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Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson answered questions during her confirmation hearings to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in April 2021. On Feb. 25, President Joe Biden nominated her to the U.S. Supreme Court. If confirmed, she would become the first Black woman to serve as a justice.
Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson answered questions during her confirmation hearings to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in April 2021. On Feb. 25, President Joe Biden nominated her to the U.S. Supreme Court. If confirmed, she would become the first Black woman to serve as a justice.
Photo Credit: Kevin Lamarque | Reuters

Biden calls his Supreme Court nominee a ‘proven consensus builder’

Biden announced Feb. 25 that he was nominating Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson to the Supreme Court

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden announced Feb. 25 at the White House that he has chosen a “proven consensus builder” by nominating Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson, a federal appeals court judge, to serve on the Supreme Court.

If confirmed, she will be the first Black woman on the nation’s high court.

Jackson, who was introduced by the president, said she was “truly humbled by the extraordinary honor of this nomination” and thanked God for bringing her to this point in her professional journey, adding: “One can only come this far by faith.”

She said she hoped her love of this country and the Constitution would inspire future generations of Americans and also gave a shoutout to Justice Stephen Breyer, whose spot on the bench she will fill if she is confirmed by the U.S. Senate.

Jackson clerked for Breyer in the 1999-2000 court term.

Jackson, 51, had been considered a front-runner to replace Breyer since he announced in late January his plans to retire at the end of the court’s current term. She worked with a law firm and served as a federal public defender before President Barack Obama nominated her in 2012 to serve as a district court judge where she served for more than eight years.

Last year, Biden named her to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit and the Senate confirmed her with a 53-44 vote.

Jackson was born in Washington and grew up in Miami. She is a graduate of Harvard College and Harvard Law School in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Court watchers have been quick to point out that although her appointment would be historic, her spot on the bench will not change the court’s current balance of liberal and conservative justices.

Pro-life advocates expressed displeasure with her nomination. Marjorie Dannenfelser, president of the Susan B. Anthony List, said in a Feb. 25 statement that Biden “is fulfilling his promise to only appoint justices who support Roe v. Wade,” noting that Jackson is “on record opposing the free speech rights of pro-life advocates pleading to save lives outside abortion centers.”

Dannenfelser was referring to an amicus brief that Jackson’s law firm in Boston submitted in 2001 supporting a Massachusetts law that created a buffer zone around pedestrians and cars approaching abortion clinics. The firm’s clients included the Abortion Access Project of Massachusetts and NARAL Pro-Choice America.

Similarly, Kristan Hawkins, president of Students for Life Action, pledged that young people in the pro-life movement would be “actively opposing” this nomination, noting that Jackson clerked for Breyer when he wrote the opinion striking down a Nebraska law banning partial-birth abortions.

As a federal District Court judge, Jackson handled a number of challenges to executive agency actions that raised questions of administrative law.

One case that gained political attention was her 2019 ruling that a former White House counsel to President Donald Trump had to obey a congressional subpoena seeking his testimony over Trump’s efforts to obstruct the investigation of possible Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election.

Jackson met her husband, Patrick, a surgeon at MedStar Georgetown University Hospital, while both were students at Harvard. The couple married in 1996 and have two daughters.

Ahead of news reports announcing that Jackson was Biden’s nominee pick, a joint statement from the Catholic social justice lobby Network, the National Black Sisters Conference and the Leadership Conference of Women Religious said they “strongly support the Biden administration’s promise to nominate a Black woman to the United States Supreme Court.”

The three Catholic groups said it is “imperative that the court reflect the diversity of our country in order to act in a fully informed, deliberate way and arrive at sound decisions.”

Jackson will next appear before the Senate Judiciary Committee, and once her nomination is processed by that committee, she will need 51 Senate votes to be confirmed.

The nominee has not indicated a religious affiliation.

Currently the court has six Catholic justices: Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Brett Kavanaugh, Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, Sonia Sotomayor and Amy Coney Barrett. Justice Neil Gorsuch was raised Catholic but is now Episcopalian. Justices Breyer and Elena Kagan are Jewish.

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