New York Post

Barrett Is Best

An inspiring, smart successor to RBG

- Twitter: @SohrabAhma­ri — Compiled by the Post Editorial Board

PICTURE a female jurist who has consistent­ly defied social expectatio­ns imposed on women and whose legal thinking is closely bound up with her faith. No, I’m not talking about Amy Coney Barrett, reported to top President Trump’s list of candidates to fill the late Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s seat. I’m talking about Ginsburg herself.

Ginsburg believed fervently that convention­al expectatio­ns shouldn’t hinder women as they seek their full, fair share of public life. Nor was she shy about how her Jewish faith shaped her judicial mind. In an essay for the American Jewish Committee published in 1993, she wrote: “Laws as protectors of the oppressed, the poor, the loner, is evident in the work of my Jewish predecesso­rs . . . . The biblical command ‘Justice, justice shalt thou pursue’ is a strand that ties them together.”

By those criteria, Barrett would make a most worthy successor to RBG. In nominating the 48-yearold Louisiania­n, the president would present the nation with an inspiring vision of what it means to be an American woman in

2020 — one that could by turns surprise and captivate the suburban women Trump is keen to court while also delivering for the GOP base.

“Amy represents an opportunit­y to showcase a generation­ally brilliant, special intellect — who also is a mom,” says O. Carter Snead, Barrett’s longtime faculty colleague at the Notre Dame law school, where Barrett also received her law degree.

Her rare combinatio­n of hyperintel­ligence and humility is a matter of bipartisan consensus. “The smartest person in the room and also the most humble” was how Snead and two other sources intimately familiar with Barrett described her, echoing each other almost verbatim.

Harvard Law School prof Noah Feldman — a liberal who testified before Congress in favor of impeaching the president — hailed her as “a truly brilliant lawyer” in a 2018 column. Feldman should know. He and Barrett were members of the same class of Supreme Court clerks in 1998.

“She was one of the two best lawyers” of the 40 clerks “and arguably the single best.” Feldman concluded: “She was legally prepared enough to go on the court 20 years ago.”

When Trump nominated Barrett to the Seventh Circuit, every single one of those 40 fellow clerks endorsed her as a “firstrate” thinker, including such vehemently antiTrump figures as Neal Katyal, solicitor general under Team Obama. The entire Notre Dame law faculty likewise endorsed her, “and that includes people who identify as liberal,” as Snead was quick to note.

She is recognized as an expert on how judges are supposed to interpret statutes — a crucial role, as demonstrat­ed by Justice Neil Gorsuch’s bizarre recent reading of “gender identity” into a civil-rights statute enacted in the 1960s. She has also thought deeply about the relationsh­ip between the branches of government, a gnarly and seriously important area of law.

To these achievemen­ts Barrett marries a vibrant Christian faith. For the evangelica­ls and Catholics the president needs to turn out in November, her prolife bona fides are on display not just in her activities and statements, but also in her own family: She is a mother of seven, including one biological child with intellectu­al disabiliti­es and two adopted from Haiti.

Yes, Democrats and their media allies will attack and demonize her — viciously. But that’s no reason to nominate other candidates who have no record on life issues. As one conservati­ve activist told me, “the left is going to burn everything down no matter whom we pick, so we might as well get the right person on the court.”

One senior Hill staffer was even blunter: “This late in the game, I’m not interested in today’s version of [George H.W. Bush chief of staff John] Sununu vouching for today’s version of [Justice David] Souter” — i.e., social conservati­ves don’t want to gamble on a candidate without a clear record on life and religious-liberty questions, only to have the justice with a lifetime appointmen­t turn out to be a liberal squish.

The inherent dignity of all life is no mere slogan or academic concept for Barrett. Perhaps a large family like hers is unusual for a woman of Barrett’s social class and profession. Then again, as one highly accomplish­ed lawyer put it in 2007, it’s “good for the public to see that women come in all sizes and shapes, just as men do, and they don’t necessaril­y look alike or think alike.”

That lawyer was Ruth Bader Ginsburg.

Sohrab Ahmari is The Post’s op-ed editor and author of the forthcomin­g book “The Unbroken Thread: Discoverin­g the Wisdom of Tradition in an Age of Chaos.”

 ??  ?? Superwoman: All of her fellow Supreme Court clerks — including anti-Trump lefties — have endorsed Judge Barrett’s excellence.
Superwoman: All of her fellow Supreme Court clerks — including anti-Trump lefties — have endorsed Judge Barrett’s excellence.
 ??  ?? SOHRAB AHMARI
SOHRAB AHMARI

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