Daily Nation Newspaper

Ketanji Brown Jackson: US Senate votes to confirm judge to top court

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THE US Supreme Court is to include a black female justice for the first time in its 233-year history after the Senate confirmed Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson to the nine-member bench.

Three Republican­s crossed the aisle to seal her appointmen­t by a vote of 53 to 47.

Justice Jackson’s appointmen­t fulfils President Joe Biden’s campaign promise to put a black woman on the court.

Chuck Schumer, the majority leader, called it a “joyous day” for the US.

The vote was overseen by Vice-President Kamala Harris, the first black woman to hold the office.

Ms Jackson, 51, will replace Justice Stephen Breyer, a fellow liberal judge for whom she once clerked, upon his retirement in June.

The lifetime appointmen­t will likely see Ms Jackson on the bench for decades, but will not shift the ideologica­l balance of the current court, with its 6-3 conservati­ve majority.

Ms Jackson has said she has a “methodolog­y” to deciding cases but not an overarchin­g philosophy. And she agreed with Republican senators about the importance of abiding by the text of the Constituti­on, as it was intended by the founders.

During her confirmati­on, Democrats touted her experience working as a public defender. She will be the first Supreme Court justice since

Marshall - the

Supreme Court have career representi­ng defendants.

The jurist, a Washington DC native, currently sits on the influentia­l US court of Appeals for the DC circuit. She has two degrees from Harvard University and once served as editor of the Harvard Law Review. She worked as a public defender in Washington before joining a private practice prior to her judicial appointmen­ts.

Some Republican­s took issue with clients Ms Jackson took on as a public defence lawyer - namely terrorism suspects held at Guantanamo Bay, with some accusing her of being soft on crime.

Others, however, applauded the diversity of experience her legal career would bring to the bench over the course of what was at times highly fractious and almost entirely polarised six week confirmati­on process.

Senator Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, one of three Republican­s to vote in favour of Justice Jackson said this decision rested, in part, as a “rejection of the corrosive politicisa­tion” that has come to shape the confirmati­on process.

The new justice “will bring to the Supreme Court a range of experience from the courtroom that few can match given her background in litigation,” Ms Murkowski said.

Thurgood first black justice - to experience criminal

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