Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Barrett participat­es in first cases

It’s a phone session, with traditions overturned by pandemic

- JESSICA GRESKO

WASHINGTON — Justice Amy Coney Barrett joined her new colleagues at the Supreme Court on Monday to hear arguments for the first time.

Because of the coronaviru­s pandemic, the high court began hearing cases by phone in May. That meant the public didn’t see the new justice Monday, but at the beginning of the day’s arguments Chief Justice John Roberts welcomed her to her new role with the traditiona­l greeting.

“Before we commence the business of the court this morning, it gives me great pleasure on behalf of myself and my colleagues to welcome Justice Barrett to the court,” he said, wishing her “a long and happy career in our common calling.”

Participat­ing in oral arguments is among the first things Barrett has done as a justice after being confirmed a week ago in a 52-48 Senate vote, with Republican­s overpoweri­ng Democrats to install President Donald Trump’s third Supreme Court nominee.

The justices had a private conference Friday but Barrett didn’t participat­e “so that she could prepare for oral arguments,” according to a statement from court spokeswoma­n Kathy Arberg.

She also did not participat­e in decisions the high court issued last week involving extended timelines for receiving and counting ballots in Pennsylvan­ia and North Carolina because of the need for a quick resolution and “because she has not had time to fully review the parties’ filings,” Arberg said at the time. But her vote also wouldn’t have changed the outcome in either case.

On Monday, Barrett and her colleagues heard two hours of argument in two relatively low-profile cases, the first involving the Freedom of Informatio­n Act and the other involving disability benefits for railroad employees.

Like her colleagues, Barrett asked questions in both cases. Her first question had to do with a hypothetic­al case in which a government official stamps “draft” on a document in order to try to avoid disclosing it. Barrett wanted to know “what other factors would a court consider” to determine whether the document should still be disclosed.

The pandemic upended a number of traditions that would have been part of Barrett’s first day of oral arguments had the justices been in their courtroom. Barrett would have joined her colleagues in a round of handshakes before taking the bench, a tradition every time the justices meet for argument or private conference. The handshakes were suspended months ago because of the pandemic. Spectators would have seen her emerge from behind the court’s red curtains and take a seat on the far right-hand side of the bench, the junior-most justice’s seat.

And while arguments in the courtroom are a free-forall, with justices constantly jumping in with questions, the court’s phone arguments are more orderly. Each justice gets to ask each lawyer questions in order of seniority. As the junior justice, Barrett asked her questions last.

If Monday’s arguments were a low-key introducti­on to the work of the court, that will soon change. Today, as the country finishes voting, the court’s cases include one about sentencing young people to life without parole. And on Wednesday the court hears a case that involves a clash of LGBTQ rights and religious freedoms in Pennsylvan­ia.

Next week brings a case that could threaten the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, one that was front and center during Barrett’s confirmati­on hearings last month. Democrats claimed that the health law known as Obamacare would be in jeopardy if Barrett joined the court. Trump has urged the court to overturn it.

The justices have said they will continue to hear cases by phone through at least December. So it’s unclear when Barrett will move into her offices, taking over the space of her predecesso­r, the late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg.

 ?? (AP/Collection of the Supreme Court of the United States/Fred Schilling) ?? Chief Justice John Roberts (right) administer­s the judicial oath to Judge Amy Coney Barrett last week in the East Conference Room of the Supreme Court Building as Barrett’s husband, Jesse M. Barrett, holds the Bible.
(AP/Collection of the Supreme Court of the United States/Fred Schilling) Chief Justice John Roberts (right) administer­s the judicial oath to Judge Amy Coney Barrett last week in the East Conference Room of the Supreme Court Building as Barrett’s husband, Jesse M. Barrett, holds the Bible.

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