Judge J. Michelle Childs heads list of potential Black women Supreme Court nominees

Black women stood on the frontlines to help push President Joe Biden over the top in the 2020 election. As the nation awaits word on whom the President nominates to fill the newly vacant Supreme Court seat, there’s little debate whether an African American woman will be that pick. Among the few remaining questions is whether that individual will deliver progress on a high court that will maintain its 6-3 conservative advantage. “As a longtime advocate for Diversity and Inclusion at the highest levels of leadership in our nation, I am looking forward to the President’s appointment of a highly-qualified and experienced jurist to our nation’s highest court,” said Congressional Black Caucus Chair Joyce Beatty (D-Ohio). “We know that when America’s boardrooms, legislatures, and even the Supreme Court start to resemble America, we all benefit,” Beatty stated. “I will continue to push in my capacity as a member of Congress and Chair of the Congressional Black Caucus to ensure that the President upholds his promise to the American people and that the Senate confirms a Black woman to the Supreme Court without any unnecessary delay.” One candidate has already emerged. The White House confirmed the candidacy of South Carolina U.S. District Judge J. Michelle Childs. A 1992 graduate of the University of South Carolina School of Law, Judge Childs was appointed in 2010 by President Barack Obama to serve as a United States District Court Judge for the District of South Carolina. Upon graduation from law school, Judge Childs went to work as an associate attorney at Nexsen Pruet Jacobs and Pollard law firm, becoming the first Black female partner in a major law firm in South Carolina. She earned two gubernatorial appointments to become the Deputy Director of the South Carolina Department of Labor, Licensing and Regulation (2000-02) and a Commissioner on the South Carolina Worker’s Compensation Commission (2002-06). Judge Childs then won election from the South Carolina General Assembly as an at-large Circuit Court Judge (2006-10). “In law school, you learn early on that your reputation and credibility will follow you throughout your career,” Judge Childs said in […]

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