EXCLUSIVE: Sen. Mitch McConnell’s minority leader’s team is circulating a memorandum in the Capitol outlining three main reasons why Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson should not be confirmed in Supreme Court this week in the Senate. The note, first received by Fox News Digital, is entitled “The Case Against Judge Jackson Against Elevation in the Supreme Court.” Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell speaks to reporters after a Republican strategy meeting at the Capitol on October 19, 2021. (AP Photo / Andrew Harnik) “Judge Jackson’s previous judicial experience and her inability to answer key questions throughout the confirmation process underscore why Leader McConnell stated that he could not support her candidacy for the Supreme Court,” the Center said in a statement. Senate Republican Communication. ELDERLY VOTES FOR CANDIDATE OF JACKSON SUPREME COURT AFTER PROVISION OF THE JUDICIAL COMMITTEE The note criticizes Jackson’s testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee on three fronts: he avoids questions about whether he is in favor of court rulings. its inability to explain its judicial philosophy and its history of “soft crime” convictions, including those of many child pornography offenders. Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson speaks at the Senate Confirmation Hearing on March 23, 2022. (Getty Images) The note even cites a Washington Post article in which a journalist interviewed one of Jackson’s defendants, Wesley Hawkins, who pleaded guilty in 2013 to possession of videos and images of children in sexual acts. Federal sentencing instructions lasted eight to 10 years, and prosecutors requested two years. Jackson gave him three months behind bars. NEW ADVERTISING CAMPAIGN ACCUSES JUDGE KETANJI BROWN JACKSON THAT HE IS VERY GIFTS WITH CHILDREN Hawkins told the newspaper he was initially angry with Jackson’s sentence, until he went to jail and began comparing his three-month sentence to similar offenders who had been jailed for five or six years. “Nothing underscores Judge Jackson’s mild approach to the crime of child pornography more than the testimony of one of those convicted of these crimes,” the GOP said in a statement. On Monday, the Senate Judiciary Committee found itself at a dead end in an 11-11 tie over whether to favor Jackson leaving the committee – evenly split between Republicans and Democrats. But by Monday afternoon, the full Senate had voted in favor of ousting Jackson from the committee, setting the stage for a final vote on her candidacy just Thursday. All 50 Democrats voted in favor of the impeachment motion, plus three Republicans: Sen. Mitt Romney of Utah, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Susan Collins of Maine. The trio said they supported Jackson’s election to the Supreme Court, giving President Biden’s candidate some level of bipartisan support. THE RECORD JAPANESE JACKSON RECORD OF THE DEMOPOULIKI SHINES JACKSON AS “RADISKALOS”, EXTREME “AND” DANGEROUS “AS IT IS NEARLY CONFIRMED The White House and Democrats have vehemently denied allegations that Jackson was very lenient with child pornography offenders, arguing that some cases do not record the full history of Jackson’s time on the bench. Jackson’s sentences are said to be in line with those of other federal judges, citing Report of the US Conviction Committee for 2020 found that less than 30% of child pornography offenders who did not produce were punished within the scope of the 2019 financial year guidelines. Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson arrives for the third day of the confirmation hearing at the Capitol, March 23, 2022. (AP Photo / Jose Luis Magana) They have also advertised her support from police organizations, such as the Brotherhood of Police, to counter the idea that she was very polite to criminals. White House spokesman Andrew Bates broke down this line of attack against Jackson, calling it “definitively demystified” by legal experts and fact-checkers. He pointed out several judges appointed by former President Trump they had similar record on child pornography because the guidelines are “widely considered obsolete”. CLICK HERE TO RECEIVE THE FOX NEWS APPLICATION If confirmed, Jackson will make history by fulfilling Biden’s campaign promise to appoint the first black woman to the Supreme Court. He would succeed Judge Stephen Breyer as soon as he retired from the bench at the end of the 2021-22 court term, which could be late June or early July. The ideological composition of the court will remain the same with 6-3 in favor of the judges appointed by the Republican presidents.