Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson speaks during an interview with The Associated Press, at the Supreme Court in Washington, Wednesday, Jan. 29, 2025. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite) Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson attends the state funeral of former President Jimmy Carter at the National Cathedral, Thursday, Jan. 9, 2025, in Washington.
Main Idea: Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson says she copes with life on a conservative Supreme Court by taking boxing lessons and staying focused on her work.
Key Points:
A divided Supreme Court can keep producing rulings that upset some workers, voters, and businesses, especially on issues like education, presidents, and civil rights.
Justice Jackson’s public voice may help people better understand the court, and clear dissent can strengthen trust that major cases get full debate.
Rate how each entity in this article affected the American people.
Primary focus of the article; her comments, memoir, Broadway appearance, and view of the Supreme Court are the.
Central institution in the story, serving as the setting for Jackson’s remarks and the source of the conservative.
Mentioned as the president at the inauguration and in connection with pardons and the court context, but not.
Appears in inauguration photos and as part of the court lineup, but has only a minor role.
Appears in inauguration photos and as part of the court lineup, but is not a central subject.
Jackson’s memoir publisher, mentioned in connection with her advance and bestselling book.
Mentioned in Jackson’s discussion of her aspiration to be the first Black female justice on Broadway after entering.
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Sign in to commentAppears in a photo caption as part of the court lineup.
Appears in a photo caption as part of the court lineup.
Mentioned only as the source of the bestseller list ranking for Jackson’s memoir.