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To Conservatives, Barrett Has ‘Perfect Combination’ of Attributes for Supreme Court
rfenst Offline
#1 Posted:
Joined: 06-23-2007
Posts: 39,304
Judge Amy Coney Barrett is regarded as the leading contender to replace Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg.

Two years ago, after nominating Brett M. Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court, President Trump strongly hinted that his choice for the next opening would be a former law professor he had named to a federal appeals court the year before: Judge Amy Coney Barrett.

Now, three years into that job, Judge Barrett is regarded — at least for now — as the leading contender to replace Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, who died on Friday. If Judge Barrett were nominated and confirmed, she would be the sitting justice with the least courtroom experience, but one viewed as a home run by conservative Christians and anti-abortion activists.

“She is the perfect combination of brilliant jurist and a woman who brings the argument to the court that is potentially the contrary to the views of the sitting women justices,” said Marjorie Dannenfelser, the president of the Susan B. Anthony List, an anti-abortion political group, who has praised Mr. Trump’s entire shortlist.

The nomination of a judge whom Mr. Trump was quoted last year as “saving” to be Justice Ginsburg’s replacement would almost surely plunge the nation into a bitter and divisive debate over the future of abortion rights, made even more pointed because Judge Barrett would replace a justice who was an unequivocal supporter of those rights. That is a debate Mr. Trump has not shied away from as president, as his judicial appointments and efforts to court conservatives have repeatedly shown.

“Amy Coney Barrett meets Donald Trump’s two main litmus tests: She has made clear she would invalidate the A.C.A. and take health care away from millions of people and undermine a woman’s reproductive freedom,” said Nan Aron, the president of Alliance for Justice, a liberal group.

But some White House officials worry that Judge Barrett’s positions might galvanize not just Democrats but also suburban women and independent voters who would favor a more mainstream pick, and her nomination is hardly certain. Mr. Trump and his advisers may have to weigh how much support they would gain from those voters if he selected another nominee versus the risk of alienating parts of their base if they shy away from Judge Barrett’s abortion record.

In the world of conservative judges, she has particularly strong credentials. Judge Barrett began clerking for Justice Antonin Scalia 22 years ago, and her fellow clerks are quick to say she was his favorite. She graduated summa **** laude from Notre Dame Law School and joined the faculty in 2002, earning praise from colleagues as an astute scholar and jurist even if they did not always agree on her jurisprudential premises.

But it is also her personal qualities that particularly endear Judge Barrett to conservatives across the country.

“Her religious convictions are pro-life, and she lives those convictions,” said Judge Patrick J. Schiltz, a longtime mentor and a U.S. district judge in Minnesota, who like Judge Barrett is Roman Catholic. “The question of what we believe as a religious matter has nothing to do with what we believe a written document says.”

Judge Barrett and her husband, Jesse Barrett, a former federal prosecutor who is now in private practice, have seven children, all under 20, including two adopted from Haiti and a young son with Down syndrome, whom she would carry downstairs by piggyback in the morning. She learned of her son’s Down syndrome diagnosis in prenatal testing, Judge Schiltz said, and decided to keep the pregnancy. Judge Barrett is known for volunteering at her children’s grade school, and at age 48, she would be the youngest justice on the bench, poised to shape a generation of American law.

She lives in South Bend, Ind., a culturally tight-knit community, like many small college towns in the Midwest. The Barretts are regulars at Notre Dame tailgates and football games. Judge Barrett and other university faculty members have been known to work out together at a CrossFit-type program, sometimes with their former provost.

At least four families in the law school faculty have adopted children, said Carter Snead, a longtime friend of the Barretts and a Notre Dame law professor whose three children are also adopted. “Their family is radically generous and hospitable,” he said.

Imagen abortion demonstration in front of the Supreme Court in March drew protesters expressing both support and opposition to the issue.

Judge Barrett became an instant celebrity among the religiously conservative grass-roots in 2017, when Democratic lawmakers questioned her public statements and Catholicism during her confirmation hearing for the Seventh Circuit. “You have a long history of believing that your religious beliefs should prevail,” Senator Dianne Feinstein, Democrat of California, told her. “The dogma lives loudly within you.”

The expression “the dogma lives loudly within you” was emblazoned on mugs and T-shirts in Catholic circles as a point of pride and defiance of what many on the right have called anti-Catholic bigotry.

Judge Barrett’s connection to the small and relatively obscure Christian group People of Praise also attracted attention after a report in 2017 that she and her husband were members. The group grew out of the Catholic charismatic renewal movement that began in the late 1960s and adopted Pentecostal practices such as speaking in tongues, belief in prophecy and divine healing.

