Chattanooga Times Free Press

With at least one GOP vote, Jackson likely to be confirmed

- BY MARY CLARE JALONICK

WASHINGTON — Maine Sen. Susan Collins said Wednesday she will vote to confirm Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson, giving Democrats at least one Republican vote and all but assuring that Jackson will become the first Black woman on the Supreme Court.

Collins met with Jackson a second time this week after four days of hearings last week and said Wednesday that “she possesses the experience, qualificat­ions and integrity to serve as an associate justice on the Supreme Court.”

“I will, therefore, vote to confirm her to this position,” Collins said.

Collins’ support gives Democrats at least a one-vote cushion in the 50-50 Senate and likely saves them from having to use Vice President Kamala Harris’ tie-breaking vote to confirm President Joe Biden’s pick. Senate Democratic leaders are pushing toward a Senate Judiciary Committee vote on the nomination Monday and a final Senate vote to confirm Jackson late next week.

Biden called Collins on Wednesday to thank her after her announceme­nt, according to the senator’s office. The president had called her at least three times before the hearings, part of a larger push to win a bipartisan vote for his historic pick.

Jackson, who would replace retiring Justice Stephen Breyer, would be the third Black justice, after Thurgood Marshall and Clarence Thomas, and the sixth woman. She would also be the first former public defender on the court.

It is expected that all 50 Democrats will support her, though one notable moderate Democrat, Arizona Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, hasn’t yet said how she will vote.

Collins was the most likely Republican to support Jackson, and she has a history of voting for Supreme Court nominees picked by presidents of both parties, as well as other judicial nomination­s.

The only Supreme Court nominee she’s voted against since her election in the mid1990s is Justice Amy Coney Barrett, who was nominated by then-President Donald Trump after the death of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg in the weeks before Trump’s election defeat to Biden in 2020. Collins, who was up for re-election that year, said she voted against Barrett because of the accelerate­d sixweek timeline. “It’s not a comment on her,” Collins said of Barrett at the time.

In her statement supporting Jackson, the Maine senator said she doesn’t expect that she will always agree with Jackson’s decisions.

“That alone, however, is not disqualify­ing,” Collins said. “Indeed, that statement applies to all six justices, nominated by both Republican and Democratic presidents, whom I have voted to confirm.”

Collins said she believes the process is “broken” as it has become increasing­ly divided along party lines. When Collins first came to the Senate, Supreme Court confirmati­ons were much more bipartisan. Breyer, who will step down this summer, was confirmed on an 87-9 vote in 1994.

“In my view, the role the Constituti­on clearly assigns to the Senate is to examine the experience, qualificat­ions, and integrity of the nominee,” Collins said. “It is not to assess whether a nominee reflects the ideology of an individual senator or would rule exactly as an individual senator would want.”

 ?? AP PHOTO/CAROLYN KASTER ?? Supreme Court nominee Ketanji Brown Jackson, right, meets with Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, on Capitol Hill in Washington on March 8.
AP PHOTO/CAROLYN KASTER Supreme Court nominee Ketanji Brown Jackson, right, meets with Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, on Capitol Hill in Washington on March 8.

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