Judicial independence requires that judges remain impartial and non-partisan, making promises only to uphold their oath to the Constitution and be fair to all parties, rather than making political promises that would compromise their ability to decide cases based solely on facts and law.
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The Fight Over Georgia’s Supreme Court | Justice Sarah WarrenHinzugefügt:
Target Toss on Extra 106.3 until 10:00 and we are so blessed to be joined by uh Justice Sarah Warren on the show today.
How are you?
>> I'm doing great. Thanks for having me.
This is really fun.
>> You're always welcome and uh we're we're going to get to some baseball stuff in a little bit. Let's start out with the uh the things that matter the most and that's uh your campaign. Um we keep seeing in in uh Carlos had brought it up during the the break. We had the listeners that were calling a few weeks ago and they just kept saying, "Hey, you need to be voting for our incumbent judges because there's something afoot with um people trying to manipulate who makes it into the uh makes it past the primary and then ultimately to the general election to be elected to the uh Supreme Court of the state of Georgia.
Do you see that? Does that hit your radar screen at all? And is that something that we should be really concerned about? I I am so glad you're asking. Yes, you you should be paying attention and and everyone listening should be concerned. Um the first thing I want to point out is on May 19th, which is a week from today, that is actually the only election for non-partisan judges. So, there is no election in November. If you want to be heard on your judges, you got to vote.
Vote early this week or vote next Tuesday on election day, May 19th. So, um our judges are non-partisan. That's what the Constitution of Georgia requires. That means we don't run as a political party and we don't make promises about policy issues and things like that. And what we're seeing is a really big outside influence. Folks from outside of Georgia and a political party attacking, making partisan attacks on the non-partisan Supreme Court. It's not normal. Uh it is not the way we're supposed to be doing things. It frankly, you know, implicates a lot of big ethics questions. Um and so, I think for folks who really care about having judges who are fair and impartial, who uphold their oath to the Georgia Constitution and the US Constitution, you know, they should really be paying attention and I hope they'll come out and vote for me.
Justice Sarah Warren is our guest right here on the Morning Extra. Half of our audience is women and they were the first ones that sounded the alarm to us on this. Uh I don't know if they had gotten just the whether it's the >> Women are always paying attention.
>> attention. I was I was going to say we nothing gets by our audience.
>> But it's unusual though. It was it it was one of the first things that was brought up and I don't know if they had just gotten a whim through it through social media, but they said here is the plan to make this just the Supreme Court far more partisan. And so that's it's just been fascinating to see how some of that outside influence that's been [clears throat] pushing money into this state and then you know the the people that have been basically told here go and if it says incumbent do this. If it doesn't do this. I think that's been pretty wild to look at. It is and and you know the amount of money we're seeing from the outside is really extraordinary. It's we were thinking about $5 million in negative ads against me and some colleagues. That should be very concerning to people and and I think people are perceiving that there's something afoot and that they don't like it. And I hope that that's what people are seeing too and saying what we what we really want are judges who are judges. We don't want judges who are politicians. Because you guys know and your listeners know we have three branches of government. If we make the political the excuse me the judicial branch political, there is no judicial branch anymore. We have lost the branch.
that check on the government that independent branch that's supposed to be deciding things fairly and impartially.
And you know I know you have a lot of folks who like sports too. When you think about it there's just a lot of fairness involved in this. The judges are supposed to be calling the balls and the strikes. And so they're not supposed to be making promises about what happens in the outcome of a case. That's exactly what we're seeing here is that the other side is promising certain outcomes on issues, but that's not what judges are supposed to do. Judges are supposed to interpret and apply the law. And I'm seeing a political party and this is just a post and I won't go into the detail of who it is whatever, but it talks about Georgia Supreme Court is run by MAGA Republicans. They're a danger to your voting rights and democracy. You can stop them but only if you vote. And um when it's the group it's it's our Supreme Court then and your picture's on there. I mean this is what and and they they are making this a very blatant partisan issue trying to probably get their base fired up I assume.
But it's being made political and I know you're trying your best to protect the non-partisanship of your your position.
But how do you respond to that? How how do the how do the other judges respond to that? I can't speak for anyone else, but I'll tell you when I hear things like that, I immediately just think about how much misinformation is out there and it bothers me a lot that folks are getting confused or or you know, perhaps even sort of being induced into thinking things that simply aren't true.
