Jones' tweet was definitely what tipped it from "probably a hack" to "wow, this is actually happening", for me. JSutherland (WMF) (talk) 13:57, 22 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]



       

The Signpost · written by many · served by Sinepost V0.9 · 🄯 CC-BY-SA 4.0