Rome News-Tribune

SC Sen. Scott: SCOTUS vote on Jackson won’t be based on skin color

- –New York Daily News

COLUMBIA, S.C. — As Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson prepares to begin her confirmati­on hearings for the U.S. Supreme Court, South Carolina’s junior senator said Friday that he won’t make his decision to vote for her based on the color of her skin.

U.S. Sen. Tim Scott, RS.C., the Senate’s only Black Republican, described Jackson as competent and highly educated after meeting with her Thursday in his office in Washington.

Jackson would be the first Black woman to serve on the U.S. Supreme Court if confirmed by the Democratco­ntrolled Senate.

“I’m not going to make a judgment based on the color of her skin; I’m going to make a judgment based on the record before me,” Scott told reporters Friday after he filed for reelection in 2022. “Certainly historic nominees are wonderful and perhaps a landmark, but they are not the determinin­g factor. We must make sure our court functions without politics, not based on race, but based on the basic principles, the most powerful principles that govern this great country.”

Jackson’s hearing in front of the Senate Judiciary Committee is scheduled to begin Monday.

–The State (Columbia, S.C.)

TEXAS AG KEN PAXTON REFUSES TO CALL TRANSGENDE­R OFFICIAL RACHEL LEVINE A WOMAN — AGAIN

AUSTIN, Texas — After Twitter flagged him for “hateful conduct,” Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton dug in on his decision to deny the gender identity of the nation’s highest-ranking transgende­r official.

Adm. Rachel Levine, the assistant secretary of health and a transgende­r woman, was recently named a woman of the year by USA Today. In a statement Paxton tweeted and sent to campaign supporters, the attorney general reiterated that he refuses to acknowledg­e Levine as a woman because he was following “science.”

Locked in a competitiv­e bid for reelection, Paxton’s comments come on the heels of the state’s controvers­ial decision to launch child abuse investigat­ions into the families of transgende­r youth.

“This whole insane episode represents a two-pronged attack from the left — both of which I’m vigorously fighting against,” Paxton wrote. “First is the left’s war against human biology, and especially against women. Second is their weaponizat­ion of Big Tech against conservati­ve voices.”

He added he was “exploring legal options” against Twitter.

Clark said 104 attorneys and 90 profession­al staff had quit her office by the end of February, surpassing the 96 attorneys and 51 profession­al staff who left in all of 2021.

Clark said the departures come as the Bronx DA faces 1,270 open gun cases.

“Gun violence is a blight on the Bronx that highlights a need for resources,” Clark said. “We must save a generation of boys and young men, predominan­tly of color, from death and prison.”

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