But what I can say is this, you know, if you have a judicial candidate or a judge out there making promises or using these kinds of really incendiary tactics, you should stop and pause and ask yourself why that is. You know, the contrast, which which I think I am the contrast is, you know, I'm a person who makes one specific promise that I will uphold my oath. You should want nothing more and nothing less from a judge. You know, I have oaths to the Constitution and I have oaths to be fair and impartial in every case. That's exactly what judges do. And what that means is, you know, I can't make a promise to any group that I'm in front of. My message to everyone is the same. But when you if you know, most people don't want to have a day in court, but if you had to have a day in court, you want to know that when you walk in, those judges on the bench have not already cast the die against you.
You want to know you're going to be able to come in and present your case and that your case will be decided only on the facts and the law in that case and nothing else. Not because of who you are, what your political party is, what your policy preferences are, right? You want that fairness and impartiality.
That's what I bring. You know, I bring judicial experience. I've been doing the job for about 7 and 1/2 years, but I bring that fairness and impartiality and I hope that that contrast, that positive non-partisan message resonates more than all the bad stuff that's out there.
Sarah Warren is our guest right here on the Morning Extra. There's a term that has now gotten me to cringe when I hear about social justice because I look at everything as if I'm being judged based on the law and not who I vote for or what I look like, that's what I want.
Just equal protection and representation underneath the law. I feel like that is what is now going on in some of these places where you will have justices making rulings that it might be based on, well, this person probably wasn't as well-off, so here's the scenario. How much do you hear about that stuff where it kind of it kind of puts all justices in a in a tough spot?
It does and you know, I think that there there's a hunger out there for people to feel like people are being treated fairly and justly and there are a lot of jobs where you can do that as an advocate. You can do that through volunteerism. You can do that by being involved in your community. You can really make a difference in people's lives. Being a judge sometimes isn't a feel-good job. You know, we have to interpret and apply the law so long as it is constitutional. And but we have taken an oath to do justice to the rich and the poor, to every person who is before us without fear or favor, without bias. I mean, those are really powerful words and that is how I am able to to do my job and do the job that the people of Georgia have trusted me with. I see some of the early voting numbers and it looks like the Democrats are uh ahead of Republicans when it comes to voting.
Um What is it that you would say to voters that would maybe vote for you to encourage them, you've got to get out if you want if you want Georgia to be a fair and balanced place, if you want Lady Justice to have the blindfold on?
How would you encourage them to maybe pick it up a little bit because we're seeing less Republican numbers? I'm so glad you asked and and you know, I I am speaking to all Georgians of all political parties and I really enjoy broad bipartisan support. My opponent by contrast is only speaking to one political party. So, you know, it doesn't matter to me what what political affiliation is is showing up at the ballot box, but I do need people showing up to vote. It's so critically important. So, I would say if you're a person who really cares about only voting on election day, that's okay. But you got to get there. You got to make a plan. You got to make sure your schedule has enough time, and you got to go and you got to vote. But if you're somebody who, you know, doesn't have to only go on that Tuesday, let's do it now. Let's get out there, and tell your friends.
Because this matters so much, you know, I've been on the court for 7 and 1/2 years. I love my job. I plan on keeping my job by winning this election. But to me at this point, 1 week away from the election, this is not about Sarah Warren. This is about preserving the integrity of the judicial branch in Georgia. That is a cause much greater than my job, but I need people's help. I need them to understand just how important this is. Sarah Warren is our guest right here on the morning extra.
How is that balancing act work where you want to make sure that you're producing a a non-partisan message and saying I want to be a judge for everyone, yet you have an opponent that's playing by a different set of rules and how they're going about it. Obviously, you want people to to come out and vote for you, but it also feels like campaigning has to be kind of strange, too, because you're basically saying, "Listen, I'm I'm want your vote, at the same time I'm a non-partisan person here with this stuff."
>> That's right. And I think the best way to think about it is this.
