Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Takeaways: Civil rights, Trump close out Jackson hearing

- By Lisa Mascaro

WASHINGTON » The historic Senate hearings for Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson, the first Black woman nominated for the Supreme Court, have been joyful, combative and clarifying, putting on display the breadth of the nation’s partisan divide and the unresolved problems of its past.

The fourth and final day of the Senate Judiciary Committee’s considerat­ion of Jackson wrapped up Thursday with several hours of testimony from outside experts.

The American Bar Associatio­n’s standing committee on the federal judiciary has afforded its highest rating, “well qualified,” to the Harvard-educated Jackson. A junior high school friend gushed over the “supernova” debate team champion. Skeptics, including the Alabama’s attorney general, warned that her views on crime and policing are “outside the mainstream.”

Yet in the 50-50 Senate, where a Trump-era rules change means it is no longer necessary to muster broad support to confirm Supreme Court nominees, the hearings have become less about the vote ahead and more about framing the politics of the eventual outcome.

Democrats are on track to confirm President Joe Biden’s pick, with a vote expected by time senators leave for a scheduled spring recess April 8.

Some takeaways from Day Four of the weeklong hearing:

REVIEWING THE RECORD

“Outstandin­g, excellent, superior, superb.”

The ABA committee gave Jackson the same highest rating that has been bestowed on most recent Supreme Court nominees, with the exception of Justice Amy Coney Barrett.

The committee’s chair, Ann Claire Williams, testified on the review of some 250-legal profession­als on Jackson’s record. Asked how Jackson’s integrity was viewed, Williams said: “Those are the comments.”

Republican senators are focusing on a narrow slice of the judge’s work, the child pornograph­y cases that Jackson herself has said are among “the most difficult” of her career — some of which still give her nightmares.

Much the way senators opposed to the first Black nominee

to the court, Thurgood Marshall, a half-century ago portrayed the storied civil rights lawyer as soft on crime in his work defending Black people, Republican­s have spotlighte­d Jackson’s sentencing­s in criminal cases, they show too much “empathy” for defendants.

A witness for the Republican side, Attorney General Steven T. Marshall of Alabama, said he believes Jackson shows more deference to criminals appearing in her courtroom than she does victims. He said her views of law enforcemen­t reforms are “outside the mainstream.”

Republican­s are trying to link

Jackson to the left-leaning “defund the police” movements, but it’s unclear if the approach is working. The judge has backing from the nation’s largest law enforcemen­t organizati­on, the Fraternal Order of Police, and she has spoken emotionall­y about her brother and uncle who worked as police officers.

TRUMP’S INFLUENCE HOVERS

Donald Trump is gone from the White House, but his influence over Republican­s endures.

One witness called by Republican­s was Alessandra Serano, the chief legal officer of Operation Undergroun­d Railroad, a Utah based anti-traffickin­g nonprofit group. It is under criminal investigat­ion in the state for exaggerati­ng its role in law enforcemen­t arrests involving child predators, in order to fundraise.

The organizati­on has become popular online and found success raising money off of conspiracy theories that have are popular among suburban mothers and groups that arose out of the QAnon conspiracy theory, which casts Trump as a hero fighting a cabal of Satan-worshippin­g cannibals operating a child sex traffickin­g ring.

As Republican­s focus on Jackson’s rulings in the child pornograph­y cases, they are tapping into this strain of the GOP and its popularity among backers of the former president, drumming up voter interest before the November elections that will determine control of Congress.

From retirement in Florida, Trump has insisted, falsely, that he won the 2020 election, a belief shared by many Republican­s, despite dozens of court cases and independen­t reviews that have rejected GOP claims of a rigged election. Trump is considerin­g another run for president in 2024.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS PHOTOS ?? American Bar Associatio­n Standing Committee on the Federal Judiciary member Ann Claire Williams, center, D. Jean Veta, left, and Joseph Drayton, right, testify during a Senate Judiciary Committee’s confirmati­on hearing of Supreme Court nominee Ketanji Brown Jackson, on Capitol Hill in Washington, Thursday, March 24, 2022.
ASSOCIATED PRESS PHOTOS American Bar Associatio­n Standing Committee on the Federal Judiciary member Ann Claire Williams, center, D. Jean Veta, left, and Joseph Drayton, right, testify during a Senate Judiciary Committee’s confirmati­on hearing of Supreme Court nominee Ketanji Brown Jackson, on Capitol Hill in Washington, Thursday, March 24, 2022.
 ?? ?? Supreme Court nominee Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson gets a kiss from her husband Dr. Patrick Jackson, at the conclusion of her confirmati­on hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, March 23, 2022.
Supreme Court nominee Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson gets a kiss from her husband Dr. Patrick Jackson, at the conclusion of her confirmati­on hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, March 23, 2022.

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