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Ketanji Brown Jackson Sworn In As First Black Woman Supreme Court Justice

What will her impact be on a Court leaning hard to the Right?

Updated June 30, 2022 at 1:24 p.m.Ketanji Brown Jackson officially became the 116th justice of the Supreme Court and the first Black woman ever to sit on the countryโ€™s highest court at a ceremony this afternoon. Jackson, who was confirmed by the Senate after contentious hearings in April, was sworn at 12:05 p.m., just minutes after the court issued the final rulings of the current term and Justice Stephen R. Breyerโ€™s retirement became official. In attendance were her husband, Patrick, and daughters Talia and Leila.

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Chief Justice John Roberts explained that joining the Court required oaths dictated by the Constitution as well as a separate one required by the Judiciary Act of 1789. Roberts administered the former and Breyer performed the latter. Another ceremony, called the โ€œinvestitureโ€ will be held privately among the nine justices later this year. Breyer, whose seat Jackson was confirmed to fill in a historic vote on April 7, notified the White House on Tuesday that his retirement would take effect today at noon.

The move wasnโ€™t unexpected, as it was Breyerโ€™s planned retirement that paved the way for President Joe Biden to nominate Jackson to the Court early this year. Sheโ€™ll take her seat on a Court dominated by a supermajority of young, conservative justices which in the course of its most recent term delivered majority opinions that could shape American society for decades.

The Courtโ€™s recent rulings that rescinded a national right of women to have an abortion, stripped accountability from police officers who fail to inform arrestees of their legal rights and sided with a high school football coach who conducted prayers on a public school field and gutted gun control efforts in New York State and elsewhere, are a lurch to the far right for the country and are likely to have a disproportionate impact on women and Black Americans.

Likewise, as the courtโ€™s first Black woman, Jacksonโ€™s voice on the bench during oral arguments and behind-the-scenes deliberations promises to have an impact on debates among the nine most important judges in the country. Court watchers, especially those with a keen interest in civil and womenโ€™s rights, will pay close attention when her first written opinionsโ€”whether on behalf of the dissenters, a concurrence with a majority or writing the lead opinion for the courtโ€™s majority. But it could be some time before that last possibility becomes reality. Jacksonโ€™s replacement of Breyer wonโ€™t shift the Courtโ€™s 6-3 conservative majorityโ€”even accounting for Chief Justice John Robertsโ€™ more moderate than expected opinions.

Straight From The Root

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