We have to campaign for election as justices on the Supreme Court cuz the Constitution of Georgia says so. You know, that's what the people of Georgia have decided. But this is not a political campaign in the way people think about it. If they expect it to be a political campaign like the political branches have, they're going to be disappointed. Because I can't make those kinds of promises. And folks should be very skeptical of anyone who does. And so if we can help people understand and kind of reframe, yes, we have to run for election, but the kind of campaign we run is fundamentally different, I think it helps people understand then why the promises I can make are so limited. But I can assure you, you do not want somebody who might promise to take a certain position or the other. Because if you're on the other side of that issue, whatever it is, you've lost before you've begun. And so only having that promise to the Constitution and to fairness and partiality really I think is the most critical thing. Justice Sarah Warren joins us on the morning extra on extra 106.3. Can you maybe paint a picture of what it would look like if Georgia's courts, especially the Supreme Court, if it if it were to go a different way, how that would impact someone listening right now? Absolutely. So, if if if we start electing politicians to the bench and we make the judicial branch a political branch, we will then have three political branches and then whatever our elected representatives do in the General Assembly will have less and less effect over time because with the stroke of a pen, a judge can override it based on their personal preferences and therefore we have no check on what the the legislature is doing and we have lessened everyone's vote as to who they're electing in the representative political branch. It is so important that the judiciary stay independent and impartial and non-partisan and we have seen in other states like Wisconsin and others an escalation in the partisanship to the point that so much money is flooding into the state and it is it is so ugly.
Um, you know, they're spending hundreds of millions of dollars on those types of elections and let me just say by contrast, you know, I've traveled around our state so many times and met so many incredible people in every corner of our state. I'm talking to Georgians. I'm raising money for my campaign from Georgians, people whose lives are affected, you know, whereas my opponent is really getting so much money from the outside. These are not people who live in our state and share our values and care about the integrity of our court.
That's something I care about and I think your listeners do, too. I think that's so important what you point out because in other states where the courts have become decidedly political, they will look at something that comes out of their state legislature and and typically that might look unconstitutional, but hey, they vote like I do and we have the same people voting for us, so I'm not going to touch that. You know, that's the idea of of remaining impartial in the state of Georgia is that if something does come out of the Golden Dome and clearly it looks like something that's that's unconstitutional, there's a check against that. That's right. That's a it's a huge part of our system. Um and we want that system to work, you know, that's that is how the system was designed and and it you know, we don't we don't like these things just cuz they're hypothetical and economic. We like them and we care about the integrity of the system because it does affect everyday Georgians all across our state. And I want to bring in something that we've just seen recently. How important your state's Supreme Court is and I will direct you to look at what's happening in Virginia. Something happened up there. They're trying to gerrymander away it was going to be 10 to one Democrat to Republican. The state Supreme Court said, "No, this is unconstitutional. We cannot allow this to move forward." And now you have the the politicians like, "We're going to get rid of the whole Supreme Court."
I've never seen anything like it. It should be alarming to see that, but then also I'm here something I'm sure you've heard too that I keep hearing, "Well, that's a Trump judge or that is a Biden judge." That is where we are and if we don't preserve what's happening, you know, what what the right thing here in the state of Georgia, we're going to have the same kind of issues that those states are.
Well, and and let me put a finer point on that one. You know, what we have in Georgia is special. We have a functioning Supreme Court of nine people who live all over our state. We're not the Supreme Court of Atlanta. We are the Supreme Court of Georgia and many of our justices drive hours to get to work every day from far-flung corners of our state. Um what we have i- is consistency and fairness and a non-partisanship that we have all honored. If you don't want to see Georgia become one of these other states, if you want to preserve one of the things about Georgia that makes us special and wonderful, we need to make sure we turn out to vote in this election. Sarah Warren is our guest. I know we're coming up on a break and and I definitely want to talk about that turnout and pushing more people to get out there earlier, but also we have to get into some baseball.
>> Oh, I hope so. Okay, cuz we've got a big series that's starting tonight.
>> Huge.
>> Chicago and Atlanta. And so for those of you that are really into talking about the Supreme Court, we'll continue that.
But if you also want to hear somebody talk some baseball at a pretty high level, that's where Sarah Warren's here.
That's right. So we let's start maybe right just before the break and let people know that your brother is actually the GM of the Chicago Cubs.
>> That's true. So did you know cuz he's the younger brother? He's younger. Don't forget it. Did you have a good inclination when he was at Vanderbilt like this dude's this dude's going to do something big in the sport?
>> Well, I the one thing I will confess bias to is that I am very biased in his favor. I I am my brother's biggest fan.
