The Oklahoman

A pick that would be bad news for abortion

- Ruth Marcus ruthmarcus@ washpost.com WASHINGTON POST WRITERS GROUP

WASHINGTON— No Supreme Court nominee is a completely safe bet. No one knows for certain how he or she would rule on a particular case until the moment arises.

And yet: Of all the potential Supreme Court nominees President

Trump is considerin­g, the one who seems most inclined to undo Justice

Anthony M. Kennedy's work and overturn Roe v.

Wade as completely and quickly as possible is Amy

Coney Barrett, a 46-yearold newly minted federal appeals court judge.

Maybe any of those on Trump's Federalist Society-vetted list would leap at the chance to dump Roe, or at least to interpret the current standard— limits on abortion are permissibl­e if they do not constitute an undue burden— in a way that would drain it of real meaning.

But there remains a big difference between outright overruling and cramped interpreta­tion. And while Barrett has the shortest judicial paper trail of the likely nominees, her academic writings are the equivalent of a flashing neon sign: I'll do it.

This outcome can be predicted from two strands of Barrett's writings. The first is her 1998 article with John H. Garvey, "Catholic Judges in Capital Cases," discussing the ethical obligation­s faced by judges who are observant Catholics and who are called on to handle death penalty cases. What comes through in Barrett's discussion is her thoughtful­ness, deep commitment to her faith— and moral opposition to abortion.

The article asks how judges, "obliged by oath, profession­al commitment, and the demands of citizenshi­p to enforce the death penalty" should balance that against the duty "to adhere to their church's teaching on moral matters." Barrett and Garvey ultimately conclude that "if one cannot in conscience affirm a death sentence the proper response is to recuse oneself."

Repeatedly, however, they distinguis­h between capital punishment and abortion or euthanasia. "Criminals deserve punishment for their crimes; aged and unborn victims are innocent," they write.

And in endorsing judicial recusal, they cite a law review article urging the same result for an anti-abortion judge who is compelled by precedent— and the status of being a lower-court judge— to uphold that right.

"The abortion case is a bit easier, we think," they write. "Both the state and the unborn child's mother are (at least typically) acting with gross unfairness to the unborn child, whereas the moral objection to capital punishment is not that it is unfair to the offender."

OK, but does that mean Barrett would overturn Roe? Here is where the second strand comes in: a series of law review articles in which Barrett outlines her view that the Supreme Court should not be so tightly bound by the doctrine of adhering to precedent— stare decisis— especially on matters of constituti­onal law.

"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," Barrett wrote in 2013.

In a 2003 article, Barrett called for a more "flexible" understand­ing of stare decisis, arguing that courts should be less focused, in deciding whether to overrule a case, on so-called reliance interests— the degree to which a decision has been woven into the settled expectatio­ns of those affected.

Maybe a Justice Barrett would be more cautious than Notre Dame Law School Professor Barrett sounds. Maybe the chief justice would be reluctant to pull the trigger on Roe with just five votes. But this is already a court that has proved its willingnes­s to overrule inconvenie­nt precedents by a single vote. Adding Barrett would pose a clear and present danger to abortion rights.

"However cagey a justice may be at the nomination stage," Barrett observed in 2013, "her approach to the Constituti­on becomes evident in the opinions she writes." By then, of course, it would be too late.

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