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Morning Briefing

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Friday, Mar 25 2022

Full Issue

After Tense Hearing, Jackson Appears To Have Senate Votes For Confirmation

Leaders of both parties tell The Washington Post that Democrats still seem to be fairly united in support of Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson, President Joe Biden's nominee for the Supreme Court, and she may get some Republican votes, too. Meanwhile, the court is releasing little information about the health of Justice Clarence Thomas, who was hospitalized last week.

After a combined 36 hours of hearings on Supreme Court nominee Ketanji Brown Jackson 鈥 during which Republicans accused her of coddling vile criminals while Democrats hailed her qualifications and her historic distinction as the first Black woman to be nominated 鈥 she appeared to remain on track for confirmation early next month, according to interviews with key senators Thursday. Jackson鈥檚 confirmation will not be overwhelmingly bipartisan, and the top Senate Republican vote-counter, Minority Whip John Thune (R-S.D.), predicted no more than three GOP votes in her favor. (DeBonis, 3/24)

Senate聽Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) said on Thursday that he will oppose Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson's Supreme Court nomination. McConnell's decision isn't surprising 鈥 he voted against her last year for her appeals court spot and has signaled concerns through the week. But it underscores hardening GOP opposition to Jackson's nomination and comes after McConnell held off in announcing how he would vote until after the hearing. (Carney, 3/24)

Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson is on a relatively smooth path to becoming the first Black woman on the Supreme Court after three days of Senate confirmation hearings that have run the gamut in tone, from tense to rowdy to emotionally supportive. ... Some Republicans recently suggested that they鈥檙e torn between supporting Jackson鈥檚 historic nomination and voting no based on opposition to her judicial philosophy. A few in that group are retiring this year, freeing them from the potential political risks of backing her nomination, although a vote to confirm Jackson would roil the GOP primaries currently underway to replace them. (Levine and Everett, 3/24)

Republicans on the Senate Judiciary Committee are shooting down the idea of boycotting the panel鈥檚 vote on Supreme Court nominee Ketanji Brown Jackson.聽鈥淭here鈥檚 not going to be any boycott. There鈥檚 zero, not one iota chance that we would boycott,鈥 said Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.), a member of the committee. The idea of a committee boycott, which has floated around Capitol Hill for weeks, was spun up after 10 Republicans sent Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.), the committee chairman, a request that he suspend the hearing until they could get pre-sentencing reports tied to child pornography cases that Jackson presided over as a district judge. (Carney, 3/24)

When Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson鈥檚 confirmation hearings haven鈥檛 devolved into tense battles over her rather unremarkable sentencing decisions in child pornography cases, they鈥檝e actually included some pretty interesting exchanges on her judicial philosophy. And subtly high on that list: How much she undercut the left鈥檚 effort to establish certain cases as 鈥渟uper precedents.鈥 (Blake, 3/24)

In other news about the Supreme Court 鈥

The Supreme Court on Thursday did not respond to inquiries about the health status of Justice Clarence Thomas and whether he remained hospitalized after being admitted late last week.聽... Thomas鈥檚 close friend Armstrong Williams on Thursday told The Hill that Thomas is 鈥渞esting and he鈥檚 going to be just fine鈥 but declined to elaborate further on the justice鈥檚 health. Pressed on whether Thomas was still in the hospital, Williams declined to answer. (Kruzel, 3/24)

The [Supreme Court] ruled Thursday that condemned prisoners are entitled to have religious advisers present in the death chamber to pray over them and touch them in a limited way. The decision came in the case of John Henry Ramirez, convicted in the brutal murder of Pablo Castro, a father of nine, who was stabbed to death as he was closing up the convenience store where he worked. The court's decision was the latest and by far the most definitive in a series of cases that have come to to the court, dividing the justices and even embarrassing them at times with contradictory rulings that appeared to be more favorable for Christian spiritual advisers than for minority religions. (Totenberg, 3/24)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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