He was a great baseball player, but he's also a really smart guy and he understands people. And when you run a team, when you're part of a team, that's understanding people. He's always been great at that and it has been so much fun to follow his career. Gosh, we'll continue so take your notes yeah let's let's let's get into the Braves We'll talk about Braves Cubs because I assume and we'll get the answer to this question next. When you know the >> She is a Braves fan but but her brother is in town.
>> When when the Brave when the Braves and the Cubs take the field tonight, I need to know what hat you're going to be wearing cuz that's important to us and our listeners here on the morning extra on extra 106.3. We'll be right back with Justice Sarah Warren. Stay tuned listen till 10:00 on the morning extra on extra 106.3. Justice Sarah Warren and make sure you get out and vote for her. Um early and often. Before we get to sports cuz I know Lo is just rearing like he's he's a he's a guy in the starting block for sports.
>> got a chance to talk on a sports station for about 3 days.
>> That's right. So I subbed in on our on our sister station last week. Got a lot of chance to talk Braves and Dodgers.
Can't wait to talk Braves and Cubs.
>> We'll get to that. Especially with such a connection to the family. I just did a quick Google search and I and I would encourage you to do the exact same thing. When Justice Warren talks about being non-partisan, she's serious about it.
So, if you do a search for her, like I have, and I hope you will, it says party unaffiliated. The person that is her opposition, her opponent, if you do a Google search for her, it gives her party and with a big logo.
There's no doubt in the world the difference in the two candidates for the the Supreme Court of the state of Georgia.
This has to be frustrating for you. It's incredibly frustrating. My my opponent's campaign is being run by and almost exclusively funded by a political party.
You know, and and I take my code of ethics as a judge very seriously. Um and when you do that, your hands are tied.
There are so few things you can say other than explaining what the process is to the people and telling them you'll keep up you'll keep your oath and that you'll do your job with integrity. So, that is my message, uh but there's a lot of talk on the other side and there's a lot of negative information and misinformation. We need people to look past it and through it.
>> It almost feels like you're having to fight with one arm tied behind your back.
>> Sometimes, two. Yeah, sometimes both arms. Everything has to run through the initial filter, whereas your opponent doesn't have to worry about that.
>> filter. Just say it. Well, and and of course, you know, she's supposed to. I mean, the the code of ethics applies equally.
Um but, you know, if you're going to be a judge or you want to be a judge, you know, you should be somebody who follows rules. Not just for the sake of following rules, but you know, we are making decisions about people's life and liberty. You don't want somebody on the bench who can't even follow rules or has no desire to follow rules themselves if they're going to have other people's lives and livelihoods in their hands.
So, um I'll keep doing it the positive way. I'll keep following the rules. And really, the the rules aren't there just as technicalities. They support the oath we take to be fair and impartial. So, there's a much bigger and deeper meaning to that, but I think that's the kind of person that Georgians want on the bench.
Uh that's the kind of person I am. So, I want to do a an origin story question here for Sarah Warren as our guest right here on on Morning Extra. We were talking off the air about obviously your brother is GM of the Chicago Cubs, you growing up playing softball.
I think that there's something that you gain from being part of athletics that there's a a fairness perspective that you have cuz there's an outcome. It's here's the score, here's what it's going to be. How has that sports background in your family influenced how you do your job? Oh gosh, well, you know, it it's given me a real perspective on what it's like to be a ref or an ump. You know, because that's essentially what we do all day as as judges.
Um and you know, it the pressure's high.
But but you know, I have I have three children. My oldest is 12. I know you heard you have a 11 >> an 11-year-old and a 15-year-old.