Peers describe her as a textualist like Justice Scalia: one who interprets the law based on its plain words, as opposed to someone who looks to accomplish the legislature’s purpose. And they said she was an originalist, meaning a judge who interprets the Constitution according to the understanding of those who drafted and ratified it.

“Justice Kennedy showed a willingness to interpolate things into the Constitution that, in cases like Obergefell, that Justice Scalia for example would not have done,” said John Garvey, the president of the Catholic University of America, who taught Judge Barrett in law school, referring to the 2015 decision that established a constitutional right to same-sex marriage. “My guess is that Judge Barrett wouldn’t assume that the judicial role carried that much power with it.”

In a 2017 law review article written before she joined the appeals court, Judge Barrett was critical of Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr.’s 2012 opinion sustaining a central provision of the Affordable Care Act, saying he had betrayed the commands of textualism. “Chief Justice Roberts pushed the Affordable Care Act beyond its plausible meaning to save the statute,” she wrote.

The court will again hear arguments on the fate of the law in November, and Judge Barrett’s article suggested that she would give its challengers a sympathetic hearing.

Her judicial philosophy on abortion has already garnered the most interest, for personal and legal reasons. In a talk at Jacksonville University in 2016, Judge Barrett said that the core holding of Roe v. Wade was that women had the right to an abortion, and that was not likely to change in the future, but how states restrict abortion might.

“I think the question of whether people can get very late-term abortions, you know, how many restrictions can be put on clinics, I think that would change,” she said.

In her confirmation hearing in 2017, Judge Barrett repeatedly stated that she would follow Supreme Court precedent on abortion as an appeals court judge.

“If Roe v. Wade were coming against the court for the first time, I suspect that she would say there is nothing in the Constitution about this, and if you want a constitutional right to an abortion, people are free to add one to the Constitution, but it is not in there,” Mr. Garvey said. “That is not the question now. We have had 45 years of abortion jurisprudence.”

In her work on the appeals court, Judge Barrett has been wary of broad interpretations of abortion rights.

Judge Barrett began clerking for Justice Antonin Scalia 22 years ago.

In 2018, she joined a dissenting opinion expressing skepticism about a ruling that had held unconstitutional an Indiana law banning abortions sought solely because of the sex or disability of a fetus. A three-judge panel of the appeals court — one that did not include Judge Barrett — struck down the law, saying it conflicted with Supreme Court precedent.

Though the state did not seek further review from the full Seventh Circuit, Judge Frank H. Easterbrook, joined by Judge Barrett and two other colleagues, addressed the law in a dissent from denial of review by the full court of a different provision of the law. “None of the court’s abortion decisions holds that states are powerless to prevent abortions designed to choose the sex, race and other attributes of children,” he wrote.

Judge Barrett followed Supreme Court precedent last year in a second case concerning abortion, voting to uphold a Chicago law shielding women entering abortion clinics from unwelcome interactions with protesters and counselors. The law was almost identical to one the Supreme Court upheld in 2000, in Hill v. Colorado.

The Seventh Circuit’s opinion, written by Judge Diane S. Sykes and joined by Judge Barrett, was skeptical of the constitutionality of the Chicago law under the First Amendment.

But Judge Sykes said appeals court judges were not free to disregard Supreme Court precedents, even when later decisions appeared to undercut them. “The road the plaintiffs urge is not open to us in our hierarchical system,” she wrote.

That left open the possibility of a different result on the next higher rung in the judicial hierarchy: the Supreme Court.

Legal scholars said Judge Barrett’s opinions on the appeals court have been models of judicial craftsmanship, tightly reasoned and unflashy.

“Her conservatism is embedded in her methodological and jurisprudential commitments, not any commitment to a particular policy outcome,” said Jonathan H. Adler, a law professor at Case Western Reserve University. “As a scholar and a judge, she has shown herself to be a very careful and deliberate thinker who is concerned with getting the right answer, whether or not it’s the popular answer.”

Judge Barrett has also been a member of the Federalist Society, the conservative and libertarian legal group. She has spoken at the Blackstone Legal Fellowship, a program to train Christian law students that is run by the Alliance Defending Freedom, a Christian legal firm that has successfully represented religious conservatives at the Supreme Court, including the Colorado baker who refused to create a wedding cake for a gay couple.

Still, those who know Judge Barrett say she is not ideological in her writings. Every Notre Dame Law School faculty member supported her elevation to the appellate court, noting they did so in spite of their different political persuasions. One of her former students said that in class she would not have known Ms. Barrett was Catholic, and that she did not start class with prayer or the sign of the cross like other professors at Notre Dame.

