Biden's Supreme Court pick Jackson faces U.S. Senate panel vote
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[April 04, 2022]
By Andrew Chung and Lawrence Hurley
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Ketanji Brown
Jackson, President Joe Biden's U.S. Supreme Court nominee, faces another
hurdle on Monday in her journey toward Senate confirmation with a vote
in a Judiciary Committee evenly divided between Democrats and
Republicans that could end up a tie.
Even with a possible 11-11 committee deadlock, Jackson's nomination
still would proceed to the full Senate, with Majority Leader Chuck
Schumer last week saying the chamber was on track to confirm the federal
appellate court judge to the lifetime post before its planned Easter
recess begins on Friday.
If confirmed, Jackson would become the first Black woman to serve on the
top U.S. judiciary body, joining the liberal bloc on a court with a 6-3
conservative majority.
The committee meets at 10 a.m. EDT (1400 GMT). During her confirmation
hearing before the panel last month, Biden's fellow Democrats expressed
support for Jackson while Republicans signaled opposition.
With a simple majority needed for confirmation and the Senate divided
50-50 between the parties, Jackson would get the job if Democrats remain
united regardless of how the Republicans vote. Biden's fellow Democrats
control the Senate because Vice President Kamala Harris can cast a
tie-breaking vote.
Senator Susan Collins last Wednesday became the first Republican to
announce support for Jackson's confirmation while also criticizing the
current judicial confirmation process as too politicized. Senator Joe
Manchin, the Senate's most conservative Democrat, also has announced
support for Jackson.
The process for confirming Supreme Court nominees has become
increasingly contentious in recent years. While nominees in decades past
often received large Senate majorities, recent votes have been far
closer, divided along party lines in a Washington increasingly beset
with partisan rancor.
For instance, Republican President Donald Trump's first appointee,
Justice Neil Gorsuch, was confirmed in 2017 on a 54-45 vote for a seat
previously occupied by the late conservative Justice Antonin Scalia, who
was confirmed 98-0 in 1986.
Gorsuch's confirmation followed a partisan brawl after Senate
Republicans, then in the majority, refused the prior year to consider
Democratic President Barack Obama's nomination of Merrick Garland to
replace Scalia after his death.
Trump's second appointee Brett Kavanaugh was confirmed 50-48 in 2018
after a contentious confirmation process in which he denied sexual
misconduct allegations, and Trump's third appointee Amy Coney Barrett
was confirmed 52-48 in 2020 after being nominated just weeks before a
presidential election.
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U.S. Supreme Court nominee Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson meets with
U.S. Senator Mitt Romney (R-UT) (not pictured), in his office at the
United States Capitol building in Washington, DC, U.S., March 29,
2022. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein/File Photo
Jackson, if confirmed, would replace
retiring liberal Justice Stephen Breyer, who was confirmed 87-9 in
1994.
During her confirmation hearings, Jackson, 51, pledged independence
if confirmed and embraced a limited role for jurists. She also
reflected on opportunities she has had that her parents, who grew up
in era of racial segregation in the South, did not.
Several Republican senators used the hearings to accuse her of being
lenient on child pornography offenders during her time as a federal
trial court judge. Jackson defended her record, saying she did her
"duty to hold the defendants accountable." Sentencing experts called
the penalties she imposed within the mainstream among federal
judges, while American Bar Association witnesses rejected claims
that Jackson was "soft on crime."
Sex crimes involving children have become a theme among far-right
activists on social media and of the unfounded QAnon conspiracy
theory, whose followers cast elite liberals and Democrats as a cabal
of pedophiles.
"Now this may play well to the QAnon crowd and the fringe conspiracy
theories who helped drive the insurrection on Jan. 6, 2021, but the
American public sees it for what it is," Democratic Senator Dick
Durbin, the committee's chairman, said last week in reference to the
Republican line of questioning.
The committee's tally is expected to be a deadlock after Senator
Lindsay Graham, its sole Republican to vote to confirm Jackson last
June for a seat on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of
Columbia Circuit, said he would vote no this time.
A tied committee vote would not block Jackson's nomination, as
Democrats would be expected to hold a vote on the Senate floor that
would let it proceed. Democrats expect a final Senate confirmation
vote on Thursday or Friday.
(Reporting by Andrew Chung in New York and Lawrence Hurley in
Washington; Editing by Will Dunham and Scott Malone)
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