Joe Biden speaks of 'historic moment for our nation' as Democrats give standing ovation after judge's ascent to supreme court.
Barack Obama, America’s first Black president, tweeted congratulations to Jackson and wrote: “This is a great day for America, and a proud moment in our history.” “I could not be more proud to have Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson on the bench. Representation matters, and little Black girls everywhere will finally be able to see themselves represented on the highest court of the land. Janette McCarthy Wallace, general counsel of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People said: “Today, Black women truly are supreme. Wallace added: “Representation is powerful – now, Black women and girls who dream of reaching the highest levels of our government can see that it is possible. Judge Jackson is one of the most experienced nominees in decades.”
1. Realizing MLK's 'dream'. The Senate Judiciary Committee vote moving Jackson's confirmation toward a final Senate roll call took place on April 4, 2022 – 54 ...
Alexis Karteron of Rutgers University-Newark notes that the Harvard Law-trained Jackson went on to clerk for Stephen Breyer, the retiring justice she is set to replace. I believe having a Supreme Court justice who is familiar with that is incredibly valuable.” Questions directed at the would-be Supreme Court justice were, according to Russell, tantamount to race-baiting. … The criminal justice system takes an enormous toll on both the people in the system and their loved ones. Now confirmed as the next Supreme Court justice, Jackson has broken through the ultimate glass ceiling in terms of legal careers. Of the judges highlighted by Austin, there is Judge Jane Bolin, who became the country’s first Black female judge in 1939, serving as a domestic relations judge in New York for almost four decades. But shortly after 2 p.m. EDT on April 7, 2022, a Senate roll call confirmed Ketanji Brown Jackson as the next U.S. Supreme Court justice – the first Black woman to sit on the bench. “Are you prejudiced against white people in the South?” Marshall was asked by a known white supremacist senator. “But he died before seeing the results of his nonviolent movement for social justice.” The Senate Judiciary Committee vote moving Jackson’s confirmation toward a final Senate roll call took place on April 4, 2022 – 54 years to the day since Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated. Bev-Freda Jackson argues that this is a distortion. Republican lawmakers suggested that his vision of an America in which people are judged “not by the color of their skin but by the content of their character” was at odds with critical race theory, a concept much maligned by conservatives that holds that racism is structural in nature rather than expressed solely through personal bias.
Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson will soon be moving her office a few blocks across D.C., after the Senate confirmed her to the Supreme Court on Thursday in a ...
- Opinion: When Russia Loses the U.N. . . . - Opinion: Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson - Opinion: When Russia Loses the U.N. . . . You may cancel your subscription at anytime by calling Customer Service. Three Republicans voted to confirm, Sens. Mitt Romney, Susan Collins and Lisa Murkowski. Liberals are griping that it should have been more. Congratulations to the new Justice, although we hope she finds herself more influenced by her new colleagues than vice versa.
With a 53-47 vote, the U.S. Senate completed the ascension of Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson to the highest court in the land. The accusations of being an activist ...
And that is really what is going to turn people out to the polls,” says Garza who now leads Black to the Future Fund, which aims to make Black communities more powerful in politics. For the first time, the entire liberal wing of the bench will be made up of women, two of them women of color. The commitment was originally made as his 2020 presidential campaign was in freefall and in need of a jolt. Monroe County Board of Education in 1999 which established that school boards can be held liable for failing to intervene in student-on-student sexual harassment is some instances. Verna L. Williams, the dean of the law school at the University of Cincinnati, adds that Supreme Court dissents can also give litigants clues for how to argue a similar case down the line. With a 53-47 vote, the U.S. Senate completed the ascension of Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson to the highest court in the land.
The vote on the historic nomination was 53 to 47, with three Republicans voting with Democrats. When sworn in this summer, Jackson will be the first Black ...
Vice President Kamala Harris took the gavel in her role as head of the Senate to preside over the vote. Jackson will be first Supreme Court justice since Thurgood Marshall to have represented indigent criminal defendants. A lot of unfortunate thoughts for the institution can go through people's minds." When sworn in this summer, Jackson will be the first Black woman to serve on the nation's high court. "Today we are taking a giant, bold and important step on the well-trodden path to fulfilling our country's founding promise. "This is one of the great moments of American history," Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said before the vote.
