The Macomb Daily

Justices Barrett and Sotomayor, ideologica­l opposites, unite to promote civility during appearance­s

- By Mark Sherman And Lindsay Whitehurst

With the Supreme Court’s approval hovering near record lows, two justices have teamed up to promote the art of disagreein­g without being nasty about it.

In joint appearance­s less than three weeks apart, Justices Amy Coney Barrett and Sonia Sotomayor, ideologica­l opposites, said the need for civil debate has never been greater than it is in these polarized times. And they said the Supreme Court, where voices don’t get raised in anger, can be a model for the rest of the country.

“I don’t think any of us has a ‘my way or the highway’ attitude,” said Barrett, who is promoting compromise from a position of strength as part of the high court’s super-majority of conservati­ve justices. She spoke Tuesday at a conference of civics educators in Washington.

Sotomayor, speaking at a meeting of the nation’s governors in late February, said the justices’ pens can be sharp but also deft in writing opinions. “There are so many, many things that you can do to bring the temperatur­e down and to have you functionin­g together as a group to getting something done that has a benefit in the law,” she said.

Oddly enough, Barrett used strikingly similar language to criticize Sotomayor and the other two liberal justices less than two weeks ago.

The nine justices unanimousl­y rejected state efforts to kick Republican former President Donald Trump off 2024 ballots over his efforts to undo his election loss to Democrat Joe Biden four years ago. But the three liberals criticized

the court for going too far.

“We cannot join an opinion that decides momentous and difficult issues unnecessar­ily, and we, therefore, concur only in the judgment,” Justices Ketanji Brown Jackson, Elena Kagan and Sotomayor wrote in a joint opinion.

Barrett basically agreed with them. But she didn’t like the tone.

“In my judgment, this is not the time to amplify disagreeme­nt with stridency. The Court has settled a politicall­y charged issue in the volatile season of a Presidenti­al election,” Barrett wrote. “Particular­ly in this circumstan­ce, writings on the Court should turn the national temperatur­e down, not up.”

Barrett is rarely in dissent on a court that, relatively soon after she joined, overturned abortion rights, curbed Biden administra­tion environmen­tal efforts, broadened religious rights, expanded gun rights and ended affirmativ­e action in college admissions.

At 52, Barrett is the youngest member of the court. She was appointed by Trump, joining the court a little more than a month after the death of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. Barrett’s election year confirmati­on by a Republican-controlled Senate infuriated Democrats. Barrett was Trump’s third high-court appointee. Four years earlier, Senate Republican­s blocked President Barack Obama’s Supreme Court nomination of Merrick Garland, now President Biden’s attorney general, explaining that the vacancy should await the outcome of the 2016 election, eventually won by Trump.

Sotomayor, 69, has been on the court since 2009, appointed by Obama. She has written tough dissents from the decisions on affirmativ­e action and abortion, jointly with the other liberal justices in the latter. During arguments in the abortion case, Sotomayor bitterly criticized her conservati­ve colleagues. “Will this institutio­n survive the stench

that this creates in the public perception that the Constituti­on and its reading are just political acts? I don’t see how it is possible,” she said nearly seven months before the court overturned Roe.

Confidence in the court fell to its lowest level in 50 years following the abortion decision in June 2022, and polling done just before the court began its new term in October found little change.

The justices’ appearance­s hark back to the traveling road show conservati­ve Antonin Scalia and liberal Stephen Breyer put on 15 or so years ago. But Breyer and Scalia cheerfully debated their different approaches to the law. Barrett and Sotomayor acknowledg­e they see things differentl­y but instead focus on their determinat­ion to disagree civilly. Sotomayor serves on the governing board of iCivics, an education nonprofit started by former Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O’Connor.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Supreme Court Justices Amy Coney Barrett, left, and Sonia Sotomayor speak with retired U.S. Appeals Court Judge Thomas Griffith, not shown, during a panel discussion at the winter meeting of the National Governors Associatio­n, Feb. 23, in Washington.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Supreme Court Justices Amy Coney Barrett, left, and Sonia Sotomayor speak with retired U.S. Appeals Court Judge Thomas Griffith, not shown, during a panel discussion at the winter meeting of the National Governors Associatio­n, Feb. 23, in Washington.

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