PUBLIC ADVOCATE POSES QUESTIONS FOR BIDEN NOMINEE JUDGE KENTANJI BROWN JACKSON
NEWS
RELEASE
FOR
IMMEDIATE
RELEASE
Feb.
25,
2022
Permission
Granted
In
Advance
to
Publish
or
quote
in
part
or
in
whole.
PHONE
703-845-1808
EMAIL:
[email protected]
WEBSITE
PUBLICADVOCATEUSA.ORG
TWITTER:
@PUBLICFREEDOM
@EUGENEDELGAUDIO
PUBLIC
ADVOCATE
POSES
QUESTIONS
FOR
BIDEN
NOMINEE
JUDGE
KENTANJI
BROWN
JACKSON
Public
Advocate
of
the
U.S.
Has
Questions
To
ask
Judge
Ketanji
Brown
Jackson,
Biden
nominee
to
the
United
States
Supreme
Court.
"Considering
the
choices
of
extremists
Joe
Biden
could
have
picked,
and
the
special
relationship,
by
marriage,
the
nominee
Judge
Jackson
has
with
former
Speaker
Paul
Ryan,
a
self
confessed
RINO
and
never
Trumper,
it
could
have
been
"worse"
like
being
a
member
of
the
Lincoln
project,
said
Eugene
Delgaudio,
president
of
Public
Advocate
of
the
United
States,
Inc.
Delgaudio
said
"Nevertheless,
before
any
Republican
or
fair-minded
Democrat
considers
endorsing
Ketanji
Brown,
we
want
some
basic
Constitutional
answers.
The
U.S.
Senate
has
subjected
previous
nominees
to
a
long
list
of
questions
that
we.
as
Consitituionalists
or
strict
Constructionists,
must
have
the
answers
to
or
at
least
asked
and
we
have
traditionally
made
some
suggestions
for
lines
of
questions
for
the
nominee
to
consider
answering.
Public
Advocate
hopes
no
Republican
or
fair-minded
Democrat
Senator
endorse
Judge
Ketanji
Brown
until
these
questions
and
other
Constitutional
questions
get
answered
at
a
public
hearing,"
said
Eugene
Delgaudio,
President
of
Public
Advocate.
Sample
Questions
Senators
Should
Ask
Judge
Kentanji
Brown
Jackson:
(partial
list)
Your
mentor
newly
retired
Judge
Stephen
Breyer
believes
Judges
can
legislate
from
the
bench
and
simply
make
laws
up
to
replace
the
legislative
role
of
the
U.S.
Congress.
Are
you
a
firm
believer
in
this
clearly
unconstitutional
practice?
Public
Advocate
fundamentally
rejects
the
idea
that
the
government
can
force
health
care
upon
anyone
--
especially
if
it
overrides
religious
objections.
Does
Kentanji
Brown
Jackson
agree
in
lock
step
like
many
federal
judges
that
religious
liberty
is
suspended
during
the
next
forever
period
of
time
as
long
as
somebody
has
the
flu
or
becomes
car
sick?
Public
Advocate
believes
life
begins
at
conception
and
that
the
monstrosity
of
the
Roe
versus
Wade
decision
can
and
should
be
reconsidered.
What
is
your
opinion
on
this,
Judge
Kentanji
Brown
Jackson?
Legal
Philosophy?
Have
you
ever
read
Sir
William
Blackstone's
Commentaries
on
the
Laws
of
England?
If
so,
what
was
Blackstone's
view
of
the
foundation
of
the
common
law?
If
not,
why
not?
Have
you
ever
read
Thomas
Jefferson's
Preamble
to
his
1786
Bill
Establishing
Religious
Freedom
in
Virginia?
If
so,
what
was
Jefferson's
view
of
the
foundation
for
freedom
of
religion?
What
is
your
understanding
of
the
phrase
"laws
of
nature
and
of
nature's
God"
that
appears
in
the
first
paragraph
of
the
Declaration
of
Independence?
Strict
Constructionist?
Do
you
agree
with
your
mentor,
newly
retired
Judge
Stephen
Breyer
who
believes
Judges
can
legislate
from
the
bench
and
simply
make
laws
up
to
replace
the
legislative
role
of
the
U.S.
Congress.
Are
you
a
firm
believer
in
this
clearly
unconstitutional
practice
of
leftist
jurors
like
her.
If
No,
Do
you
agree
with
former
Chief
Justice
John
Marshall
that
the
Constitution
governs
the
Supreme
Court
and
the
other
federal
courts?
As
a
strict
constructionist,
by
which
of
the
various
rules
of
construction
of
the
Constitution
should
a
justice
of
the
Supreme
Court
be
bound?
If
you
plan
on
legislating
from
the
bench,
could
you
tell
the
Senate
which
laws
you
will
leave
intact
without
unilaterally
overturning
them?
Do
you
agree
with
the
following
as
a
rule
of
construction
of
the
Constitution
binding
on
the
Supreme
Court?
"In
expounding
the
Constitution
of
the
United
States
...
every
word
must
have
its
due
force,
and
appropriate
meaning;
for
it
is
evident
from
the
whole
instrument,
that
no
word
was
unnecessarily
used,
or
needlessly
added."
The
word
-
"religion"
-
appears
in
the
First
Amendment
to
the
Constitution.
What
would
be
a
strict
construction
of
the
meaning
of
that
word?
HOW
DO
YOU
VIEW
YOUR
ACHIEVEMENTS?
Do
you
believe
that,
because
you
are
a
black
woman,
you
would
bring
something
to
your
work
as
a
Supreme
Court
justice
that
a
man
of
any
color
would
not?
If
not,
would
you
then
disagree
with
the
Biden
Administration's
characterization
of
your
appointment
as
one
which
brings
much
needed
diversity
to
the
Court?
What
role,
if
any,
would
compromise
have
in
the
decision-making
process
of
the
United
States
Supreme
Court?
Do
you
believe
that
there
are
any
issues
that
could
come
before
the
Court
where
compromise
is
morally
wrong?
If
so,
what
are
they?
PUBLIC
ADVOCATE
of
the
United
States
will
prepare
a
longer
list
of
questions
that
should
be
considered
and
will
submit
them
to
the
U.S.
Senate
for
answers
and
will
send
them
to
the
White
House
for
answers
from
the
nominee
for
the
Supreme
Court,
Judge
Kentanji
Brown
Jackson.
END
OF
STATEMENT.