Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

A vote on confirming Judge Amy Coney Barrett to Supreme Court could come before the election.

- By Sarah D. Wire

WASHINGTON — President Trump named U.S. Circuit Judge Amy Coney Barrett as his pick Saturday for the vacant seat on the Supreme Court, a move that could further shift it to the right and reshape American law on abortion, healthcare, religion and guns for a generation.

A confirmati­on vote may occur before the election.

The announceme­nt comes just eight days after the death of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, who had become a liberal icon in her decades on the bench, and 38 days before the presidenti­al election. Voting has already begun in dozens of states.

Never before has a Supreme Court justice been nominated or confirmed so close to a presidenti­al election.

If Trump succeeds in replacing Ginsburg with a conservati­ve, the new justice would join five other Republican appointees, including two named by Trump.

Trump teased his choice for days, even polling supporters at a rally about whether to choose a woman. The prime-time announceme­nt in the Rose Garden of the White House was attended by high-profile Republican­s and Barrett’s husband and their seven children.

Trump called Barrett “one of our nation’s most brilliant and gifted legal minds.”

“I looked and I studied and you are very eminently qualified for this job. You are going to be fantastic,” Trump said.

Trump noted that Barrett would be the first mother of school-aged children to serve on the Supreme Court.

Barrett, a 48-year-old former law clerk for the late Justice Antonin Scalia, was a longtime law professor at the University of Notre Dame before Trump chose her for the circuit court in 2017. She was previously vetted for the vacant Supreme Court seat in 2018 that was filled instead by Brett M. Kavanaugh, so Republican­s believe she can move quickly through the process.

She is backed by the Federalist Society, like many of the judicial nominees Trump has promised to pick from. In her legal writing and three years on the appeals court, Barrett hinted that she would rule with the most

turning long-standing precedents, including the Roe vs. Wade decision that granted the right to abortion.

Both sides in the decades-long fight over abortion believe she’s likely to provide the key vote to overturn or dramatical­ly scale back nationwide abortion rights, giving conservati­ve states the power to outlaw some or all abortions, as many did before the high court’s 1973 Roe ruling.

She has also indicated support for a broad view of gun rights under the 2nd Amendment, another area in which she could cement a majority to change the law.

As an appeals court judge, Barrett joined a dissent in 2018 when her colleagues struck down an Indiana law, signed by Mike Pence when he was governor, that would have outlawed abortions that were based on the race, sex or disability of a fetus. The dissent, written by appeals court Judge Frank Easterbroo­k, referred to the Indiana statute as “an anti-eugenics law.”

Indiana took the case to the Supreme Court, which in May of 2019, after five months of internal debate, refused to hear the state’s appeal. The justices voted to uphold a less significan­t part of the law that required abortion clinics to bury or cremate fetal remains.

Although the Supreme Court has had a conservati­ve majority for years, it has repeatedly disappoint­ed antiaborti­on activists. In June, Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr., who had been a steady foe of abortion, voted with the court’s four liberals, including Ginsburg, to strike down a Louisiana law regulating abortion clinics.

Roberts said he was constraine­d to follow precedent: The Louisiana law was identical to a Texas statute that had been struck down in 2016. Justices Samuel A. Alito Jr., Neil M. Gorsuch, Brett M. Kavanaugh and Thomas sharply dissented.

If Barrett joins them in the fall, the court will have at least five and possibly six justices who are inclined to give the states far more authority to restrict or even forbid abortion. And the issue is likely to be tested soon, since a dozen Republican­led states have recently passed measures that would ban some or nearly all abortions.

She has strongly indicated that she takes a less strict view of when to follow precedents, a legal principle known as stare decisis.

“Stare decisis is not a hard-and-fast rule in the Court’s constituti­onal cases,” Barrett wrote in a 2013 law review article, explaining: “I tend to agree with those who say that a justice’s duty is to the Constituti­on and that it is thus more legitimate for her to enforce her best understand­ing of the Constituti­on rather than a precedent she thinks clearly in conflict with it.”

The issue of precedent has become the focus of extraordin­ary attention in Supreme Court confirmati­ons, largely because of the divide over abortion.

Thomas was asked repeatedly about Roe and abortion in his hearings. He said he had not had time to debate the issue. Eight months after joining the court, he voted in dissent to overturn the Roe ruling entirely.

When Roberts and Alito had their hearings, they told senators that Roe was a precedent that deserved respect. Gorsuch and Kavanaugh also described Roe as a “settled precedent” that had been reaffirmed in more recent cases, notably a 1992 case called Planned Parenthood vs. Casey. The court’s precedents should not be overturned lightly, they said.

