Takeaways: Supreme Court nominee quizzed on race, crime
By LISA MASCARO
AP Congressional Correspondent
WASHINGTON (AP) — The first full day of questions for Supreme Court nominee Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson opened with some very big ones — on race, abortion and judicial philosophy. Senators probed her approach to the law, her views on “court packing” and her response to claims by Republican senators that she is soft on crime — in particular, too lenient in sentencing child pornography offenders. Jackson is making history as the first Black woman nominated for the high court, which has been filled for 233 years mostly by white men. President Joe Biden tapped the Harvard-trained Jackson to replace retiring Justice Stephen Breyer.