The Senate voted 53-47 to confirm Jackson's nomination, making her the 116th Justice of the United States Supreme Court. Three Republicans—Sens. Susan Collins ...
Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson on Thursday became the first Black woman to be confirmed to the Supreme Court. The Senate voted 53-47 to confirm Jackson’s nomination, making her the 116th Justice of the United States Supreme Court. Ketanji Brown Jackson Is Confirmed to Supreme Court
Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson will soon be moving her office a few blocks across D.C., after the Senate confirmed her to the Supreme Court on Thursday in a ...
- Opinion: When Russia Loses the U.N. . . . - Opinion: When Russia Loses the U.N. . . . - Opinion: Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson You may cancel your subscription at anytime by calling Customer Service. Three Republicans voted to confirm, Sens. Mitt Romney, Susan Collins and Lisa Murkowski. Liberals are griping that it should have been more. Congratulations to the new Justice, although we hope she finds herself more influenced by her new colleagues than vice versa.
The vote was a bipartisan rejection of Republican attempts to paint her as a liberal extremist who had coddled criminals.
“Nobody’s going to steal my joy,” Senator Raphael Warnock, Democrat of Georgia, said in remarks ahead of the vote. While Democrats had the votes to confirm Judge Jackson on their own if their caucus united behind her, they wanted some Republican backing, particularly for a historic pick. More than a dozen members of the Congressional Black Caucus, including Representative Hakeem Jeffries, Democrat of New York, and Representative Joyce Beatty, Democrat of Ohio, clustered on the Senate floor to mark the occasion. Once he had arrived, Mr. Paul cast his “no” vote from the Senate cloak room because he was dressed too casually to meet the jacket-and-tie dress code for the chamber. Judge Jackson’s confirmation was a major achievement for President Biden, who had promised at a low point during his 2020 primary campaign that he would appoint a Black woman to the Supreme Court at his first opportunity. The vote was a rejection of Republican attempts to paint her as a liberal extremist who had coddled criminals. Officials said the two would appear at an event on Friday to mark Judge Jackson’s confirmation, though she will not be sworn in for months. It was a sign of the deeply divided times that winning over three Republicans was considered something of a victory. “I wanted to be fair, but I wanted to be expeditious. The chamber erupted in cheers, with senators, staff and visitors all jumping to their feet for a lengthy standing ovation, when the vote was announced. Not everyone shared in the joy of the day. “Today is one of the brightest lights.
The vote on the historic nomination was 53 to 47, with three Republicans voting with Democrats. When sworn in this summer, Jackson will be the first Black ...
Vice President Kamala Harris took the gavel in her role as head of the Senate to preside over the vote. Jackson will be first Supreme Court justice since Thurgood Marshall to have represented indigent criminal defendants. A lot of unfortunate thoughts for the institution can go through people's minds." When sworn in this summer, Jackson will be the first Black woman to serve on the nation's high court. "Today we are taking a giant, bold and important step on the well-trodden path to fulfilling our country's founding promise. "This is one of the great moments of American history," Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said before the vote.
With perhaps three decades of service on the supreme court ahead, KBJ's perspective and influence could be profound.
Farrell said that such an impact is likely to be especially apparent in criminal justice cases, given Jackson’s spell as a former federal public defender – making her the only justice in supreme court history to have represented defendants. That gives Jackson possibly three decades or more of service on the supreme court, over which timespan the fortunes of the liberal wing might improve. “She never cuts corners, she holds herself and others to a higher standard, and that will have an influence on the language and scope of opinions.” At 51 she is the youngest of all the justices other than Amy Coney Barrett, a year her junior. Far from it, she will bring to the bench a wealth of real-world knowledge and a personal narrative that no other justice can match. By replacing a fellow liberal, Stephen Breyer, she will effectively leave the current 6 to 3 conservative dominance of the court unchanged.
“I'm excited one, for women in general, but particularly for African American women,” Johnson said. “As a U.S. historian, I see the pattern of progress in our ...
