Washington, D.C. – Ketanji Brown Jackson was sworn in on Thursday as a United States Supreme Court justice, making history as the first Black woman on the nation’s top judicial body.
Jackson, 51, joins the liberal bloc of a court at a time when its 6-3 conservative majority has been flexing its muscles in major rulings.
Her swearing in as President Joe Biden’s replacement for retiring liberal Justice Stephen Breyer came six days after the court overturned the 1973 Roe vs Wade landmark that legalised abortion nationwide. Breyer, 83, the court’s oldest member, officially retired on Thursday.
“With a full heart, I accept the solemn responsibility of supporting and defending the Constitution of the United States and administering justice without fear or favour,” Jackson said in a statement.
Jackson is the 116th justice, sixth woman, and third Black to serve on the Supreme Court since its 1789 founding.
“I am glad for America,” Breyer said in a statement. “Ketanji will interpret the law wisely and fairly, helping that law to work better for the American people, whom it serves.”
Biden appointed Jackson last year to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit after she spent eight years as a federal district judge.
Like the three conservative justices appointed by the Democratic president’s Republican predecessor Donald Trump, Jackson is young enough to serve for decades in the lifetime job.
“I am pleased to welcome Justice Jackson to the court and to our common calling,” Chief Justice John Roberts said at the ceremony.
The Senate confirmed Jackson on a 53-47 vote on April 7, with three Republicans joining the Democrats in support of her.
Jackson’s appointment does not shift the court’s ideological balance.
“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,” Jackson said at an April 8 event celebrating her confirmation. “But we’ve made it.’
Biden has tried to bring more women and minorities and a wider range of backgrounds to the federal judiciary.
Jackson’s appointment fulfilled a pledge Biden made during the 2020 presidential campaign to name a Black woman to the Supreme Court.
With Jackson’s addition, the Supreme Court for the first time has four women on the bench.
She served as a clerk for Breyer early in her legal career.
The court issued its final two rulings of its current term on Thursday, including one powered by the conservative justices that put limits on the federal government’s authority to issue sweeping regulations to reduce carbon emissions from power plants.
Jackson joins a liberal bloc that has found itself outvoted in numerous major rulings this term, not only on abortion rights, but on gun rights, expanding religious liberties, and other matters.
Jackson will participate in arguments in cases for the first time when the court’s next term opens in October.
One major case for the coming term gives the conservative justices an opportunity to end affirmative action policies used by colleges and universities in their admissions processes to increase their enrolment of Black and Hispanic students to achieve campus diversity.
(Reuters)