USA TODAY US Edition

‘A long overdue but welcome historic’ moment

Jackson takes oath as the first Black female justice

- John Fritze

WASHINGTON – Ketanji Brown Jackson, a former public defender who rose to become a judge on a powerful federal appeals court, made history Thursday as the first Black woman to sit on the Supreme Court.

Jackson, 51, a Miami native and Harvard-trained lawyer who was confirmed by the Senate nearly three months ago, will take the seat occupied by Associate Justice Stephen Breyer for 28 years. Breyer announced his retirement in January, clearing the way for President Joe Biden to name Jackson as his first pick for the nation’s highest court.

Previously a judge on the powerful U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, Jackson took the oath of office at a fraught moment for the high court, as its decisions to overturn Roe v. Wade and expand access to handguns have exacerbate­d tensions among the justices and underscore­d divisions among Americans over culture war issues.

But none of that was on display as Chief Justice John Roberts administer­ed one oath of office to Jackson and Breyer – for whom Jackson clerked more than 20 years ago – administer­ed the other. With that, Jackson became the 104th associate justice – marking the first time women and people of color outnumber white men on the court.

“I am truly grateful to be part of the promise of our great nation,” Jackson said in a statement released by the court after the ceremony.

In brief remarks before the oaths were administer­ed, Roberts noted that Jackson could now exercise her duties as a justice. That will allow Jackson to get her chambers and staff set up in preparatio­n for the start of what appears to be another intense term this fall. “I am pleased to welcome Justice Jackson to the court and to our common calling,” Roberts said.

When the justices return to Washington in October with Jackson in her seat, there will be four women and two African Americans on the nation’s highest bench for the first time in the court’s 233-year history.

“Her hard work, integrity, and intelligen­ce have earned her a place on this court,” Breyer said in a statement released by the court. “I am glad for America. Ketanji will interpret the law wisely and fairly.”

Jackson was confirmed 53-47, picking up the support of three Senate Republican­s along with all Democrats. Because she is replacing Breyer, who was nominated by President Bill Clinton, Jackson is not expected to change the court’s conservati­ve tilt. Relatively young for a Supreme Court justice, Jackson could serve for decades.

Though Republican­s largely praised Jackson’s temperamen­t, some accused her of being soft on crime and questioned her role in defending alleged terrorists who were classified as enemy combatants after the 9/11 attacks. Though some of that criticism was sharp – unfair, according to Democrats – Jackson sailed through the hearings.

Because she sat on Harvard University’s board of overseers, Jackson announced in March that she will recuse herself from a case pending at the Supreme Court challengin­g the affirmativ­e action policies at Harvard College and at the University of North Carolina. Arguments in that appeal are expected to take place in the fall.

The court will hear a number of other major cases next term, including one dealing with whether state courts may review state rules for federal elections and another on whether businesses may deny matrimonia­l services to same-sex couples.

Jackson will be the first former federal public defender to serve on the Supreme Court. She will be the only justice with experience on the U.S. Sentencing Commission, a bipartisan agency that makes recommenda­tions about criminal sentences in federal court. On a court where many of her colleagues worked in presidenti­al administra­tions before becoming appeals court judges, Jackson will be one of two justices – along with Associate Justice Sonia Sotomayor – to have served as a trial court judge.

Some of Jackson’s decisions drew criticism from conservati­ves, including a 2019 case in which she ruled that President Donald Trump’s former White House counsel, Don McGahn, had to testify as part of a congressio­nal impeachmen­t inquiry. She was also criticized on the right for ruling against a Trump effort to expand the number of immigrants in the country illegally who would be subjected to expedited deportatio­n. Those same critics rarely mentioned other cases in which Jackson sided with Trump, such as a challenge to his controvers­ial border wall. In another case, she ruled federal immigratio­n law allowed faster removals for certain migrants seeking asylum.

Jackson will arrive on the court after a historic term in which tensions between the justices spilled out into the open, a dramatic leak of a draft opinion in the abortion case undermined confidence in the court’s protocols and protests erupted in response to that leak, including some that took place outside the homes of the justices themselves. She has quietly watched those events following her confirmati­on, leaving her in the unusual circumstan­ce of being a confirmed Supreme Court justice without an actual seat on the court for months. Breyer had always intended to retire at the end of the term, but his decision became public in January, prompting Democrats – with the slimmest of majorities in the Senate – to move quickly to confirm her.

“Justice Jackson’s swearing in reflects a long overdue but welcome historic milestone,” said Elizabeth Wydra with the liberal Constituti­onal Accountabi­lity Center. “She will join a court at a historic crossroads, too.”

 ?? FRED SCHILLING/COLLECTION OF THE U.S. SUPREME COURT ?? Chief Justice John Roberts swears in Ketanji Brown Jackson as her husband, Dr. Patrick Jackson, holds the Bible.
FRED SCHILLING/COLLECTION OF THE U.S. SUPREME COURT Chief Justice John Roberts swears in Ketanji Brown Jackson as her husband, Dr. Patrick Jackson, holds the Bible.

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