“Both of us are kind of right-of-center people,” said John P. Elwood, who taught a class with her at George Washington University in 2001 and who is now head of the Supreme Court practice at Arnold & Porter in Washington. “She didn’t wear it on her sleeve.”

Judge Barrett has already become the symbol of the type of cultural influence many conservatives want to see in American government: leadership that looks to a higher power. In 2006, one of the three times she was named professor of the year, she gave the commencement address to Notre Dame law students.

“If you can keep in mind that your fundamental purpose in life is not to be a lawyer, but to know, love and serve God,” she said, “you truly will be a different kind of lawyer.”



Adam Liptak covers the Supreme Court and writes Sidebar, a column on legal developments. A graduate of Yale Law School, he practiced law for 14 years before joining The Times in 2002.
rfenst Offline
#2 Posted:
Joined: 06-23-2007
Posts: 39,304
I guess I can live with Barrett compared to Lagoa.
Smooth light Offline
#3 Posted:
Joined: 06-26-2020
Posts: 3,598
Is that because the"The TIMES"told you?
CelticBomber Offline
#4 Posted:
Joined: 05-03-2012
Posts: 6,786
Smooth light wrote:
Is that because the"The TIMES"told you?


As opposed to what you know of her from your deep long lasting personal relationship with her or maybe.... from what Trump told you?
rfenst Offline
#5 Posted:
Joined: 06-23-2007
Posts: 39,304
Smooth light wrote:
Is that because the"The TIMES"told you?



Absolutely!
tailgater Offline
#6 Posted:
Joined: 06-01-2000
Posts: 26,185
rfenst wrote:
I guess I can live with Barrett compared to Lagoa.


Smooth-light-in-his-loafers comment aside, what drives this opinion?

I haven't researched either, yet.
rfenst Offline
#7 Posted:
Joined: 06-23-2007
Posts: 39,304
tailgater wrote:
Smooth-light-in-his-loafers comment aside, what drives this opinion?

I haven't researched either, yet.

Professional familiarity with Lagoa. She refused to recuse herself when she absolutely should have while on the Florida Supreme Court- twice that I know of. Nothing but a political appointee. She lacks federal experience on the bench. Never clerked for SCOTUS. Not regarded as especially bright....
MACS Offline
#8 Posted:
Joined: 02-26-2004
Posts: 79,774
^Yeah... but, but... she's hispanic and checks TWO affirmative action boxes (less whining from the left, hypothetically... as if) and Barrett only checks ONE. White female vs Hispanic female.

I agree, though... I hope he chooses, and the senate confirms, Barrett.
Smooth light Offline
#9 Posted:
Joined: 06-26-2020
Posts: 3,598
Since you only read" THE TIMES " do your research then, until then,shut the fu*k up!
Please,put down the wacky weed for a while.

Barrett : weekend special

The loafers feel fine, after walking thew the poo you been spew'en, left the shoes outside because of the smell.

rfenst Offline
#10 Posted:
Joined: 06-23-2007
Posts: 39,304
MACS wrote:
^Yeah... but, but... she's hispanic and checks TWO affirmative action boxes (less whining from the left, hypothetically... as if) and Barrett only checks ONE. White female vs Hispanic female.

I agree, though... I hope he chooses, and the senate confirms, Barrett.

Lagoa would go over very well for Trump in Florida. Her appointment would shore up his Cuban-American voters in a big swing state. He would be a fool not to pick her.
HockeyDad Offline
#11 Posted:
Joined: 09-20-2000
Posts: 46,130
I’m excited. I need to check the pantry to see if I have popcorn. I can’t wait for the Democrats to reveal who Lagoa has raped.
MACS Offline
#12 Posted:
Joined: 02-26-2004
Posts: 79,774
rfenst wrote:
Lagoa would go over very well for Trump in Florida. Her appointment would shore up his Cuban-American voters in a big swing state. He would be a fool not to pick her.


I'd prefer Barrett for her qualifications, though.

And this just in off the high speed sports wire... Roe v Wade will not be overturned, no matter the selection.
Smooth light Offline
#13 Posted:
Joined: 06-26-2020
Posts: 3,598
Roe v Wade: that boat 🛥️ has a slow leak. 🌊

ZRX1200 Online
#14 Posted:
Joined: 07-08-2007
Posts: 60,599
I’m still holding out for Alex Jones
rfenst Offline
#15 Posted:
Joined: 06-23-2007
Posts: 39,304
MACS wrote:
I'd prefer Barrett for her qualifications, though.

