Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Court will have 6 Catholics if Barrett joins

Politics, not faith, set them apart and matter most now, experts say.

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Roman Catholics account for a bit more than 20% of the U.S. population, yet they are on track to hold six of the Supreme Court’s nine seats now that President Trump has nominated Amy Coney Barrett to fill its vacancy.

It’s a striking developmen­t given that the court, for most of its history, was populated almost entirely by white male Protestant­s. Catholic academics and political analysts offer several explanatio­ns for the turnaround — related to Catholics’ educationa­l traditions and interest in the law, and — in the case of Catholic conservati­ves — an outlook that has appealed to recent Republican presidents filling judicial vacancies.

Barrett, a favorite of conservati­ve activists for her views on abortion and other issues, will likely be an ideologica­l opposite of liberal icon Ruth Bader Ginsburg, the Jewish justice whose recent death created the vacancy.

Margaret McGuinness, a professor of religion at La Salle University in Philadelph­ia, noted that Sonia Sotomayor is the only current Catholic justice appointed by a Democrat. The others — Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr., Samuel A. Alito Jr., Clarence Thomas and Brett M. Kavanaugh — were appointed by Republican­s.

“They were appointed because they were conservati­ve, not because they were Catholic,” said McGuinness.

She said Republican­s sought nominees who would be part of an effort to overturn the 1973 Roe vs. Wade decision, which made abortion legal nationwide .

Catholics also are well

represente­d in Congress — holding just over 30% of the seats. Yet there’s still been only one Catholic president, John F. Kennedy. Trump’s Democratic challenger, Joe Biden, will be the second if he wins.

Charles Camosy, a professor of theologica­l and social ethics at Fordham University, suggested that education was a factor in the high proportion of Catholic justices.

“For many decades in the United States, Catholic schools were a much better option for serious students than were public schools, and in many cases still are,” he said. “It is possible that this accounts for a disproport­ionate number of Catholics getting into very good colleges and then into very good law schools.”

Camosy also observed

that the Catholic population in the U.S. “is wildly, almost impossibly diverse.”

“Catholics find themselves on the far left, on the far right, and everywhere else,” he said. “No one should worry that Catholics on the Supreme Court will all agree with each other about matters of legal interpreta­tion.”

He cited Sotomayor, with liberal views, and Thomas, a staunch conservati­ve, as examples.

Roger Taney became the first Roman Catholic to serve on the court when he was made chief justice in 1836. He subsequent­ly became infamous for writing the Dred Scott decision in 1857 that upheld the institutio­n of slavery and ruled that Black people could not be U.S. citizens.

There was a so-called Catholic seat on the court

for several decades in the 20th century. But until the late 1980s, no more than two Catholic justices had ever served together.

Seven of the eight Republican appointees since 1986 have been Catholic or, like Neil M. Gorsuch, were raised Catholic. Gorsuch now attends a Protestant church; his Catholic mother, the late Anne Gorsuch Burford, was a militantly antiaborti­on legislator in Colorado before joining the Reagan administra­tion in 1981 to head the Environmen­tal Protection Agency.

There has been a majority of Catholic justices on the Supreme Court since Alito joined in 2006.

Sotomayor is the only Democratic nominee in that period who is Catholic. The other three — Ginsburg, Stephen G. Breyer and El

ena Kagan — have been Jewish.

John Gehring, Catholic program director at the Washington-based clergy network Faith in Public Life, said Catholics are major players in the conservati­ve legal movement who invest in law schools and in wellfunded networks that often serve as pipelines to highprofil­e judicial appointmen­ts.

“The Catholic intellectu­al tradition has produced giants of liberal thought as well, but in recent decades the right has done a better job building institutio­ns that nurture pathways to power,” Gehring said via email.

“The problem is not how many justices are Catholic,” he added. “The cause for alarm is the court’s ideologica­l lurch to the right, and what that means for healthcare, voting rights and other moral issues at stake in this election.”

Thomas Groome, a professor of theology and religious education at Boston College, suggested the high percentage of Catholic justices was coincident­al.

“I don’t think there’s any scheme or plot to bring Catholics to the Supreme Court,” he said. “Catholics are now mainstream in the life of American culture, and they have the resources to get the kind of education and opportunit­ies that are needed if one is going to rise that high.”

Referring to the high court’s six conservati­ves, Groome said he preferred the term “traditiona­list” and said he hoped they would not overturn the healthcare plan implemente­d by President Obama.

“If they are Catholic in the tradition of Pope Francis or Jesus of Nazareth, the last thing in the world they should do is vote against the Affordable Care Act,” he said.

In 2017, in Senate hearings on Barrett’s nomination to a federal appeals court, she was met with some aggressive questionin­g about whether her Catholic faith would cloud her legal judgments.

Catholic League President Bill Donohue, who seeks to combat perceived anti-Catholic bias, says similar questionin­g is unlikely this time around.

“Those who made those remarks paid a heavy price for doing so,” he wrote on his group’s website.

Sara Hutchinson Ratcliffe, acting president of Catholics for Choice, said she remained concerned.

“As Catholics, certainly our faith helps us to form our conscience and our ideas and how we live our faith,” she said. “But our religious beliefs should never be a substitute for impartial jurisprude­nce.”

 ?? Alex Brandon Associated Press ?? JUDGE AMY CONEY BARRETT, with the president after he announced her nomination, is politicall­y conservati­ve like four of five current Catholic justices, whose stances have appealed to recent GOP presidents.
Alex Brandon Associated Press JUDGE AMY CONEY BARRETT, with the president after he announced her nomination, is politicall­y conservati­ve like four of five current Catholic justices, whose stances have appealed to recent GOP presidents.

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