Who Will Be The First Black Woman On U.S. Supreme Court: Meet The Top Contenders For The Position


US President Joe Biden has said that he will appoint a black woman to the top US court for the first time in history.

During a press conference in Delaware in June 2020, Biden said that he hoped to appoint a Black woman to the Supreme Court if given the opportunity.

The eventual nominee will replace Justice Stephen Breyer, who will retire in June.

 Mr Biden promised a replacement with the “experience and integrity” needed for the role. He said he’ll announce his pick by the end of February.

Here are the three judges who are considered top contenders for the position.

1. Ketanji Brown Jackson

Ketanji Brown Jackson

Ketanji Brown Jackson, 51, is widely believed to be the top contender to replace Justice Breyer.

Born in Washington DC and raised in Miami, Ms Jackson currently serves on the influential US Court of Appeals for the DC circuit. Three current justices previously served on the court.

“Presidents are not kings,” she wrote in a 2019 ruling compelling a former aide to President Trump to testify in the Russia meddling probe.

“They do not have subjects, bound by loyalty or blood, whose destiny they are entitled to control.”

The jurist has two degrees from Harvard University, which she attended as an undergraduate and as a law student, once serving as editor of the Harvard Law Review.

During her time at Harvard, she led protests against a student who draped a Confederate flag from his dorm window.

Her parents are both graduates of historically black colleges who began their careers are teachers.

Ms Jackson has also clerked for three federal judges in the past, most notably Justice Breyer himself from 1999-2000.

In January 2021, she was among President Biden’s very first judicial picks, to fill the court seat vacated by his current Attorney General Merrick Garland.

At that confirmation hearing, former House Speaker and ex-Republican vice-presidential candidate Paul Ryan introduced her; Mr Ryan is a relative by marriage.

“Our politics may differ, but my praise for Ketanji’s intellect, for her character, for her integrity, it is unequivocal,” he said.


Ms Jackson’s husband is a surgeon and she has two children.

2. Leondra Kruger

Leondra Kruger, 45, is in her eighth year on the California Supreme Court.

Born to a Jamaican immigrant mother and a Jewish father, the Pasadena native is a graduate of Harvard University and Yale Law School, where she was the first black woman to serve as editor of the Yale Law Journal.

In 2016, she became the first California Supreme Court judge to give birth while serving on the bench.

Ms Kruger previously worked at the Obama Department of Justice, from 2007-13.

During her tenure, she argued 12 cases before the US Supreme Court as deputy to the Solicitor General, the official who represents the government before the high court.

She reportedly twice turned down offers to serve as the Solicitor General.

The jurist also once clerked for late Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens.

Her husband is a lawyer and she has two young children.

3. J Michelle Childs

She also previously served as a circuit court judge in the state.

Unlike Ms Jackson and Ms Kruger, Ms Childs did not attend an Ivy League school, instead going to the University of South Carolina Law School.

In private practice, she was the first black female partner at a major law firm in the state.

Congressman Jim Clyburn, an influential black politician in the state whose endorsement of Mr Biden is widely credited with saving his 2020 campaign, has advocated for Ms Childs to be nominated because of her unorthodox resume.

Most recently, Mr Biden nominated Ms Childs to the DC Circuit Court of Appeals.

Source: BBC




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