Santa Cruz Sentinel

Things to know about court nominee Amy Coney Barrett

- By Jessica Gresko

WASHINGTON >> Confirmati­on hearings begin Monday for President Donald Trump’s Supreme Court nominee, Amy Coney Barrett. If confirmed, the 48-year- old appeals court judge would fill the seat of liberal Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, who died last month.

Ginsburg’s replacemen­t by Barrett, a conservati­ve, would shift the balance on the court significan­tly right, from 5- 4 in favor of conservati­ves to 6-3. Here are things to know about her:

Education

Barrett was born in Louisiana and attended Rhodes College, a liberal arts school in Memphis, Tennessee, as an undergradu­ate. She went to law school in Indiana, at Notre Dame, on a full scholarshi­p. She’d be the only justice on the current court not to have attended either Harvard or Yale for law school.

Barrett was a law professor at Notre Dame for 15 years before Trump nominated her to become a federal appeals court judge in 2017.

Judicial philosophy

Barret has said that her judicial philosophy is the same as that of the late Justice Antonin Scalia,

whom she worked for after law school and has called a mentor. Scalia described himself as an “originalis­t,” interpreti­ng laws and the Constituti­on based on what they were understood to mean when they were written.

“Judges must apply the law as written,” Barrett said when she spoke at the announceme­nt of her nomination in the White House Rose Garden last month. “Judges are not policymake­rs.”

Record

Barrett’s short tenure as a judge on the 7th U. S. Circuit Court of Appeals has led to few noteworthy or controvers­ial opinions. She has, however, signed onto several decisions that she is sure to be questioned about during her confirmati­on hearing.

In 2018, a three-judge panel ruled that Indiana laws requiring that funerals be held for fetal remains after an abortion or miscarriag­e and banning abortions because of the sex, race or developmen­tal disability of a fetus were unconstitu­tional.

Barrett was among four judges who wanted the full court to weigh in and suggested that the laws might be constituti­onal. And last year, after a three-judge panel blocked an Indiana law that would make it harder for a minor to have an abortion without her parents being notified, Barrett voted to have the case reheard by the full court.

In a dissent in a 2019 gun-rights case, Barrett argued that a conviction for a nonviolent felony shouldn’t automatica­lly disqualify someone from owning a gun. Also in 2019 Barrett wrote a unanimous threejudge panel decision making it easier for men alleged to have committed sexual assaults on campus to challenge the proceeding­s against them.

Faith

Barrett would be the seventh member of the court either to be Catholic or have been raised Catholic. But she’s been somewhat more vocal about her faith than other members, and faith became a flashpoint during her confirmati­on to be an appeals court judge.

 ?? MANUEL BALCE CENETA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? On Oct. 1, President Donald Trump’s Supreme Court nominee Judge Amy Coney Barrett listens as Sen. Jerry Moran, R-Kan., not shown, speaks during their meeting on Capitol Hill in Washington.
MANUEL BALCE CENETA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS On Oct. 1, President Donald Trump’s Supreme Court nominee Judge Amy Coney Barrett listens as Sen. Jerry Moran, R-Kan., not shown, speaks during their meeting on Capitol Hill in Washington.

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