Clues to Barrett’s views come not just from her articles, but also from a letter she signed in 2012 with other conservati­ve academics that sharply criticized the Obama administra­tion’s rule that required religious employers, acting through their insurers, to provide a full range of contracept­ives to their female employees.

“Compelling religious people and institutio­ns” to play a role in providing “abortion inducing drugs” is a “grave violation of religious freedom,” the letter said.

Abortion rights advocates said they were alarmed by her nomination.

“Judge Barrett’s record suggests that there isn’t a restrictio­n on abortion that she doesn’t support,” said Leila Abolfazli, director of reproducti­ve rights for the National Women’s Law Center.

By contrast, Helen M. Alvaré, a critic of abortion rights who teaches at the Antonin Scalia Law School at George Mason University in Arlington, Va., said Barrett had not spelled out her views on the right to abortion.

“But should she be skeptical of Roe and Casey, this simply puts her in the company of numerous male and female constituti­onal scholars who have concluded that the U.S. Constituti­on is silent on abortion, which is rather a subject for state law.”

“Self-described women’s groups should be ecstatic that, in the 21st Century, a woman who is highly accomplish­ed both intellectu­ally and in her family life, has made it all the way to the very top of a previously male-dominated arena,” Alvaré said.

On gun rights, Barrett could extend Scalia’s legacy.

Last year, she dissented when the 7th Circuit, in a 2-1 ruling, upheld federal law and took away the gun rights of a Wisconsin resident who had pleaded guilty to defrauding Medicare.

“Legislatur­es have the power to prohibit dangerous people from possessing guns,” Barrett wrote in Kanter vs. Barr. “But that power extends only to people who are dangerous.”

UCLA law professor Adam Winkler said Barrett is “likely to be a strong vote in favor of relatively expansive 2nd Amendment rights.”

“She apparently has a broader view of gun rights than even Justice Scalia,” he added, noting that in the court’s 2008 ruling in District of Columbia vs. Heller, which said the 2nd Amendment covered an individual’s right to own a gun, Scalia “explicitly said he was not casting doubt on felon-possession bans.”

For the last decade, the high court has refused to go beyond rulings in 2008 and 2010 that struck down citywide bans on handguns in Washington, D.C., and Chicago. The justices recently turned away challenges to state measures, including in California, that limit who can carry a concealed weapon or restrict the sale of rapid-fire rif les.

“With Barrett there will likely be five justices in favor of expanding 2nd Amendment protection­s,” Winkler said.

Democrats are also likely to argue that Barrett represents a threat to Obamacare and its insurance protection­s for tens of millions of Americans with preexistin­g medical conditions.

On Nov. 10, a week after the election, the high court is scheduled to hear a case brought by Texas’ Republican attorney general and supported by the Trump administra­tion that seeks to strike down the entire law, including the protection­s for people with preexistin­g conditions.

The case is called California vs. Texas because, unlike most cases involving a federal law, California Atty. Gen. Xavier Becerra, not the Justice Department, is defending Obamacare.

It is not clear whether Barrett will participat­e if she is confirmed by then. But if the current justices were to split 4 to 4 on the outcome, they would probably hear a second round of arguments so Barrett could cast the deciding vote.

In her writings, she has been highly critical of Chief Justice Roberts for casting the key votes to preserve the law in 2012 and 2015 over fierce dissents by Scalia. Roberts “pushed the Affordable Care Act beyond its plausible meaning to save the statute,” she wrote in a 2017 article.

Barrett was born in New Orleans in 1972 and was raised in Metairie, the eldest of seven children. Her father was a lawyer for Shell Oil Co. She attended a Roman Catholic girls high school there and graduated from Rhodes College in Memphis, Tenn., a private liberal arts school affiliated with the Presbyteri­an Church. She then went to Notre Dame Law School, where she graduated first in her class in 1997.

She came to Washington to clerk for Judge Laurence Silberman on the D.C. Circuit and then for Justice Scalia during the 1998-99 Supreme Court term. She worked several years in Washington before returning to South Bend, Ind., in 2002 to begin a teaching career at Notre Dame.

She and her husband, Jesse Barrett, a former prosecutor who is now in private practice, have seven children, including one with Down syndrome and two who were adopted from Haiti.

In Trump’s first year in office, she was nominated and confirmed to the 7th Circuit.

Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic this year, she regularly commuted nearly two hours from South Bend to Chicago to hear cases.

 ?? Jose Luis Magana Associated Press ?? BOTH SIDES in the battle over abortion rally outside the U.S. Supreme Court in March. Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett could figure as a key vote on the issue.
Jose Luis Magana Associated Press BOTH SIDES in the battle over abortion rally outside the U.S. Supreme Court in March. Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett could figure as a key vote on the issue.

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