Biden's Supreme Court pick enters intensifying U.S. fight on race
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[February 26, 2022]
By Andrew Chung and Lawrence Hurley
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -President Joe Biden's
selection on Friday of Ketanji Brown Jackson as the first Black woman
U.S. Supreme Court nominee immediately thrusts the federal appeals court
judge into the center of America's debate over race.
Of the 115 people who have ever served on America's top judicial body,
all but three have been white, only two have been Black and both of
those were men. Biden and many leading fellow Democrats have sought to
make the case that naming a Black woman is long overdue, but some
leading Republicans have accused him of discrimination for refusing to
consider any men or any non-Black women for the job.
"If you're a white guy, tough luck. If you're a white woman, tough luck.
You don't qualify," said Senator Ted Cruz, a member of the Senate
Judiciary Committee that is set to hold confirmation hearings for
Jackson. Fellow Republican Senator Roger Wicker called Biden's promise
to nominate a Black woman "affirmative racial discrimination."
During a White House appearance on Friday with Jackson, Biden noted that
her parents grew up in the era of segregation "but never gave up hope
that their children would enjoy the true promise of America." Biden
called Jackson "extremely qualified" and also cited the need for "a
court that reflects the full talents and greatness of our nation."
Biden chose Jackson over two other leading candidates: Leondra Kruger,
who serves on the California Supreme Court; and Michelle Childs, a South
Carolina-based federal judge.
Race has been a divisive issue for America since its founding, including
the past enslavement of and legal discrimination against Black people.
Divisions have persisted.
In a Reuters/Ipsos poll conducted in October, about six in 10 Republican
respondents said they agreed with a statement that white people were
under attack in America. One in six Democrats agreed. About half of
Republicans said U.S. minorities were treated fairly, compared to one in
five Democrats.
Naming a Black woman to the court is a sign that America is making
progress in addressing racism, said Fatima Goss Graves, chief executive
of the National Women's Law Center.
"When the court starts its session next year, a Black woman will be
seated for the first time," Graves said. "Her presence will remind this
country of the progress that is possible and will begin the job of
shattering stereotypes that constrict Black women in leadership at all
levels."
The percentage of America's population that is white is continuing to
decline, according to U.S. census figures. Counting everyone living in
the United States, the population is 61.6% white, 18.7% Hispanic and
12.4% Black, with smaller percentages for other minority groups.
Debates over race have spilled over into the Supreme Court itself, with
conservative justices expressing skepticism about policies to remedy
past racial discrimination.
Race will loom large over the Supreme Court's next term, which begins in
October. If confirmed by the Senate, Jackson would replace retiring
liberal Justice Stephen Breyer and would participate in cases in which
race is front and center. The current court, which has a 6-3
conservative minority, includes one Black justice, conservative Clarence
Thomas.
One major case could end affirmative action policies used by colleges
and universities in their admissions processes to increase their
enrollment of Black and Hispanic students to achieve campus diversity.
The justices will also decide Alabama's defense of a Republican-backed
map of U.S. House of Representatives districts that a lower court found
was drawn to minimize the clout of Black voters in the state. The
eventual ruling could further weaken the landmark Voting Rights Act,
enacted in 1965 during the tumult of the U.S. civil rights movement to
protect minority voting rights that had been violently suppressed for
years, especially in southern states like Alabama.
Biden's nominee has to be confirmed by the Senate, which is divided
50-50 between the two parties, by a simple majority vote. Democrats
control the chamber because Vice President Kamala Harris can cast a
tie-breaking vote.
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President Joe Biden on Friday nominated federal appellate judge
Ketanji Brown Jackson to become the first Black woman to serve on
the U.S. Supreme Court, saying it is time for the nation's top
judicial body to reflect "the full talent and greatness of our
nation.
'AN INSPIRATION'
For some Americans, the nomination carries profound meaning.
Kimberly Peeler-Allen, co-founder of Higher Heights for America, a
group that promotes Black women in leadership, compared it to the
appointment of Thurgood Marshall in 1967 as the first Black justice.
Thomas was the second.
"To see someone like you ... is an inspiration for millions of
others," Peeler-Allen said.
Democratic U.S. congressman Jim Clyburn, who was instrumental in
2020 in convincing Biden to commit to naming a Black woman to the
court, emphasized the message such an appointment would make. It
would tell every child growing up in modest circumstances "you've
got just as much of a chance to benefit from the greatness of this
country as everybody else," Clyburn told the CBS program "Face the
Nation."
"That's the kind of conversation I had with candidate Biden way back
when he was running for president," Clyburn added.
Harris, who serves as the first Black U.S. vice president after
Biden picked her as his 2020 running mate, emphasized the importance
of the court reflecting all viewpoints when rendering decisions.
"The idea that there would be a Black woman on the court is about
ensuring that this court makes decisions in a way that reflect the
experiences of all Americans," Harris told Telemundo.
Conversely, James Ho, a Republican-appointed judge serving on a New
Orleans-based federal appeals court, gave a speech on Feb. 15
defending a legal scholar who had suggested in a Twitter post that
Biden's Supreme Court nominee would be a "lesser black woman."
Ho criticized the use of racial preferences in hiring, student
admissions and judicial appointments, adding that the "first step in
fighting racial discrimination is to stop practicing it."
Such reactions to Biden's pledge reflect growing differences between
Democrats and Republicans on questions of civil rights, according to
John Sides, an expert in U.S. politics and public opinion at
Vanderbilt University in Nashville.
"Attacks on Biden's plan are consistent with a political landscape
in which Democrats believe in taking affirmative steps to remedy
racial inequality while Republicans see those steps as
illegitimate," Sides said.
Racial tensions have simmered in the United States in recent years
particularly in light of incidents such as the 2020 murder of George
Floyd, a Black man, by a white Minneapolis police officer and Donald
Trump's 2017-2021 presidency when critics accused him of pursuing
policies built around "white grievance."
Debates have flared around the country over initiatives to increase
workplace racial diversity, racial sensitivity training and the
teaching of U.S. history and race relations in public schools. Some
parent groups and Republican legislators have accused public school
boards of teaching "critical race theory," an academic framework
primarily used in law schools to analyze racism in U.S. law and
institutions.
With the Senate confirmation process looming, attacks on Biden's
nominee may carry risks for Republicans.
"Anybody we are talking about is likely to be qualified - and
Republicans would understand that attacking in personal ways
wouldn't be good for the party and wouldn't be helpful," said Gregg
Nunziata, a former Republican Judiciary Committee staffer.
Nunziata noted that some Republicans already have used "unfortunate
phrasing that has reflected badly on them."
(Reporting by Andrew Chung in New York and Lawrence Hurley in
Washington; additional reporting by Jason Lange; Editing by Will
Dunham and Scott Malone)
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