Editors and Publishers: Please feel free to
post and publish free of charge.
Biden's Promise to Diversify the Courts
By Ben Jealous
People who care
about equal justice under the law should be very happy about President Joe
Biden’s first set of judicial nominees.
I am especially
excited about the three outstanding Black women that President Biden
nominated to the circuit courts—the appeals court level just below the U.S.
Supreme Court.
You will soon be
hearing more about all these highly credentialed and accomplished women:
Ketanji Brown Jackson, Candace Jackson-Akiwumi, and Tiffany
Cunningham.
Biden is fulfilling
his promise to bring professional diversity to courts that are dominated by
former prosecutors and corporate lawyers. Ketanji Brown Jackson and Candace
Jackson-Akiwumi both have experience as public defenders. Jackson is now a
federal district judge who was unanimously confirmed by the Senate in
2013.
Biden has pledged to
nominate the first Black woman to the U.S. Supreme Court. These nominees
are a good sign that he intends to keep that promise, too.
It is shameful that
the Seventh Circuit, which has jurisdiction over diverse cities like
Chicago, Milwaukee, and Indianapolis, currently has only white judges. The
confirmation of Jackson-Akiwumi will change that. The confirmation of
Tiffany Cunningham will make her the first Black judge ever to serve on the
Federal Circuit Court of Appeals.
These brilliant
women will also bring other perspectives that are sorely lacking on the
courts.
Judge Jackson was
vice chair and commissioner on the U.S. Sentencing Commission, where she
advocated for ending the brutally unjust and anti-Black discrepancy between
sentences for crack cocaine and powder cocaine.
As a public
defender, Candace Jackson-Akiwumi represented more than 400 people who
could not afford a lawyer.
Tiffany Cunningham
has been nominated to the specialized federal circuit, which needs judges
familiar with science and technology issues. Cunningham not only has a law
degree from Harvard, but a degree in chemical engineering from MIT. She has
been repeatedly named to legal publications’ lists of the country’s best
lawyers. She is impressive.
This is history in
the making, not just for these judges but for all the people who will be
influenced by their decisions.
Legendary civil
rights advocate Mary Frances Berry recently wrote, “When the American
people voted in November, we chose a new Congress and administration that
we believed would deliver change. That means passing legislation that
actually helps everyday people, not just the rich and powerful. It also
means having the right people in key positions to bring that ‘real people’
focus to policymaking and to upholding the law.” As Berry pointed out, the
success of these trailblazing women will also create new opportunities for
the women and girls who follow them.
Former President
Donald Trump’s judicial nominees were overwhelmingly white—around four percent of his judges are Black —and mostly picked for their loyalty
to a right-wing judicial ideology that sacrifices individual rights and the
common good to states’ rights and the power of corporations. Trump appointed no Black women to the
circuit courts.
Confirming Biden’s
judicial nominees will begin the process of repairing the damage done to
our courts during the Trump administration and restoring faith in our
courts.
Unfortunately, we
have seen that being extremely well qualified does not prevent women of
color from being unfairly attacked. Right-wing groups have spent millions
of dollars to smear women of color nominated to Biden’s cabinet and to
high-level positions at the U.S. Justice Department.
People For the
American Way has launched the Her Fight Our Fight campaign to support the women of color who are
ready to help lead the way to a more just, more inclusive, multiethnic and
multiracial democratic society.
___________________________________________
Ben Jealous serves as president of People For the
American Way and People For the American Way
Foundation. Jealous has decades of experience as a leader,
coalition builder, campaigner for social justice and seasoned nonprofit
executive. In 2008, he was chosen as the youngest-ever president and CEO of
the NAACP. He is a graduate of Columbia University and Oxford, where
he was a Rhodes Scholar, and he has taught at Princeton and the University
of Pennsylvania.
|
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]
<< Home