As a U.S. historian, I often have to write, research and teach areas in our country’s history where American citizens and our government did not live up to the ideals in our founding documents, but it is moments like this with colleagues and students who are not African American, who understood what this moment meant for me and what it meant for them and what it meant for the country. With the nomination of the now-Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, there is a movement on behalf of Black women and for Black women that is important for Black women as a whole and for the nation to say that we can see Black women as a full part of our society.” “I think that she needs to create her own legacy, and she absolutely will,” Schneider said. “My initial reaction to hearing the news of her confirmation was pure joy, along with a huge sigh of relief,” Dean said. “I was disheartened to watch a brilliant African American female jurist have to endure the three days of what I call political theater,” Johnson said. It was very clear what some of the senators were attempting to do: make her out to be some sort of dangerous radical while questioning her abilities and her right to be in that room and up for that job.
Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson will soon be moving her office a few blocks across D.C., after the Senate confirmed her to the Supreme Court on Thursday in a ...
- Opinion: When Russia Loses the U.N. . . . - Opinion: When Russia Loses the U.N. . . . - Opinion: When Russia Loses the U.N. . . . You may cancel your subscription at anytime by calling Customer Service. Three Republicans voted to confirm, Sens. Mitt Romney, Susan Collins and Lisa Murkowski. Liberals are griping that it should have been more. Congratulations to the new Justice, although we hope she finds herself more influenced by her new colleagues than vice versa.
Most senators voted along party lines, with all 50 Democrats voting to confirm Jackson and three Republican senators breaking ranks with the GOP in support of ...
When Harris announced the final tally, the chamber erupted in cheers, according to the Associated Press. Vice President Kamala Harris, the first Black woman to be Vice President of the United States, presided over the vote. The U.S. Senate voted 53-47 to confirm Ketanji Brown Jackson to the Supreme Court on Thursday, making history as the first Black female Supreme Court Justice.
Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson will soon be moving her office a few blocks across D.C., after the Senate confirmed her to the Supreme Court on Thursday in a ...
- Opinion: When Russia Loses the U.N. . . . - Opinion: When Russia Loses the U.N. . . . - Opinion: When Russia Loses the U.N. . . . You may cancel your subscription at anytime by calling Customer Service. Three Republicans voted to confirm, Sens. Mitt Romney, Susan Collins and Lisa Murkowski. Liberals are griping that it should have been more. Congratulations to the new Justice, although we hope she finds herself more influenced by her new colleagues than vice versa.
Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson will soon be moving her office a few blocks across D.C., after the Senate confirmed her to the Supreme Court on Thursday in a ...
- Opinion: When Russia Loses the U.N. . . . - Opinion: When Russia Loses the U.N. . . . - Opinion: When Russia Loses the U.N. . . . You may cancel your subscription at anytime by calling Customer Service. Three Republicans voted to confirm, Sens. Mitt Romney, Susan Collins and Lisa Murkowski. Liberals are griping that it should have been more. Congratulations to the new Justice, although we hope she finds herself more influenced by her new colleagues than vice versa.
Biden, Vice President Kamala Harris and Jackson are each set to deliver remarks Friday from the South Lawn of the White House.
Breyer, who announced his retirement in January, has said he intends to finish the Supreme Court term, which will probably end in late June or early July. But with Collins, Romney and Murkowski bucking their party to support Biden's nominee, the White House was able to avoid a potential tie in the evenly divided Senate. Psaki said she wasn't aware of any additional testing, social distancing or masking requirements that will be taken for the ceremony. Three Republicans – Sens. Susan Collins of Maine, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, and Mitt Romney of Utah – joined all 50 Democratic senators to confirm the 116th justice. As Biden struggles with low approval numbers, Jackson's confirmation marks a major victory for him and his party. The Senate voted 53-47 Thursday to confirm Jackson, a U.S. appeals court judge for the D.C. district.
The Senate confirmed Ketanji Brown Jackson as the first Black woman to serve on the Supreme Court. Republican Utah Sen. Mitt Romney vote in favor of ...
In an earlier statement, he said after reviewing Jackson’s record as a federal district and appeals court judge and her testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee that he concluded she is a well-qualified jurist and person of honor. Lee cited Jackson’s unwillingness to share her judicial philosophy during her confirmation hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee last month. But he said, “I thought some were preparing for their presidential campaign. Jackson will replace Justice Stephen Breyer, who announced his retirement effective at the end of the court’s current term this summer. Lee voted against her confirmation. Lee said Democrats on the committee told Republicans to look at Jackson’s record to understand her judicial philosophy but were denied access to relevant documents.