And this just in off the high speed sports wire... Roe v Wade will not be overturned, no matter the selection.

Her position legal position on that is well known. Remember, she has already testified for the Senate before it gave Consent to her appointment to federal court. She might not vote to overturn it, but I am sure she will agree to whittle away a bit at a time.
DrMaddVibe Offline
#16 Posted:
Joined: 10-21-2000
Posts: 55,424
rfenst wrote:
Her position legal position on that is well known. Remember, she has already testified for the Senate before it gave Consent to her appointment to federal court. She might not vote to overturn it, but I am sure she will agree to whittle away a bit at a time.



Do you really care about it? Its a dead issue.

I mean the Left position all along has been follow the science. Can't slice it both ways. Puns intended.
DrMaddVibe Offline
#17 Posted:
Joined: 10-21-2000
Posts: 55,424
HockeyDad wrote:
I’m excited. I need to check the pantry to see if I have popcorn. I can’t wait for the Democrats to reveal who Lagoa has raped.



Elian Gonzalez is the word on the barrio!


What's more important is how hard the DNC will be to tear down a woman and a Latino if she is the candidate. They will tear down something. It's what they do!
Smooth light Offline
#18 Posted:
Joined: 06-26-2020
Posts: 3,598
Killing future taxpayer the science of the debt.
Can get enough of that sugar crisp serial killers. Stick a fork in their azz and turn them over they're done.

LET THERE BE LIFE!

Take responsibility for your own actions.
tailgater Offline
#19 Posted:
Joined: 06-01-2000
Posts: 26,185
Smooth light wrote:


left the shoes outside because of the smell.



The shoes undoubtedly thank you.

delta1 Offline
#20 Posted:
Joined: 11-23-2011
Posts: 28,784
rfenst wrote:
Lagoa would go over very well for Trump in Florida. Her appointment would shore up his Cuban-American voters in a big swing state. He would be a fool not to pick her.



didja see where he decided to send some Hurricane Maria relief money, about $13 Billion to Puerto Rico...almost three years to the day after the hurricane devastated the US territory...

after throwing rolls of paper towels at them and letting those American citizens endure three years of suffering and death...

such obvious pandering...going after the PR vote in Florida...


I suspect they'll take the money and still vote for Biden
DrafterX Offline
#21 Posted:
Joined: 10-18-2005
Posts: 98,548
I dunno... I heard Dems hate wimmins & Christians... Mellow
ZRX1200 Online
#22 Posted:
Joined: 07-08-2007
Posts: 60,599
Has anyone seen her tits?
DrafterX Offline
#23 Posted:
Joined: 10-18-2005
Posts: 98,548
The Clinton's prolly... Mellow
Smooth light Offline
#24 Posted:
Joined: 06-26-2020
Posts: 3,598
Get back on the Cart, AGAIN!! 💩💩.
delta1 Offline
#25 Posted:
Joined: 11-23-2011
Posts: 28,784
ZRX1200 wrote:
Has anyone seen her tits?



not sure, but judging by some public photos of her fully dressed, pretty sure she exceeds RBG in that category
frankj1 Offline
#26 Posted:
Joined: 02-08-2007
Posts: 44,221
I like that she has adopted a mess of kids.
MACS Offline
#27 Posted:
Joined: 02-26-2004
Posts: 79,774
frankj1 wrote:
I like that she has adopted a mess of kids.


5 are her own. She adopted 2 kids from Haiti, so apparently black lives matter more to her than BLM.

HA!
HockeyDad Offline
#28 Posted:
Joined: 09-20-2000
Posts: 46,130
Wait ...what? She kidnaps black kids? This is awful.
delta1 Offline
#29 Posted:
Joined: 11-23-2011
Posts: 28,784
one of her children is a "special needs" child, which she knew before birth, and chose to have him anyway...have to respect that...
rfenst Offline
#30 Posted:
Joined: 06-23-2007
Posts: 39,304
frankj1 wrote:
I like that she has adopted a mess of kids.
And, here I thought a woman's place is in the home taking care of her children and husband.

Sarcasm
frankj1 Offline
#31 Posted:
Joined: 02-08-2007
Posts: 44,221
rfenst wrote:
And, here I thought a woman's place is in the home taking care of her children and husband.

Sarcasm

let's see how she votes on that stuff...HA!
Smooth light Offline
#32 Posted:
Joined: 06-26-2020
Posts: 3,598
Exactly, time will tell.
Smooth light Offline
#33 Posted:
Joined: 06-26-2020
Posts: 3,598
Exactly, time will tell...who -koo- ba- chew.
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