Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

A silver lining in Barrett’s nomination

- Ruth Marcus Columnist

If there’s a silver lining in the Barrett nomination, however micro-thin, it is her motherhood.

The tableau was striking, and impressive. Soonto-be Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett left her home in South Bend, Indiana, with seven children in tow, seven well-behaved, well-groomed children. The son she adopted from Haiti held the hand of her youngest son, who has Down syndrome. Her oldest daughters ushered the younger ones into the car. It took one minivan and one SUV to hold them all.

I have written a number of critical things about Barrett; I’m sure there will be more, both before and after she is confirmed. But I want to pause here and remark on Barrett’s family, and her motherhood. That subject is not off-limits. It’s a plus.

It sends an important signal to women — and men, for that matter — who may disagree strongly with the judge’s philosophy but cannot help but come away with the message from her selection:

It’s possible to manage family and career, however imperfectl­y and stressfull­y. Success at work does not require giving up the chance to have children, not if you want them.

It was, of course, politicall­y self-serving for President Trump to note, as he did at the White House several hours later, that Barrett will “make history as the first mother of school-aged children ever to serve on the U.S. Supreme Court.” Pause here to observe, with a touch of bitterness, that no one considers it a particular achievemen­t for a male justice to have both robes to put on and kids to get to school. We just lard on the praise for their basketball coaching and assume there’s a wife to handle the rest.

It was similarly self-serving for Barrett, in the Rose Garden, to offer, “While I am a judge, I’m better known back home as a room parent, carpool driver and birthday party planner.” That’s what these events are about, after all — to show the nominee as unscary and relatable, as relatable as a Supreme Court nominee can be. Thus Barrett, whose membership in a religious community that once described women as “handmaids” has attracted some controvers­y, took pains to portray hers as a thoroughly modern marriage, with a lawyer husband who “does far more than his share of the work.”

Barrett’s seven children shouldn’t be a bigger deal than Antonin Scalia’s nine. The point of feminism is that women get to have the final say whether to have children and how many — and, yes, as I’ll get to later, it is a painful irony that Barrett seems likely to erase the right to choose. If few of us could manage the feat of seven children and a demanding career, Barrett appears to have superhuman endurance, and good for her, as Grigoriadi­s eventually acknowledg­ed. “More power to ACB and her ability to raise 7 kids.”

More power, indeed. Barrett’s nomination is significan­t in this regard because she presents a different role model than the four previous female justices. Two — Sandra Day O’Connor and Ruth Bader Ginsburg — married and had children. But their children (O’Connor’s three sons; Ginsburg’s daughter and son) were grown by the time they joined the court. The two serving female justices — Elena Kagan and Sonia Sotomayor — are unmarried and do not have children.

Perhaps it’s a coincidenc­e that Kagan and Sotomayor don’t have children; perhaps it’s a reflection of the difficulti­es of managing the highest-powered of careers and family life, or of the challenges that some particular­ly accomplish­ed women face in finding partners willing to accommodat­e those whose achievemen­ts might eclipse theirs. Not everyone is lucky enough to find a Marty Ginsburg, who reveled in his wife’s brilliance, except in the kitchen.

I’m under no illusion about Barrett’s jurisprude­nce and whether her having children tempers it in any way that might make it more palatable from my point of view. Quite the contrary. Barrett reportedly learned of her son’s Down syndrome through prenatal testing and chose to continue the pregnancy. She would, it appears, deny others the freedom to make a different decision, as two-thirds say they would.

Being a parent didn’t make Barrett any more sympatheti­c to the plight of Zahoor Ahmed, a Yemeni woman married to a U.S. citizen. Ahmed’s visa was denied on the grounds that she had attempted to smuggle two children into the country. She argued that the children were hers, she couldn’t have smuggled them into the country because they had drowned, and submitted the police report from the accident. None of this mattered to Barrett, who said the court lacked power to review the decision.

But if there’s a silver lining in the Barrett nomination, however micro-thin, it is her motherhood. O’Connor and Ginsburg paved the way, decades before, for an achievemen­t they could not have imagined, a mother of seven at the top of her profession. How bitterswee­t that she seems poised to demolish so much of their legacy.

Ruth Marcus is syndicated by the Washington Post Writers Group.

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