Durbin: Some speaking out about Biden court pick 'have never voted for a Black nominee'
Sen.
Dick Durbin (D-Ill.), the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, said Thursday that "some of the people who are speaking the loudest about not choosing a Black woman have never voted for a Black nominee."
Durbin,
in an appearance on CNN, told host Brianna Keilar, "We've had 25 women of color come before the Senate Judiciary Committee during the first year of the Biden administration and some of the people who are speaking the loudest about not choosing a Black woman have never voted for a Black nominee."
"And that's just the fact, I'm sorry to say, but it is the reality of this year 2022 in American history," he said.
Durbin said he wanted critics of Biden's Supreme Court pick to remember that it was a Republican president, Ronald Reagan, "who announced that he was looking for a woman to serve in the Supreme Court" and "came up with a great name, Sandra Day O'Connor," whom, he added, served with distinction.
He said that "it was a Republican president,
Donald Trump, who said he wanted a woman on the court to replace Justice
Ruth Bader Ginsburg."
"I didn't hear the same criticism from the Republican side," Durbin said.
He said that lawmakers need to "face the reality here" while adding that the 108 of the 115 Supreme Court justices in U.S. history have been white men.
"I really think there's room for us to consider not only women, but women of color to fill these vacancies," he said.
Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.), the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, said Thursday that “some of the people who are speaking the loudest about not choosing a Black woman …
thehill.com