The confirmation of Ketanji Brown Jackson to the Supreme Court on Thursday was as noteworthy for what it didn't change as for what it did.
Madison’s push for a federal “negative” on state legislation — a congressional veto on any state law that contravened “in the opinion of the national legislature the articles of union” — was in essence an attempt to put the power of judicial review into the hands of an elected and representative body, rather than an unelected tribunal. Instead, it emerged organically out of the legal culture of the American colonies and was written, implicitly, into the federal Constitution. What Marshall did was to give shape to the practice of judicial review, as well as navigate the court through its first major conflict with the executive branch, leaving its power and authority intact, if not enhanced. The Times is committed to publishing a diversity of letters to the editor. But rather than marginal and oppressed minorities, this court will turn its attention to the interests and prerogatives of powerful political minorities — you might call them factions — that seek to dominate others free of federal interference. “Once the framers decided to turn to the courts to ensure the supremacy of federal law over state law,” Nelson writes, “they inevitably delegate to those courts jurisdiction to determine the meaning of federal law. His argument, and the claim that would presage the practice of judicial review as we came to understand it, was that the act itself violated the “Fundamental Principles of Law.” One delegate, John Dickinson of Pennsylvania, thought “no power ought such exist.” John Mercer of Maryland, likewise, said that he “disapproved of the Doctrine that the Judges as expositors of the Constitution should have the authority to declare a law void.” And James Madison, the most influential figure at the convention, thought the practice would make “the Judiciary Department paramount in fact to the Legislature, which was never intended and can never be proper.” And although the delegates did not discuss judicial review at length during the convention, it was this decision that essentially guaranteed the Supreme Court would develop something like it. When judges and juries “exercised power to determine the law, they sometimes used their power to nullify legislation, even acts of Parliament, and to refuse obedience to other commands of Crown authorities,” the legal historian William E. Nelson explains in “ Marbury v. In her dissent, Justice Elena Kagan wrote that by “granting relief” to the plaintiffs in the case without a demonstration of “irreparable harm,” the court went “astray.” We should expect to see it continue on that mistaken path. To begin with, judicial review (or something like it) had been part of the Anglo-American legal tradition for decades before Marbury. In Virginia, Massachusetts and other colonies, juries and judges held considerable power to say what the law was and even overturn laws handed down from legislatures and other authorities. The traditional view is that the Supreme Court’s power of judicial review grew out of Chief Justice John Marshall’s decision in 1803’s Marbury v.
When Jackson takes the bench as a justice for the first time, in October, she will be one of four women and two Black justices — both high court firsts.
Her experience as a public defender is inextricably tied to the fight for racial justice and that experience now proves invaluable as she begins her journey on the Supreme Court. During her confirmation hearings we heard the story of a girl born to public school teachers who was taught that despite the many barriers she would face, that in America, if she worked hard and believed in herself, she could do anything and be anything she wanted. She will be the first justice with experience as a federal public defender. We are excited to see how Justice Jackson uses her integrity, upstanding character and expert legal knowledge to positively impact our country and inspire the next generation of Black leaders. “Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson is one of the most impressive, qualified and fair-minded Supreme Court justices ever confirmed. "As a Black female lawyer myself, I am beaming with pride and add my voice to the chorus of well-wishers who are congratulating Judge Jackson on making history today.
Across four days of Senate confirmation hearings, Ketanji Brown Jackson, the first black female Supreme Court nominee, showed us the power of role models in ...
“And I was walking through the Yard in the evening. and a black woman I did not know was passing me on the sidewalk. You don’t have to be a perfect mom, but if you do your best and you love your children that things will turn out OK.” “Justice Breyer exemplifies what it means to be a Supreme Court Justice of the highest level of skill and integrity, civility, and grace,” Jackson continued. And I fully admit that I did not always get the balance right. Like so many families in this country, they worked long hours and sacrificed to provide their children every opportunity to reach their God-given potential.”
A day after the Senate confirmed Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson as the first Black woman on the Supreme Court, she will join President Biden and Vice President ...
