Los Angeles Times

In defense of ‘ textualism’

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Re “Judge Barrett’s antidemocr­atic philosophy,” Opinion, Oct. 4

Judge Amy Coney Barrett, President Trump’s nominee to the U. S. Supreme Court, has written decisions and scholarly articles dealing with “textualism,” but in her op- ed article law professor Victoria Nourse does not critique any specific writing by Barrett.

Instead, Nourse repeatedly cites and quotes the late Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia. Nourse generally misreads the expressed ideas of Barrett and Scalia on “textualism,” thinking that it is a substitute for statutory interpreta­tion.

Scalia and Barrett have said that “interpreta­tion” must be used only if the statute language is unclear, and the scrutiny begins with the text but it does not end there. They discard the method of picking through legislativ­e history in an attempt to discover some basis to justify a liberal interpreta­tion of the law, regardless of the text.

They assert that the text of the statute must first be scrutinize­d if it is asserted that the law is unclear, to see whether there’s a way to implement it. Makes sense, doesn’t it? Larry Lacombe

Los Angeles

The United States, which has been a fervent critic of the injustices in some Islamist countries caused by their adherence to a literal reading and strict textual understand­ing of the Koran, seems now under the threat of turning the Supreme Court into an institutio­n dominated by constituti­onal absolutes.

Barrett’s judicial record clearly indicates her textual approach to the Constituti­on as an instrument that should be interprete­d according to the meaning that is “clear” upon the face of its text, and in accordance with arguments that align with the America of the 18th century.

But much has changed since the days of the founding fathers, and any interpreti­ve methods of the Constituti­on must take into considerat­ion the modern world.

We should be aware that even textual literalism is not immune to the inf luence of personal bias in understand­ing the text, no matter how objective the assertions appear to be.

Berta Graciano- Buchman

Beverly Hills

My concern is not with any of Nourse’s arguments, but with the interchang­eable use of Obamacare and the Affordable Care Act. In two separate paragraphs it’s Obamacare, and in another two it’s the Affordable Care Act.

This happens often. Make up your mind.

It reminds me of a post on Facebook I saw in which a person does not like Obamacare, but don’t touch the Affordable Care Act.

Nanilee Root Mentone

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