City
Epaper

First African-American woman sworn in as US Supreme Court justice

By IANS | Updated: July 1, 2022 03:45 IST

Washington, July 1 Ketanji Brown Jackson was sworn in to formally become an associate justice of the US ...

Open in App

Washington, July 1 Ketanji Brown Jackson was sworn in to formally become an associate justice of the US Supreme Court, making her the nation's first African-American woman to serve in that role.

Chief Justice John Roberts administered the constitutional oath for Jackson on Thursday afternoon while Associate Justice Stephen Breyer administered the judicial oath, in a ceremony before a small gathering of her family at the Supreme Court on Capitol Hill.

Jackson, in a statement, said that she will administer justice "without fear or favour".

The ceremony was streamed live on the homepage of the Supreme Court's website. A formal investiture ceremony will take place at a later date, according to the court, Xinhua news agency reported.

It came a day after Breyer, who had served in the Supreme Court since 1994, announced he would step down from the Supreme Court bench on Thursday. The 83-year-old liberal announced his retirement from the court early this year.

US President Joe Biden announced in late February the nomination of Jackson, 51, to succeed Breyer. It was one of the veteran Democrat's major promises to fill a potential Supreme Court vacancy with an African American woman.

The US Senate confirmed Jackson in a 53-47 vote in April, with three Republicans joining 50 Democrats and independents in supporting Biden's nomination of her for the Supreme Court.

The Supreme Court is the final appellate court of the US judicial system, with the power to review and overturn lower court decisions, and is also generally the final interpreter of federal law, including the country's constitution.

Since the Supreme Court was established in the US in 1789, 116 justices have been confirmed to the bench. Of them, 108 are white men and only six are women, including Jackson. The justices have life tenure and can serve until they die, resign, retire, or are impeached and removed from office.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Supreme court on capitol hillUs Supreme CourtJohn RobertsKetanji brown jackson
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalDonald Trump Signs Order Imposing 10% Tariffs on All Countries After US Supreme Court Ruling; How Much Tariff Will India Pay Now?

NationalSC Constitution Bench defers hearing after AG says govt has set up expert committee on arbitration

NationalSC Constitution Bench defers hearing after AG says govt has set up expert committee on arbitration

InternationalAfghanistan: Four people publicly flogged by Taliban

Politics"You have shamed democracy": BJP MP Ravi Shankar Prasad slams CM Mamata Banerjee

Politics Realted Stories

PoliticsFormer Youth Congress president Mohammed Haris Nalapad calls ED raids a political vendetta

PoliticsRahul Gandhi's April 23 visit to Kolkata cancelled; Congress alleges 'denial of permission': Sources

PoliticsBihar women's commission issues notice to MP Pappu Yadav over "disgusting" remarks; threatens disqualification recommendation

PoliticsCBDT denies raiding TN Congress chief Selvaperunthagai; files complaint with EC, Chennai Police

PoliticsIT raids unearth unaccounted assets linked to TMC MLA Debasish Kumar; ECI notified