The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ga. senator has role on SCOTUS pick

Ossoff ’s vote on judiciary panel may help Jackson along.

- By Tia Mitchell Tia.mitchell@ajc.com

Judge Ketanji WASHINGTON — Brown Jackson’s nomination to the U.S. Supreme Court will take another step forward this afternoon when the Senate Judiciary Committee decides whether to move the matter to the full Senate floor.

Georgia U.S. Sen. Jon Ossoff will be a part of that discussion as one of 22 mem- bers of the committee. That position has not only given him a front-row seat to the entire nomination process but also a speaking role.

During four days of hear- ings on Jackson’s nomination, Ossoff gave opening remarks and then had two blocks of time to ask her questions: 30 minutes, then 20 minutes.

Ossoff said he felt it was important to use that time to bring up topics that illuminate­d Jackson’s perspectiv­e and approach to the Constituti­on. He focused on issues such as free speech, search and seizures during crimi- nal investigat­ions, and limitation­s on executive power.

“With the time I had as a participan­t, I did my best to elevate the proceeding­s to their highest public pur- pose,” Ossoff said.

Jackson, if confirmed, would be the first Black woman to serve on t he Supreme Court.

The Judiciary Committee is expected to decide today whether to recommend confirming her. Even if the 22-member panel deadlocks because none of its 11 Republican­s are willing to support Jackson, Democrats still can use other mechanisms to move the process to the Senate floor.

A final confirmati­on vote is expected to take place later in the week. So far, only one Republican, Maine U.S. Sen. Susan Collins, has said she will vote with Democrats to confirm Jackson. That could be enough to achieve the majority vote required without the vice president serving as a tie-breaker.

The January 2021 election of Ossoff and Raphael Warnock gave Democrats a 50-vote majority in the Senate with Vice President Kamala Harris available to break any ties in their favor.

Ossoff and other Democrats on the Judiciary Committee have criticized how some Republican­s, particular­ly Sens. Ted Cruz of Texas, Josh Hawley of Missouri and Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, treated Jackson during the hearings.

They asked her questions about critical race theory and sentencing choices she made as a trial judge, which touched on today’s partisan culture wars but aren’t directly connected to the work she would do as a Supreme Court justice.

But Republican­s have defended the line of questionin­g, saying Jackson was treated no worse than recent conservati­ve nominees to the high court.

Ossoff said he was dismayed when the process of confirming just the 116th person in U.S. history to serve on the Supreme Court got bogged down in bickering.

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