Two
moderate Republicans, Susan Collins of Maine and Lisa Murkowski
of Alaska, voted in support of Rikelman, joining all Senate
Democrats present for Tuesday's vote.
Rikelman represented Mississippi's last remaining abortion
clinic in urging the Supreme Court to reaffirm the
constitutional right to abortion and strike down a state law
that banned the procedure after 15 weeks of pregnancy.
The court’s conservative majority used the case, Dobbs v.
Jackson Women's Health Organization, to overturn prior rulings
that recognized a national right to abortion, in a landmark
decision last June that left the issue in control of states.
President Joe Biden Rikelman to the court one month after the
court’s decision, a move cheered by progressive advocates who
have pressed Biden to prioritize civil rights issues in his
judicial picks.
Rikelman's nomination drew opposition from Republicans, who
questioned her abortion rights advocacy during a September 2022
Senate hearing and described her position on the issue as
extreme.
Rikelman vowed at the hearing to apply the Supreme Court’s
recent abortion ruling in future cases, recognizing it as “the
law of the land.”
She also committed to viewing all arguments in cases before her
“with an open mind.”
Prior to working at the Center for Reproductive Rights, Rikelman
was a lawyer for NBCUniversal handling litigation and worked at
a prominent New York law firm.
She is Biden’s third nominee to secure a seat on the court,
whose active judges were all nominated by Democrats.
(Reporting by Andrew Goudsward; Editing by David Bario & Shri
Navaratnam)
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