WASHINGTON
— The Senate Judiciary Committee is pushing Ketanji Brown Jackson closer
to confirmation, setting up a vote next week to recommend her nomination to the
full Senate and seat her as the first Black woman on the Supreme Court.
Jackson appears to be on a glidepath to
confirmation by mid-April, even if she doesn't receive the bipartisan votes
that President Joe Biden has sought. Democrats can confirm her without one
Republican vote in the 50-50 Senate, as long as every Democrat supports her. Vice
President Kamala Harris can break a tie.
At a brief meeting Monday, Senate
Judiciary Committee Chairman Dick Durbin set the committee vote for April 4 and
praised Jackson's answers during four days of hearings last week that often
grew contentious. Republicans on the committee — led by several senators who
are eyeing presidential runs — spent much of the hearings focused on her
sentencing decisions in a handful of child pornography cases during her nine
years as a federal judge in an effort to paint her as too lenient on the
criminals.
Durbin
criticized the Republican focus on the issue, saying the GOP senators asked
"the toughest, meanest questions and then race to Twitter to see if
somebody is tweeting." In a Senate floor speech shortly afterward, Tennessee
Sen. Marsha Blackburn, one of the Republicans who asked Jackson repeatedly
about the pornography cases, defended her colleagues, saying the questioning
was "not an attack."
The
partisan spat threatened to divide Jackson's confirmation down party lines as
Republicans drew her nomination into a midterm campaign push to paint Democrats
as soft on crime. Durbin, who like Biden wants a bipartisan vote, said he hopes
other Republicans "will not be discouraged" by the back-and-forth
when considering whether to support the historic nomination.
So
far, no Republicans have said they will vote for her. Sen. Mitch McConnell of
Kentucky, the GOP leader, cited the Republicans' concerns about her sentencing
history, along with her support from liberal advocacy groups, in announcing
Thursday that he "cannot and will not" back her.
Maine
Sen. Susan Collins, who met with Jackson for more than an hour and a half
earlier this month, is the most likely GOP senator to vote for her. After their
meeting, Collins said she believes Jackson takes "a very thorough, careful
approach in applying the law to the facts of the case, and that is what I want
to see in a judge."
Jackson
would be the third Black justice, after Thurgood Marshall and Clarence Thomas,
and the sixth woman. She would also be the first former public defender on the
court, and the first justice with experience representing indigent criminal
defendants since Marshall.
Pushing
back on the Republicans' questions about her sentencing in child pornography
crimes, Jackson said during the hearings that sentencing is not a "numbers
game." She noted that there are no mandatory sentences for sex offenders
and that there has been significant debate on the subject. Some of those cases
have given her nightmares, Jackson said, and were "among the worst that I
have seen."
White
House spokesman Andrew Bates on Monday said the questioning was in "bad
faith," and that many of the Republicans had voted for GOP-nominated
judges who had also sentenced defendants beneath federal guidelines, as Jackson
did.
The
April 4 vote will set up a week of procedural maneuvers on the Senate floor
aimed at securing Jackson's confirmation by the end of the week. Durbin said he
still has hope for some Republican votes by then.
"I strongly urge my colleagues on both sides of the aisle to take a look at this woman and what she will bring to the Court," Durbin said. "She is the best and deserves our support."
VOA
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