>> a 12-year-old, a 9-year-old, and a 5-year-old. And we're thick into sports, too. And and there are so many life lessons. And you know, you hear the kids saying like, oh, if the ump had not called that strike or you know, you shouldn't have called infield fly on that or whatever it is. Sometimes you got to look at your kid and say, that's right. That's not fair. We still have to win. So how are we going to we're going to get past this? We're going to overcome this because we still got another inning to go. We still have more in this fight. And and that's really kind of a mantra that I use for myself, too. I've always talked about it in terms of when it comes to my daughters, I say I'm when everyone says, well, what do you do this for? You know, what what what's the why? And I always say cuz I want them to face adversity in their life. And I think that when you have faced that adversity, I think you become a better judge of character, just of how you manage things that are that are challenges to you. The grit and resilience that you can gain in sports, you know, depending on on how you comport yourself in sports, I think it's so applicable to life. And I think you guys know, too, I'm currently in a battle with cancer, but I'm sitting here with you right now. And and I I I can assure you that my sports background has contributed to my ability just to march through. You know, you got to get through pain sometimes. You got to get through discomfort. And the mental toughness, I mean, the mental toughness is such a huge part of sports. And it's a huge part of doing what I do every day as a judge. You know, and it even apart from the cancer part of things because when you have a really difficult problem, a legal problem, and it's your job to untangle it. You have to sit with it and do the research and think about it and go through really tough mental processes that can take months. And you just have to be able to to grit through all of that because you are working on behalf of the people of Georgia, and you got to get it right.
>> God, I love that. It's so encouraging and um I wasn't going to bring that up.
>> Yeah, no, it's okay. It's It's my It's my reality.
>> No, I know it is, but it it was one of those cuz I had known I'd known and I was told, but I wasn't going to bring it up, but now that you have, does that change your perspective on anything, everything? Just just just the the the the personal battle. Yeah, I mean, look, first it makes me think about how many other people are going through a cancer battle or some other really big issue in their life.
Um and how tough it can be to get up in the morning and do all the things you have to do, take care of your family, go to your job, you know, when you feel bad, when you're stressed, when you feel like the world is collapsing on you. And there are so many people across Georgia who are doing that right now, whether it's caring for a parent or a special needs child or they're have, you know, an illness that people can't see. I mean, these are real things, and my empathy has gone off the charts for those folks. It's also made me just appreciate my community. I mean, I have seen an unbelievable outpouring of love and support, not just from my family. I I've got the best family in the entire world. Um but our school community, our church community, the legal community, and and I I've said a couple of times now I I hope that everyone can feel supported in life the way that I do. You know, so often we wait till somebody dies to celebrate them or to tell somebody how much we love them. Like, why can't we do that now? That's so important. So important. Justice Fair Warning is our guest right here on the Morning Extra.
All right, so with the Cubs in town, >> Mhm, here we go. All right, you've been dealing with a multitude of battles. Is this now at least a few days to kind of I mean, it doesn't mean you're going to stop with the message, but does this allow you to kind of turn the brain off for a couple hours and be like, all right, let's watch this and and and see how my team growing up is now playing against my brother's team cuz that's that's pretty cool. You know, baseball I think is a cure for a multitude of problems. How if you go sit at a ballpark, you know, with the sunset or maybe it's in the afternoon and you you hear the sound of the bat on the ball and you you know, you hear the ball and the leather glove and you hear the guy, you know, selling beer in the background and you smell all the smells and you hear all the sounds. Baseball makes you forget all the other things going on in the world and I think that's why it's, you know, the the favorite pastime of Americans for so long. So, I love baseball. I'll get to one game. There's there's too much campaigning to do to go to more, but man, I am excited for this fight. So, do you at least get to grab dinner or something with with your brother while he's in town?
>> I'll I'll check in with him. We'll make sure that we make that happen cuz you got to have a little brother-sister catch-up, but he's great about calling and checking in on me. We call each other a lot and and he has three kids as well and I'm involved in their lives and we try to make sure we see each other, but there's nothing like a battle between the Braves and the Cubs. So, I have to tell you Tug's nickname is sweet Tug.
Now, that's not s w e e t.
>> [laughter] >> That's s u i t e. All right, Tug has access to the nicest suites in the ballpark.
>> a good look, Tug. No, I agree. And it's not true. But for the color man, Color man Tug, It's not true. Yeah, you're right. He's on all the suites and everything.
Okay, so when you do get a chance to take in one of these games, do you get the hookup from your brother? Like is it going to be a little bit of a nicer setup for you for this time around?
>> it depends. Sometimes we'll go with a bunch of friends and just buy tickets in a in a section where we can all go be together and sometimes we'll go find him somewhere else in the ballpark and have a >> Tug looks down at you, by the way.
Literally from the perch from the perch he's looking at me down below.
>> There she is down there. I feel like I'm being ganged up on right now. Hey, that's I saw your shot, Tug. It's okay.