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Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson will soon be moving her office a few blocks across D.C., after the Senate confirmed her to the Supreme Court on Thursday in a ...
- Opinion: When Russia Loses the U.N. . . . - Opinion: When Russia Loses the U.N. . . . - Opinion: When Russia Loses the U.N. . . . You may cancel your subscription at anytime by calling Customer Service. Three Republicans voted to confirm, Sens. Mitt Romney, Susan Collins and Lisa Murkowski. Liberals are griping that it should have been more. Congratulations to the new Justice, although we hope she finds herself more influenced by her new colleagues than vice versa.
The White House is billing as a “celebration” its event on the south lawn later today when Joe Biden welcomes the newly-confirmed US supreme court justice ...
“It certainly puts us in a different space.” We should expect that we are going to see some increase in cases as you get to the colder weather in the fall. I think we should expect over the next couple of weeks we are going to see an uptick in cases and hopefully there’s enough background immunity so that we don’t wind up with a lot of hospitalizations. “At that point in time, vaccines were unavailable. It is likely that we will see a surge in the fall. But he said there was “a significant amount of background immunity” that could help the country avoid the worst outcomes of previous surges, including Omicron and Delta: Her mother was a principal when I was a principal … so [for] the Black people in Miami, you can imagine what’s happening now as we watch this,” Wilson told the Guardian. “It certainly puts us in a different space.” They’re talking about her in barbershops,” she said. flu or other infections in which you have decades and decades of experience. “At that point in time, vaccines were unavailable. Anthony Fauci, the White House medical adviser, has been talking to Bloomberg TV, and warning that he thinks a new surge of Covid-19 infections is “likely” to occur across the US in the fall.
President Joe Biden hosted Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson at the White House on Friday to celebrate her historic confirmation by the Senate to serve as the ...
Those three Republicans will not be attending the event Friday as Collins has tested positive for Covid and Murkowski is in Alaska for an event and a spokesperson for Romney said he was not going. Republican senators accused Jackson of being soft on crime, attacking her sentencing record as well as her time as a defense attorney. Jackson will not become a justice until the end of the court's current term — likely in June or July — when Justice Stephen Breyer is expected to step down, and Biden makes good on a major campaign promise to put the first Black woman on the Supreme Court. In my family, it took just one generation to go from segregation to the Supreme Court of the United States. And it is an honor — the honor of a lifetime — for me to have this chance to join the court, to promote the rule of law at the highest level, and to do my part" to carry U.S. democracy under the law into the future. "We have come a long way toward perfecting our union. "But we’ve made it, we’ve made it.
Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson will soon be moving her office a few blocks across D.C., after the Senate confirmed her to the Supreme Court on Thursday in a ...
- Opinion: When Russia Loses the U.N. . . . - Opinion: When Russia Loses the U.N. . . . - Opinion: When Russia Loses the U.N. . . . You may cancel your subscription at anytime by calling Customer Service. Three Republicans voted to confirm, Sens. Mitt Romney, Susan Collins and Lisa Murkowski. Liberals are griping that it should have been more. Congratulations to the new Justice, although we hope she finds herself more influenced by her new colleagues than vice versa.
Jackson, the first Black woman ever confirmed to the US Supreme Court, says her appointment is 'honour of a lifetime'.
Of course, this is a historic occasion, but the president [is] also hoping to seize some momentum politically on this.” “After more than 20 hours of questioning at her hearing[s] and nearly 100 meetings … we all saw the kind of justice she’ll be,” he added. In my family, it took just one generation to go from segregation to the Supreme Court of the United States,” she said. The ceremony came a day after the US Senate voted 53-47 in favour of Jackson’s nomination, making her not only the first Black woman to serve as Supreme Court justice, but also only the third Black American to join the high court. We have come a long way toward perfecting our union. “And it is an honour – the honour of a lifetime – for me to have this chance to join the court, to promote the rule of law at the highest level, and to do my part to carry our shared project of democracy and equal justice under law forward into the future.”
The president is planning to commemorate the appointment of the first Black woman to the Supreme Court alongside a bipartisan group of senators who voted to ...
