Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Confirm Judge Jackson

- JAY AMBROSE

Maybe I’ve been fooled, but my inclinatio­n is to say confirm Ketanji Brown Jackson as a Supreme Court justice because, during Senate hearings, she demonstrat­ed a firm, decisive, constituti­onally correct understand­ing of what her duties would be.

To put it simply, she is for the rule of law. To put it in more specific court terms, she thinks justices should determine what the Constituti­on actually says by referring to its specific words (known as “textualism”) and, when necessary, their public meaning at the time they were written (known as “originalis­m”).

Is this really the nominee of an ideologica­lly devoted Democratic president, cheered on by semi-socialist progressiv­es informing us that our exceptiona­l Constituti­on is a dusty 234-year-old document left behind by current times?

The vain desire is for a “living Constituti­on,” which is stuck in a coffin when judicial oligarchs in effect rewrite it to fit their druthers and cheat democracy by avoiding a legal amendment process. After all, agreement by two-thirds of both houses of Congress and three-fourths of state legislatur­es is the proper mode of revision, not a majority of nine appointed people.

Most Republican­s identifyin­g as conservati­ves embrace the approach that Judge Jackson calls her “methodolog­y.” Democrats on and off the court tend to prefer the fraudulent way out, as in concocting a nonexisten­t constituti­onal right for mothers to kill their unborn children any time prior to viability in pregnancy. The progressiv­es deceptivel­y argue they are still heeding an implied constituti­onal principle, although this much I will concede: Legal questions can be loaded with complicati­ons, not least given the issue of precedents.

For instance, Judge Jackson reasonably said in the hearings that adherence to precedents is needed to afford constituti­onal stability and reliabilit­y although she also said new, defensible informatio­n and understand­ings can evolve. She believes Roe v. Wade is settled law and observed that two court nominees of ex-President Donald Trump said as much themselves.

Judge Jackson has rightly worried Republican senators because, for instance, she has praised a New York Times project asserting that racism defines America more than anything. At the same time, she said her job as a justice would be dealing with law and facts, not with intellectu­al debate on such matters.

Some Republican senators have gone after her with virulent force on supposedly being a soft judge when sentencing child-porn collectors. She met the accusation­s with relevant details and counter-facts they chose to belittle or ignore. Despite her excellent performanc­e—the alertness, intelligen­ce and knowledge she showed in the hearings—she did make a grotesque error when she said she could not define a woman.

Progressiv­e Democrats have blasted critical senators for inciting racial prejudice against this nominee who could be the first Black woman to ever sit on the court. Even if the allegation is bogus and two wrongs don’t make a right anyway, consider that she experience­d nothing even close to the abuse of a Donald Trump nominee called a teenage alcoholic sex offender when the only proof was that he had been a teenager, as deep thinkers say.

Democrats, some believing separation of church and state means separation of religious people and state, went after a superb female nominee for being Catholic.

The truth is that both sides are fighting political battles when judicial viewpoints are what counts. This nominee may not live up to her words, but is likely among the least risky Biden might have picked. She may make history in more ways than one.

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