Difference between revisions of "Amy Coney Barrett"

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In terms of her judicial philosophy, Barrett is, like the late Justice Scalia for whom she clerked, an originalist and a textualist, meaning that she seeks to interpret the Constitution according to what it actually says, not according to what others wish to read into it. On several occasions, she has praised Scalia for holding such a position and for being so attentive to the actual text of statutes he reviewed.<ref>https://www.wsj.com/articles/amy-coney-barrett-is-again-a-top-contender-for-supreme-court-nomination-11600644990</ref>
 
In terms of her judicial philosophy, Barrett is, like the late Justice Scalia for whom she clerked, an originalist and a textualist, meaning that she seeks to interpret the Constitution according to what it actually says, not according to what others wish to read into it. On several occasions, she has praised Scalia for holding such a position and for being so attentive to the actual text of statutes he reviewed.<ref>https://www.wsj.com/articles/amy-coney-barrett-is-again-a-top-contender-for-supreme-court-nomination-11600644990</ref>
  
Some of Barrett's more notable legal publications regard the doctrine of ''stare decisis'', that previous legal precedents can, in certain cases, be binding on future courts. She has suggested the doctrine is sometimes applicable, but only in relatively limited circumstances, for instance on matters in which a court decision has such overwhelming support from the legal community and from the broader public that overturning it would be practically unthinkable. [[''Brown v. Board of Education'']], according to Barrett, would be an example of this. Otherwise, ''stare decisis'' is not inviolable; in situations where precedent and the Constitution come into conflict, the Constitution must have first consideration.<ref>http://texaslawreview.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/08/Barrett.pdf</ref>
+
Some of Barrett's more notable legal publications regard the doctrine of ''stare decisis'', that previous legal precedents can, in certain cases, be binding on future courts. She has suggested the doctrine is sometimes applicable, but only in relatively limited circumstances, for instance on matters in which a court decision has such overwhelming support from the legal community and from the broader public that overturning it would be practically unthinkable. ''[[Brown v. Board of Education]]'', according to Barrett, would be an example of this. Otherwise, ''stare decisis'' is not inviolable; in situations where precedent and the Constitution come into conflict, the Constitution must have first consideration.<ref>http://texaslawreview.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/08/Barrett.pdf</ref>
  
 
==References==
 
==References==

Revision as of 23:52, September 24, 2020

Amy Coney Barrett
Amy Coney Barrett.jpg
Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
From: November 2, 2017 – present
Predecessor John Daniel Tinder
Successor Incumbent (no successor)
Information
Spouse(s) Jesse M. Barrett
Religion Roman Catholic[1]

Amy Coney Barrett (born January 28, 1972) is a judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, having been appointed by President Donald Trump to the position. She is considered the leading candidate to be nominated by President Trump to replaced the seat vacated by the death of Ruth Bader Ginsburg, on the U.S. Supreme Court.

After intense, irrational liberal opposition to her confirmation, which included Dem Senator Dianne Feinstein questioning her religious beliefs,[1] the U.S. Senate voted 55–43 to confirm Barrett on October 31, 2017,[2] with Joe Donnelly, Tim Kaine, and Joe Manchin being the only Democrats who voted for her.

Susan B. Anthony List described Judge Barrett's confirmation as a pro-life victory: "Judge Amy Barrett’s confirmation is a victory for the pro-life movement as well as for the fundamental freedom of all Americans to live out their faith in the public square,” said SBA List President Marjorie Dannenfelser. “In spite of her exemplary qualifications, Judge Barrett was subject to outrageous personal attacks for her Catholic faith from pro-abortion Senators during her confirmation hearing. Those attacks have no place in America, let alone Congress, in the 21st century.”[3]

Axios reported a "scoop" that President Trump is "saving" Judge Barrett to be Ginsburg's replacement.[4] As he was deliberating last year over replacing Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy, Trump told confidants he had big plans for Judge Amy Coney Barrett.

