While reporting on the ongoing Senate confirmation hearings for Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson, many mainstream media outlets have buried the racism and misinformation that are shaping the Republican members’ questioning of the first Black woman nominated to the Supreme Court, instead downplaying the attacks with vague euphemisms for racism and failing to provide proper fact-checking of the GOP’s smear campaign.
Leading up to the hearings, right-wing media amplified misinformation against Jackson about her record on the sentencing of sex offenders to inaccurately paint Jackson as a “radical.” The claims about Jackson’s record, which have been debunked, are in line with (and pushed in the same circles as) the QAnon conspiracy theory. Despite the baselessness of these attacks, many mainstream outlets have failed to fact-check this misinformation in their coverage of the hearings. Additionally, some coverage framed the hearing as “a bruising affair” in which Republican senators “pummeled” Jackson, positioning her as part of a fight rather than as the target of a concerted misinformation campaign.
Republican members of the Senate Judiciary Committee also employed racist dog whistles in their questioning of Jackson on critical race theory, a broad framework of ideas that examines systemic racism in the United States legal system. CRT is not taught below the college level, but this fact has not stopped GOP politicians from pushing legislation at the state level banning the practice in public schools as part of their racist attacks on Black history in public education.
Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) in particular advanced this racist line of attack during the hearings, questioning Jackson about her stance on CRT and The 1619 Project, a journalism project to reframe the founding of America through the lens of Black experience.
Despite the clear racism and conspiratorial conjecture present in questioning from members like Cruz and Sen. Josh Hawley (R-MO), some outlets framed these attacks on Jackson with vague terms, saying the hearings had “racial overtones” or were “racially charged” rather than accurately calling out the actual racism on display for their audience. The Associated Press Stylebook notes that euphemisms like this should be avoided, as they downplay the effects of racism and have historically been used by news outlets to avoid directly describing it.