Chuck Schumer Announces Biden’s Supreme Court Nominee Will Be Confirmed By The Senate With ‘all Deliberate Speed’

By Oma Seddiq.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D‑NY, speaks to the media after Senate Democrats met pri­vate­ly with President Joe Biden, Thursday, Jan. 13, 2022, on Capitol Hill in Washington AP Photo/​Jose Luis Magana

  • Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said the Senate will move quick­ly to con­firm a Biden Supreme Court nominee.
  • The announce­ment came short­ly after news broke about Justice Stephen Breyer’s retirement.
  • A new Democratic-appoint­ed jus­tice would not change the court’s 6 – 3 con­ser­v­a­tive major­i­ty, but would keep that bal­ance in place.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer on Wednesday announced that the Senate will move quick­ly to con­firm a Supreme Court nom­i­nee to the bench after news of Justice Stephen Breyer’s forth­com­ing retire­ment broke. “President Biden’s Supreme Court nom­i­nee will receive a prompt hear­ing in the Senate Judiciary Committee and be con­sid­ered and con­firmed by the full United States Senate with all delib­er­ate speed,” Schumer said in a state­ment. Breyer is set to step down from the bench at the end of the court’s term this sum­mer, accord­ing to mul­ti­ple news out­lets. The White House and the lib­er­al jus­tice are expect­ed to for­mal­ly announce his retire­ment as ear­ly as Thursday.

Breyer’s retire­ment clears the way for President Joe Biden to appoint his replace­ment. The news comes after pro­gres­sives launched a months-long pub­lic cam­paign demand­ing that Breyer step down while the Senate is still under Democratic con­trol. On the 2020 cam­paign trail, Biden vowed to put the first Black woman on the nation’s high­est court. A new Democratic-appoint­ed jus­tice would not change the Supreme Court’s 6 – 3 con­ser­v­a­tive major­i­ty, but would keep that bal­ance in place. Biden react­ed to the news on Wednesday, say­ing that “there has been no announce­ment from Justice Breyer” and to “let him make what­ev­er state­ment he’s going to make.” “I’ll be hap­py to talk about it lat­er,” the pres­i­dent added. Breyer, 83, is the old­est mem­ber of the court and most senior mem­ber of the court’s lib­er­al wing. A Bill Clinton appointee, Breyer has served on the bench for near­ly 28 years. Schumer praised Breyer’s decades-long judi­cial expe­ri­ence, say­ing he “embod­ies the best qual­i­ties and high­est ideals of American jus­tice.” “His work and his deci­sions as an Associate Justice on the biggest issues of our time — includ­ing vot­ing rights, the envi­ron­ment, wom­en’s repro­duc­tive free­dom, and most recent­ly, health care and the Affordable Care Act — were huge­ly con­se­quen­tial,” Schumer con­tin­ued. “America owes Justice Breyer an enor­mous debt of gratitude.”

Read the orig­i­nal arti­cle on https://​www​.busi​nessin​sid​er​.com/​c​h​u​c​k​-​s​c​h​u​m​e​r​-​s​c​o​t​u​s​-​n​o​m​i​n​e​e​-​w​i​l​l​-​b​e​-​c​o​n​f​i​r​m​e​d​-​w​i​t​h​-​a​l​l​-​d​e​l​i​b​e​r​a​t​e​-​s​p​e​e​d​-​2​022 – 1