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Consider This from NPR

In Supreme Court Nomination Debate, Echoes of Past Judicial Breakthrough

Consider This from NPR

NPR

Society & Culture, News, Daily News, News Commentary

4.26.2K Ratings

🗓️ 10 February 2022

⏱️ 15 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

When President Biden announced that he would nominate a Black woman—the Supreme Court's first—to the seat that will be vacated by retiring Justice Stephen Breyer, criticism from some on the right began almost immediately.

Senator Ted Cruz, R-Texas, said it was "racist" to consider only Black women for the post, and Biden's decision was "insulting to African-American women."

The conversation about identity and qualifications echoes some of the questions that arose when another breakthrough appointment was announced more than 50 years ago.

In 1966, Constance Baker Motley became the first Black woman to serve on the federal bench. Her identity and lived experience as a civil rights attorney loomed large in the debate about her fitness to serve.

Tomiko Brown-Nagin, dean of Harvard Radcliffe Institute, and author of Civil Rights Queen: Constance Baker Motley and the Struggle For Equality, discusses Motley's nomination and her career. She says Motley supported the appointment of women and people of color to the federal judiciary as a way to strengthen the institution.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

115 people have served on the Supreme Court.

0:03.8

110 of them have been men, 112 have been white,

0:08.4

and none has ever been a black woman.

0:12.1

And with a vacancy coming up on the high court,

0:14.2

President Biden promises his nominee will change that.

0:17.4

That person will be the first black woman

0:20.0

ever nominated to the United States Supreme Court.

0:22.6

The White House says this is an effort

0:24.4

to remedy decades of a flawed process

0:27.0

and to help the Supreme Court look more like

0:29.9

America.

0:31.0

Almost immediately, some conservatives

0:33.2

attacked Biden's promise to consider only black women

0:36.5

in choosing a nominee.

0:38.0

Take for example, Republican Senator Ted Cruz of Texas,

0:41.0

who called Biden's pledge racist.

0:44.0

You know, black women are what,

0:45.5

6% of the US population.

0:48.3

He's saying to 94% of Americans,

0:50.6

I don't give a damn about you.

0:51.8

You are ineligible.

0:53.1

In fact, Cruz said Biden's vow to nominate a black woman

...

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