Judge Jackson Would Be a Social Justice, Not a Constitutional Justice

Judge Jackson Would Be a Social Justice, Not a Constitutional Justice
U.S. Supreme Court nominee Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson testifies during confirmation hearings in Washington on March 22, 2022. Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images
Thomas Del Beccaro
Updated:
Commentary

We live in an era when notions of social justice dominate American life. For decades, from college enrollment to wokeism, America’s focus has moved from opportunity and merit to overriding concerns of fairness and rectification of the past. The Supreme Court nominees of the left are a prime example of that shift, and Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson could be their most prominent champion.

Thomas Del Beccaro
Thomas Del Beccaro
contributor
Thomas Del Beccaro is an acclaimed author, speaker, former chairman of the California Republican Party, and Fox News, Fox Business, and Epoch Times opinion writer. He is author of the historical perspectives “The Divided Era” and “The New Conservative Paradigm” and is publisher of PoliticalVanguard.com, where he publishes daily commentaries.
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