The Jerusalem Post

Trump’s Court nominee says her religious views would not guide decisions

- • By LAWRENCE HURLEY, PATRICIA ZENGERLE and ANDREW CHUNG

WASHINGTON ( Reuters) - President Donald Trump’s Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett on Tuesday began the first of two days of direct questionin­g from US senators, telling them that her religious views would not affect her decisions on the bench.

The Senate Judiciary Committee hearing presents Barrett with a chance to respond to Democratic lawmakers who have been unified in opposing her primarily on what they say would be her role in underminin­g the Obamacare healthcare law and its protection for patients with pre- existing conditions.

Republican Senator Lindsey Graham, the committee’s chairman, opened the questionin­g by asking her about her conservati­ve legal philosophy known as originalis­m, in which laws and the Constituti­on are interprete­d according to the meaning they had at the time they were enacted.

“That meaning doesn’t change over time and it’s not for me to update it or infuse my own policy views into it,” Barrett said.

Graham asked Barrett, a devout Catholic and a favorite of religious conservati­ves, whether she could set aside her religious beliefs in making decisions as a justice.

“I can,” Barrett said.

Barrett called the late conservati­ve Justice Antonin Scalia, for whom she served as a clerk two decades ago, as her mentor, but said she would not always rule the same way as him.

“You would not be getting Justice Scalia, you would be getting Justice Barrett. That is so because originalis­ts don’t always agree,” she said.

Graham will be followed by Senator Dianne Feinstein, the panel’s top Democrat. Barrett sat alone at a table facing the senators.

Barrett was nominated to a lifetime post on the court on Sept. 26 by Trump to replace the late liberal

Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg.

Barrett could be on the Supreme Court in time for the Nov. 10 arguments in a case in which Trump and Republican- led states are seeking to invalidate the 2010 Affordable Care Act, Democratic former President Barack Obama’s signature domestic policy achievemen­t that has enabled millions of Americans to obtain medical coverage.

Barrett has criticized a 2012 Supreme Court ruling authored by conservati­ve Chief Justice John Roberts that upheld the law, popularly known as Obamacare.

Republican­s have a 53- 47 Senate majority, leaving Democrats with little to no chance of blocking Barrett’s confirmati­on.

If confirmed, Barrett, 48, would tilt the Supreme Court further to the right and give conservati­ve justices a 6- 3 majority, making even the unexpected victories on which liberals have prevailed in recent years, including abortion and gay rights, rarer still. She is Trump’s third

Supreme Court appointmen­t.

Trump’s nomination of Barrett came late in an election cycle when Republican control of both the White House and Senate is at stake. The confirmati­on hearing format has changed because of the COVID- 19 pandemic, with the public excluded and some senators participat­ing remotely.

Democrats, including vice presidenti­al candidate Kamala Harris, on the first day of the hearing zeroed in on the fate of Obamacare, as Republican­s push to confirm Barrett before the Nov. 3 presidenti­al election between Trump and Democrat Joe Biden.

The hearing is a key step before a full Senate vote by the end of October on Barrett’s confirmati­on to a lifetime job on the court.

Republican­s have sought to portray Democrats as attacking Barrett, a devout Roman Catholic, on religious grounds, although the Democrats have so far steered clear of doing so.

 ?? ( Stefani Reynolds/ Reuters) ?? CHILDREN OF US Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett wear protective masks while listening during her confirmati­on hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee on Capitol Hill yesterday.
( Stefani Reynolds/ Reuters) CHILDREN OF US Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett wear protective masks while listening during her confirmati­on hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee on Capitol Hill yesterday.

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