A spate of coronavirus cases among lawmakers and administration officials this week whittled down the prospective guest list. I am the dream and the hope of the slave.” We use cookies and similar methods to recognize visitors and remember their preferences. We also use them to measure ad campaign effectiveness, target ads and analyze site traffic. “It is real.” Speaking a day after the Senate voted to confirm her, Judge Jackson said she was daunted by the idea of being a role model to so many, but that she was ready for the task. “This is going to let so much sun shine on so many young women, so many young Black women, so many minorities,” Mr. Biden said at the ceremony, where he was flanked by Judge Jackson and Vice President Kamala Harris — the first Black woman to hold her role. “But we’ve made it. Judge Jackson’s confirmation was also a time for celebration for President Biden, who hailed the moment as one of “real change” in American history as he and his supporters cheered the ascension of the first Black woman to the court. We’ve made it. WASHINGTON — Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson, the first Black woman to be appointed to the Supreme Court, said on Friday at a White House ceremony celebrating her confirmation that it was the honor of her lifetime, and that she understood what it had meant to the young Black women and girls who followed along with her nomination process. “It has taken 232 years and 115 prior appointments for a Black woman to be selected to serve on the Supreme Court of the United States,” she said.
After 232 years, a Black woman is on the supreme court – and the atmosphere on a sunny Washington day was celebratory.
We’re going to look back – and nothing to do with me – we’re going to look back and see this as a moment of real change in American history.” On that grey day, Trump gloated at the prospect of tipping the court firmly in conservatives’ favour. I’m just the very lucky first inheritor of the dream of liberty and justice for all.” A shiver of emotion ran through the crowd, which rose as one. And after a week of sombre grey skies, lashing rain and surging coronavirus, the White House looked a little more majestic than usual in radiant sunlight. The atmosphere at the White House was joyful and celebratory – not a sentence there has been much cause to write over the past five years.
Remarks by President Biden, Vice President Harris, and Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson on the Senate's Historic, Bipartisan Confirmation of Judge Jackson to be an ...
(Applause.) (Applause.) (Applause.) (Applause.) Combined. (Applause.) He was an absolute godsend. (Applause.) God love you. (Laughter.) (Applause.) Even joy. (Applause.) Talia and Leila, stand up. (Applause.) Patrick, stand up, man. (Applause.) I tell you what — as I told Mom: Moms rule in my house. (Applause.) Poise. Poise and composure.
Jackson celebrates her rise "from segregation to the Supreme Court" at a White House event. . Read more at straitstimes.com.
"And that belief has pushed our nation forward for generations and it is that belief that we reaffirmed yesterday through the confirmation of the first Black woman to the United States Supreme Court." "It has taken 232 years and 115 prior appointments for a Black woman to appointed to serve on the Supreme Court of the United States, but we have made it - all of us," she said. WASHINGTON (AFP) - Ketanji Brown Jackson celebrated her rise "from segregation to the Supreme Court" at a White House event on Friday (April 8) marking her confirmation as the first Black woman appointed to the nation's highest judicial bench.
Jackson, confirmed to the Supreme Court in a 53-47 vote in the Senate, spoke alongside President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris.
I am just the very lucky first inheritor of the dream of liberty and justice for all," Jackson said. She named civil rights icon Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Thurgood Marshall, the first Black Supreme Court justice, as well as Constance Baker Motley, who in 1966 became first Black woman to serve as a federal judge. She then quoted the poet Maya Angelou: "I do so now by bringing the gifts my ancestors gave. Once she does, Jackson will join a court that has grown substantially more conservative following the appointment of three of former President Donald Trump's nominees. She touched on the marathon confirmation process, noting that she met with 97 senators in 95 personal meetings. "There was verbal abuse, the anger, the constant interruptions, the most vile, baseless assertions and accusations," Biden said.
Hill joins the staff writer Jane Mayer to reflect on confirmation hearings marked by grandstanding and racial attacks. Plus, a childhood scheme with grownup ...
And the staff writer Charles Bethea shares a story about a childhood scheme involving a rare basketball card that has grownup consequences. Anita Hill, who faced a Senate committee during Clarence Thomas’s Supreme Court nomination hearings, in 1991, reflects on the confirmation process for Ketanji Brown Jackson, and Jane Mayer discusses the revelations about Ginni Thomas’s political activities and how they have damaged the Court’s credibility. Listen and subscribe: Apple