First Muslim woman confirmed as US federal judge
Choudhury, the legal director of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of Illinois, was confirmed on a 50-49 vote. She will also be the first Bangladeshi-American federal judge.
The US Senate has confirmed civil rights lawyer Nusrat Jahan Choudhury, one of President Biden’s nominee for a federal judgeship in New York, making her the country's first Muslim woman to serve as a federal judge.
Choudhury, the legal director of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of Illinois, was confirmed on a 50-49 vote. She will also be the first Bangladeshi-American federal judge.
Choudhury previously spent most of her professional career with the national ACLU, where she worked on racial justice and national security issues. She was deputy director of the organization's racial justice program from 2018 until 2020. U.S. President Joe Biden nominated her to the federal bench in January 2022.
Top Senate Democrat Chuck Schumer in a statement said that Choudhury's "experience as a talented and dedicated civil rights litigator has prepared her to serve with integrity and professionalism on the federal bench, and she will follow the facts and administer justice with fairness and a deep respect for the rule of law."
She faced pushback from some Senate Republicans after she gave inconsistent answers on whether she made comments at 2015 event at Princeton University saying that police killings of unarmed Black men happen "every day."
She later in a letter to the Senate Judiciary Committee panel said that "Such a statement is inconsistent with my deep respect for law enforcement."
Choudhury clerked for a judge on the nearby Southern District of New York trial court as well as the U.S. Second Circuit Court of Appeals, which reviews cases from the New York, Connecticut and Vermont federal courts.
Biden also appointed the first Muslim judge in U.S. history, U.S. District Judge Zahid Quraishi. The Senate confirmed him to the New Jersey federal trial court in 2021.