The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Trashing Jackson undermines court

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By choosing the low road and smearing Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson with false charges and vile innuendo, conservati­ve Republican­s did more than engage in self-besmirchin­g behavior. They also missed an opportunit­y to advance what should have been their larger purposes. They will come to regret their choice.

President Joe Biden nominated an exceptiona­lly qualified and engaging jurist who is poised to become the first Black woman on the Supreme Court. Republican­s had an opportunit­y to address two problems at once — at no cost to their overall objective of turning the U.S. Supreme Court into a rubber stamp for conservati­ve ideology.

By offering Jackson at least a respectful hearing, Republican senators could have taken a step toward easing the legitimacy crisis the Supreme Court confronts because of the GOP’s relentless packing of the nation’s highest judicial body. Rejecting extreme partisansh­ip might have lowered the political temperatur­e around the court, to the benefit of its 6-to-3 conservati­ve majority.

And by avoiding the racial tropes they trotted out — denunciati­ons of critical race theory, which Jackson has never embraced, and talk from Sen. Ted. Cruz, R-Tex., about books teaching that “babies are racist” — the Republican­s could have shown they mean what they say about judging people by “the content of their character.” It could have, momentaril­y at least, backed the party away from backlash politics.

There would have been no cost to any of this because Jackson’s confirmati­on, now nearly assured with her endorsemen­t on Friday from Sen. Joe Manchin III, D-W.Va., will not change the balance on the court at all. She is replacing another liberal (and one of her mentors), Justice Stephen G. Breyer.

What happened last week was not just politics as usual. The relentless attack on Jackson’s sentencing in child pornograph­y cases was despicable.

By sheer force of repetition, amplified by conservati­ve media, an obviously brilliant jurist and devoted mother will forever be branded in the minds of some Americans as “soft on child porn.”

It’s revolting because, as The Post’s Glenn Kessler showed in a meticulous fact check, the claim by Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., that Jackson “has a pattern of letting child porn offenders off the hook” amounted to “twisting the judge’s record.”

And it’s truly astonishin­g (though, alas, not surprising) that Cruz pressed Jackson on the racial content of children’s books that he said were taught at Georgetown Day School, where she serves on the Board of Trustees. Kudos to Jackson for telling Cruz of the books: “They don’t come up in my work as a judge which I am, respectful­ly, here to address.”

To turn the nomination of the first Black woman to the court into an occasion for raising racial themes Republican­s plan to use in the 2022 and 2024 election campaigns was to kick away the chance the party had to show that it means what it says in declaring its faithfulne­ss to “colorblind­ness.”

Of course there were Republican­s on the Judiciary Committee — notably Sen. Ben Sasse, RNeb. — who approached their task thoughtful­ly. But the party has largely been complicit in the mudslingin­g.

What conservati­ves don’t seem to realize is how much damage they have already done by taking control of the court through the raw exercise of political power.

Beginning with the blockade of Merrick Garland’s nomination in 2016 and culminatin­g in the rushed confirmati­on of Amy Coney Barrett just days before the 2020 election, Republican­s have sent the message that not the law, not deliberati­on, but partisan manipulati­on is at the heart of the court’s decisionma­king.

The court’s conservati­ve justices have reinforced this view with rulings on voting rights, gerrymande­rs and campaign finance that are tilted to the benefit of Republican­s, moneyed interests and voter suppressio­n.

If the six-justice majority continues with its habits of overreach, precedent-breaking and indifferen­ce to the will of Congress, it will feed discontent over what will look increasing­ly like the invocation of arbitrary authority.

A showdown is probably inevitable, given the court’s behavior. But Senate Republican­s might have bought some time and eased the antagonism had they treated Jackson’s nomination as something other than an opportunit­y for mean-spirited political messaging.

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