Biden nominates Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson to the Supreme Court
President Joe Biden announced Friday that he is nominating federal Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson to the Supreme Court.
Jackson, currently on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, “is one of our nation's brightest legal minds and will be an exceptional Justice,” Biden said in a tweet.
The president will deliver remarks on Jackson's nomination at 2 p.m. ET, the White House said. Jackson will also make remarks.
Biden made the decision on whom to nominate by Thursday night, NBC News had reported.
He had vowed to pick a Black woman to succeed liberal Justice Stephen Breyer, who plans to retire in the summer at the end of the court's current term. Biden made that promise years earlier as a presidential candidate.
If successful, Biden's nomination will at least temporarily avoid any further erosion of the high court's already-diminished liberal flank, who are outnumbered 6-3 by conservatives.
Just five women — Sandra Day O'Connor, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan and Amy Coney Barrett — have served on the Supreme Court. Only two Black men, Thurgood Marshall and Clarence Thomas, have ever been appointed to the bench. No Black women have previously sat on the high court.
Democratic leaders vowed to swiftly advance Jackson's nomination.
“Judge Jackson will receive a prompt hearing in the Senate Judiciary Committee in the coming weeks. After the Judiciary Committee finishes their work I will ask the Senate to move immediately to confirm her to the Supreme Court,” Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said in a statement.
Biden was apparently still deliberating his options on Thursday: White House press secretary Jen Psaki said that afternoon that Biden had still not reached a “final final” decision and that “no job offer has been made.”
Psaki assured that “we are still on track to make an announcement before the end of the month,” as Biden had promised, while noting “we have to do a lot of things around here at the same time.”
The president has been deeply engaged in managing the crisis over Russia's military invasion of Ukraine, which began earlier this week amid an international outcry.
The 51-year-old Jackson — young by the court's modern standards — was confirmed last year to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit in a 53-44 vote. All 50 Democrats supported Brown's nomination, along with Republicans Susan Collins of Maine, Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, and Alaska's Lisa Murkowski.
Jackson previously clerked for Breyer, and her judicial record has garnered plaudits from progressives.
In a biography page posted Friday morning, the White House said Jackson has “the perspective to be an exceptional Justice.” The bio said that despite her achievements from a young age, “like many Black women, Judge Jackson still faced naysayers.”
“When Judge Jackson told her high school guidance counselor she wanted to attend Harvard, the guidance counselor warned that Judge Jackson should not set her ‘sights so high,'” the White House said. Jackson went on to graduate with distinction from Harvard University and Harvard Law School, where she was an editor of the Harvard Law Review.
“Because of her diverse and broad public service, Judge Jackson has a unique appreciation of how critical it is for the justice system to be fair and impartial,” the White House said.
Multiple outlets reported that Biden was also considering South Carolina federal Judge J. Michelle Childs and California Supreme Court Justice Leondra Kruger up until the final days of the selection process.
Childs had been the favorite of two major South Carolina politicians: high-ranking Democratic Rep. James Clyburn, a key backer of Biden's 2020 presidential campaign, as well as Graham.
In a statement, Graham said Jackson's nomination “means the radical Left has won President Biden over yet again,” adding, “The attacks by the Left on Judge Childs from South Carolina apparently worked.”
“I expect a respectful but interesting hearing in the Senate Judiciary Committee,” added Graham, a member of that panel.
Due to Republicans tossing the 60-vote filibuster rule for Supreme Court nominees during the Trump administration, the 50-50 split in the Senate gives Democrats enough power to confirm Biden's eventual pick without any GOP votes. Vice President Kamala Harris would be the tiebreaking vote, if required.
Republican Sen. Susan Collins of Maine, seen as a moderate, called Jackson “an experienced federal judge with impressive academic and legal credentials” in a statement.
“I will conduct a thorough vetting of Judge Jackson's nomination and look forward to her public hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee and to meeting with her in my office,” Collins said.
Democrats' narrow Senate majority was briefly clouded in early February by the news that Sen. Ben Ray Lujan, D-N.M., had been hospitalized after suffering a stroke.