Monterey Herald

Barrett tells doubtful Dems she’d keep open mind on court

- By Lisa Mascaro, Mark Sherman and Laurie Kellman

WASHINGTON >> Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett presented herself Wednesday in her final round of Senate confirmati­on questionin­g as a judge with a traditiona­l approach, holding deep personal and religious beliefs but committed to keeping an open mind on what would become a 6-3 conservati­ve majority court.

Senate Republican­s are championin­g President Donald Trump’s pick, who adheres to a strict reading of the Constituti­on. Doubtful Democrats are digging deeper into the judge’s approach to health care, abortion, racial equity and voting rights, but they are running out of time to stop her quick confirmati­on.

The conservati­ve late Justice Antonin Scalia was a mentor, but Barrett said when confronted with his rulings and outspoken comments that she is her own judge.

“When I said that Justice Scalia’s philosophy is mine, too, I certainly didn’t mean to say that every sentence that came out of Justice Scalia’s mouth or every sentence that he wrote is one that I would agree with,” Barrett told the Senate Judiciary Committee,

The judge was being asked about several of Scalia’s decisions, some controvers­ial. She did not respond directly to Sen. Dianne Feinstein, the top Democrat on the panel, who asked whether Barrett agreed with Scalia’s view that the civil rights era Voting Rights Act was a “perpetuati­on of racial entitlemen­t.” Barrett said Scalia’s approach — “originalis­m and texturalis­m” — is hers as well. But without discussing the specifics of that case, she called the Voting Rights Act a “triumph in the civil rights movement.”

When Democratic Sen. Chris Coons of Delaware ran through several of Scalia’s opinions including his dissent in the landmark 2105 Obergefell v. Hodges gay marriage case he wanted to know just “how closely” she stood by his views.

“I hope you’re not suggesting I don’t have my own mind,” Barrett said.

Sen. Lindsey Graham, RS.C., opened the final day of her testimony praising Trump’s nominee as an “unashamedl­y pro-life” conservati­ve who is making history as a role model for other women.

Her nomination to replace the late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg has ground other legislativ­e business to a halt as Republican­s excited by the prospect of locking in a 6-3 conservati­ve court majority race to confirm her over Democratic objections before Election Day.

“She’s going to the court,” Graham said. “This is the first time in American history that we’ve nominated a woman who’s unashamedl­y pro-life and embraces her faith without apology.”

Democratic Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois agreed Barrett is making history — but as the first nominee considered so close to a presidenti­al election, tapped to fulfill the president’s public quest to install a ninth justice in time to undo the Affordable Care Act in a case heading to the court Nov. 10.

Durbin called Trump’s intent to dismantle the health care law a cloud — “an orange cloud” — over her nomination, a political slam at the president’s tan.

“They need that ninth justice, that’s why it has to be hurried,” Durbin said.

Barrett’s nomination has been the focus at a Capitol mostly shut down by COVID-19 protocols. The health care debate has been central to the week’s hearings, as Americans struggle during the pandemic, drawing a sharp exchange among senators at one point

Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, scoffed that few Democratic senators attended the hearing. Durbin retorted that health risks left many senators monitoring from their offices rather than convening as a group. Two GOP senators who tested positive for COVID-19 after attending Barrett’s nomination at the White House now say they are symptom free and attending in person.

As Democrats probed Barrett’s views, Durbin asked if her strict adherence to originalis­m means a president could not “unilateral­ly deny the right to vote” based on race, noting restrictio­ns on mail-in ballots being erected in several states before Nov. 3.

She agreed there are “many laws” that protect the right to vote, including the 14th and 15th Amendments to the Constituti­on, but stopped short of a blanket statement: “I really can’t say anything more.”

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