Four days ago, at 1:53 p.m. eastern, the Senate formally confirmed Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson as the next associate justice on the U.S. Supreme Court. It was about six hours later, at 8:12 p.m. eastern, when Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham congratulated the first Black woman ever confirmed to the nation’s highest court by releasing an attack ad.
The South Carolinian’s minute-long video began with this declaration:
“In the last several years, we’ve had three Supreme Court hearings. The game has changed. Remember Amy Coney Barrett, how they came after her, remember Kavanaugh? I do. Compare that hearing with what happened to Judge Jackson is ridiculous. She wasn’t ambushed. I asked her hard questions, and she gave bad answers.”
Right off the bat, we’ve actually had four Supreme Court hearings in recent years, not three. As for whether people remember Amy Coney Barrett, I certainly do. In fact, I remember one specific Republican senator — I believe his name was Lindsey Graham — going back on his word and rushing to confirm her in the midst of a presidential election.
I also remember Brett Kavanaugh’s confirmation hearing and the GOP senators’ indifference to credible allegations of sexual misconduct in the nominee’s background.
If comparing their hearings to Jackson’s process is “ridiculous,” it’s only because Democrats took the confirmation process in 2022 more seriously than their Republican counterparts did in 2020 and 2018.
As for the senator patting himself on the back for having asked “hard questions,” the record shows that Graham’s questions weren’t difficult, they were cringe-worthy. “Uh, on a scale of 1 to 10, how faithful would you say you are in terms of religion?” was one of the most outlandish questions in the history of Supreme Court confirmation battles, and it was asked by the South Carolinian who’s now boasting about the quality of his lines of inquiry.
But Graham’s video proceeded with this pitch:
“I voted ‘no’ to Judge Jackson, and now I understand why the radical left wanted her so badly. She’s a judicial activist; she gets outcomes she wants no matter how the law is written; [and] when it comes to crime, her record is very, very dangerous. That doesn’t work with me.”
Graham proceeded to whine a bit about Democrats filibustering Janice Rogers Brown, neglecting to mention (a) she wasn’t a Supreme Court nominee; (b) Brown ended up getting confirmed anyway; and (c) Brown really did have a radical ideology she employed from the federal bench.
But as notable as the Republican senator’s errors and omissions are, what’s even more striking is the existence of this attack ad.
In recent years, as Supreme Court confirmation battles have turned into “a political blood sport,” campaign-style commercials have become relatively common. The point, of course, is to help shape public attitudes and pressure senators ahead of a confirmation vote.