I feel like I'm taking a beating that I don't deserve. [laughter] Oh, it's all right. Oh, yeah, Billy Tug is not this not this not usual. However, you observe and take in the game, that's a good way to do it. I've always said to my young'un, whatever seat you're in is the best seat in the house as long as you're in the building. As long as you're in the building, you can't miss it. The The one thing cuz you you had such a great like when you were describing how baseball will help you forget and and help you step up unless your kids at the plate or on the mound. And let me tell you as a as a guy with a a son that's playing college baseball, every at bat is excruciating.
And I thought it was going to get easier. Like when when it was four you, you know, four-year-old and they would run to third and it was just fine.
>> So I'll tell you something I haven't told many people when my brother was playing Little League, 12-year-old Little League, they were trying to get to Little League World Series from their team in Atlanta and they made it it wasn't maybe it was the regionals or maybe you know, one of these steps. We were down in St. Petersburg and and my brother was pitching.
And so if he was about 12, I must have been 15 and we sat in the stands getting ready to watch that game and I had to go to the bathroom and throw up cuz I was so nervous. You know, I mean you just get in so deep, right? And you Cuz you care so much and you love and you know how much work they put in and the dedication and the desire and and and the the whole package.
>> That's right. And y'all know I mean baseball is a game of failure, right? I mean there are all the whole game, you know, you're the best players are hitting 300, right? The very very best players. That means you are not succeeding more than you are failing and so you got to learn how to ride the wave.
>> I've always said this cuz I was fortunate enough to play as a a collegiate baseball player and played at the Division II level.
Uh the reason why us baseball players a lot of times come across as egotistical because you fail so much that if you're beating yourself up, you have no chance in this game.
>> That's right. You got to pull yourself out of the depths because tomorrow's a new game or or the next inning's the next inning, you know, you got to get out there.
>> And you can't ride too high. When when you hit a home run, you better be even keel because the next two at bats you'll probably strike out, line out or ground out.
>> a roller coaster cuz I think you really have to thread the needle, right? You have to have just enough ego to psych yourself up to do what you got to do, but if it gets too high, it hurts in the other direction.
>> Oh, I've I've had the over three and the the next at bat's coming and you have to yourself, I am the greatest player out here. Well, the first at bat awful.
Didn't even touch it. But I want me at the plate.
>> That's right. You got to believe. And we want you in the in the seat of the Supreme Court here in the state of Georgia. It's so important that you go out and vote.
I've laid it out already. The the other side will say since this is a non-partisan race, the other side is more enthusiastic right now with early voting. You, listening right now, I think I know how you feel.
I think I know the things that are important to you because you call and you and you reach out on social media. I feel like I know you.
You need to get out and vote. Make sure that you vote for Justice Warren. It's it's something you have to do if you want to keep Georgia the way that it is and and know that that justice will be blind if you're ever put in that seat in in a situation where things don't look favorable for you and you know you've done nothing wrong, you want somebody sitting in that seat that will give you the benefit of the doubt. Innocent until proven guilty.
Innocent until till there is a reason that you're not. And Sarah, we wish you continued success. I hope when you get past all this, you'll come back and just hang out and and then things are not quite as serious.
>> And and then we'll give Carlos all the real baseball talk. We'll talk stats, man.
Are you a numbers Okay, yeah. Enough.
Enough. Yeah, there's like cuz cuz Carlos is like Mr. Spreadsheet. Like he makes the difficult easy.
>> I I was making the point that why Spencer Strider was going to do well in LA, it's cuz you're out of Colorado and your pitches on the horizontal break don't break the same. It's almost 4 inches different. It's impossible to throw in it. Yes, we'll have that conversation.
>> Okay, let's go. And and we'll make sure that sweet tug also gets you access to your family to the suite. [laughter] I'll wave up to you from down below. I think Justice Warren's going to be just fine, specifically these next 3 days. How do folks find out more about you, Justice Warren?
>> You can go to sarahwarren.com.
On Facebook, I'm at Georgians for Justice Warren and on Instagram Justice Sarah Warren. Please look us up.
>> I hope you'll go and find out more and I I encourage you you must you must you must.
>> Let's turn it out, folks. Please do.
Yes, ma'am.
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सुप्रीम कोर्ट में 5 जजों का शपथग्रहण समारोह #supremecourt #judges #oathceremony #shorts #ytshorts
Bharat24Liv
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