USA TODAY US Edition

Supreme Court nominee Amy Barrett signed anti-abortion letter in 2006.

- Josh Salman and Kevin McCoy Contributi­ng: Richard Wolf, Christal Hayes

While a law professor at the University of Notre Dame, Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett was among hundreds who signed an antiaborti­on letter that accompanie­d a January 2006 newspaper ad calling for “an end to the barbaric legacy of Roe v. Wade.”

The two-page advertisem­ent was placed in the South Bend Tribune by the Indiana anti-abortion group St. Joseph County Right to Life. On one page, Barrett and her husband Jesse’s names appear under the message “We, the following citizens ... oppose abortion on demand and defend the right to life from fertilizat­ion to natural death.”

On the next page, the anti-abortion group attacked the 1973 Supreme Court ruling that it said, “legalized abortion for any reason” and allowed late-term abortions, which it referred to as “the brutal partial-birth abortion procedure.”

Barrett, who met with senators at the Capitol on Thursday, declined to respond to questions about the ad. The existence of the ad was first revealed by The Guardian.

Experts say it’s not surprising that she opposes abortion, given her religious beliefs and conservati­ve tutelage. She’s viewed as an acolyte to the late Justice Antonin Scalia, for whom she clerked.

But the appearance of Barrett’s name next to a call to overturn Roe v. Wade is likely to increase scrutiny of her nomination. The Senate Judiciary Committee plans to begin confirmati­on hearings Oct. 12.

Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California, the top Democrat on the committee, said the ad, Barrett’s comments on precedent and her record on the bench “raise serious concerns about whether she would uphold the law.”

The Republican-led committee did not comment on the ad, pointing instead to Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham’s comments after meeting with Barrett on Tuesday.

“I think the American people are going to see over the coming days someone who is very capable of understand­ing the difference between personal beliefs – whatever they may have, we all have personal beliefs – and that of being a judge,” Graham said.

If the 48-year-old is confirmed, conservati­ves would lock in a 6-3 majority, probably for years to come.

During Tuesday night’s presidenti­al debate, former Vice President Joe Biden said abortion rights are on the ballot. Jumping in, President Donald Trump said: “You don’t know her (Barrett’s) view on Roe v. Wade.”

Experts predict a more conservati­ve Supreme Court would not immediatel­y overturn Roe v. Wade because the cases before them would be more narrowly targeted and justices wouldn’t want to shift so quickly from precedent.

Instead, abortion rights groups believe Barrett’s appointmen­t would allow justices to effectivel­y secure the same end by upholding state abortion restrictio­ns.

At an event held just before the 2016 presidenti­al election, Barrett said she expects a conservati­ve court could address abortion regulation­s, but not the right to abortion itself.

“I don’t think that abortion or the right to abortion would change. I think some of the restrictio­ns would change,” Barrett said at an event sponsored by Jacksonvil­le University’s Public Policy Institute. “I think the question is how much freedom the court is willing to let states have in regulating abortion.”

She referred to a June 2016 ruling in which the court voted 5-3, without Scalia, to strike down restrictio­ns on Texas doctors and clinics that provide abortions.

“The court has held in some circumstan­ces the states can render partialbir­th abortions illegal – very late-term abortions,” Barrett said during the Jacksonvil­le University event. “I think that’s the kind of thing that could change. ... Whether people can get very late-term abortions, how many restrictio­ns could be put on clinics, I think that would change.”

That’s what abortion rights advocates fear.

“The court will kill Roe v. Wade slowly by 1,000 cuts,” said Lawrence Gostin, a law professor at Georgetown University who specialize­s in public health. “Any state law that puts restrictio­ns on abortion, other than a complete ban, has a good chance of being upheld by the Supreme Court.”

A conservati­ve shift will have disproport­ionate effects on women who are poor, lack access to health care or live in rural communitie­s. Women who are more financiall­y secure may be more able to commute to another state with fewer restrictio­ns, Gostin said.

“There’s a lot the court can do to make it virtually impossible for poor women in red states to get an abortion,” he said.

Most recently, the court struck down a Louisiana law that required doctors performing abortions to have admitting privileges at nearby hospitals. The justices agreed to hear the case after a federal appeals court had upheld the law – despite a Supreme Court ruling in 2016 striking down a similar Texas law as an undue burden on women seeking abortions.

This time, anti-abortion forces expected a different result. Associate Justice Anthony Kennedy, who voted to strike down the Texas law, had retired. His successor was Associate Justice Brett Kavanaugh, who had praised Chief Justice William Rehnquist’s dissent in Roe v. Wade. As a federal appeals court judge, Kavanaugh had dissented from a decision in 2017 allowing an undocument­ed teenager in government custody to get an abortion.

But in the end, Chief Justice John Roberts switched sides and voted with liberals to strike down the Louisiana law. Kavanaugh would have let it stand.

Steve Aden, chief legal officer for Americans United for Life, called Roe v. Wade “example A for rampant judicial activism.” His organizati­on was among the first anti-abortion groups to support Barrett.

Similar anti-abortion ads were placed in the South Bend Tribune at least 11 times from 1992 through 2019. Of those 11 ads, Barrett and her husband’s names appeared only in 2006, according to an online search of the paper’s archives.

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