"I'm saving her for Ginsburg," Trump said of Barrett, according to three sources familiar with the president's private comments. Trump used that exact line with a number of people, including in a private conversation with an adviser two days before announcing Brett Kavanaugh's nomination.

Barrett is a favorite among conservative activists, many of whom wanted her to take Kennedy’s spot."[5]

Judge Barrett has written that stare decisis or judicial precedent is not absolutely binding and can be overturned for solid reasons: “I tend to agree with those who say that a justice’s duty is to the Constitution and that it is thus more legitimate for her to enforce her best understanding of the Constitution rather than a precedent she thinks is clearly in conflict with it.” [6]

Early Life

Amy Vivian Coney was born and raised in New Orleans, Louisiana, the oldest of seven children. Her father, Michael Coney, was an attorney for the Shell Oil Company; her mother, Linda, was a stay-at-home mom. A lifelong Roman Catholic, she attended St. Mary's Dominican High School, where she was vice-president of the student body. She is a member of ecumenical People of Praise congregation, which includes spirit filled Roman Catholics.[7] After graduating in 1990, she attended Rhodes College in Memphis, Tennessee, majoring in English literature. While there, she joined the Phi Beta Kappa academic honor society, and graduated magna cum laude in 1994, having been chosen by the English department's faculty as their most outstanding student. Coney went on to study law at the University of Notre Dame, obtaining a prestigious Kiley Fellowship; she served for a time as executive editor of the Notre Dame Law Review, and graduated summa cum laude first in her class in 1997, winning the Law School's highest honor, the Hoynes Prize.

She married Jesse M. Barrett, a former Assistant U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Indiana and current partner at SouthBank Legal in South Bend, Indiana. They have seven children, two of whom are adopted from Haiti.

Legal Career

After graduating from Notre Dame, Barrett spent a year as a law clerk for Judge Laurence H. Silberman of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, then did the same the following year for Supreme Court Associate Justice Antonin Scalia. In 1999, she joined the Washington, D.C. law firm Miller, Cassidy, Larroca & Lewin, where she litigated cases in constitutional, criminal, and commercial law. In 2002, Barrett returned to Notre Dame to join the Law School's faculty, teaching and researching in the fields of federal courts, constitutional law, and statutory interpretation. Several of the nation's leading law journals, including the Columbia, Texas, and Virginia Law Reviews, have published scholarly articles written by her on these subjects. During her time on the Notre Dame faculty, three of the Law School's graduating classes voted her "Distinguished Professor of the Year," and former students of hers later described her as "inspirational," "always approachable," and "remarkably fair-minded and smart."[8]

Apart from her work at Notre Dame, Barrett has also served as a visiting professor at the University of Virginia and the George Washington University Law School, and is a member of the American Law Institute. From 2010 to 2016, she was a member of the Advisory Committee for the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure.[9]

Federal Judicial Career

On May 8, 2017, President Trump nominated Barrett for the position of Circuit Judge on the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, succeeding Judge John Daniel Tinder.

Her nomination was heard in September by the Senate Judiciary Committee, where Barrett was sharply criticized by its Democratic members, including Dick Durbin and Dianne Feinstein, who seemed less concerned about her legal and judicial credentials than about whether she would uphold Roe vs. Wade. In 1998, Barrett had written that Catholic judges who objected to capital punishment on religious grounds should consider recusing themselves; moreover, during her time at Notre Dame she had been part of a pro-life faculty organization, and in 2015 had signed a joint letter to Catholic bishops affirming "the value of human life from conception to natural death." Though Barrett stated during the hearing that judges must rule according to the law and not to their personal opinions, Feinstein and Durbin remained hostile, Feinstein in particular remarking that "the dogma lives loudly within you": a line that drew considerable criticism from some observers, who raised concerns that Senate Democrats were applying an unconstitutional "religious test" to Barrett.

In October 2017, Barrett's nomination was passed through the committee on a party-line vote and brought before the Senate, which voted to confirm her by a vote of 55-42. She won the support of all Republican senators, as well as three Democrats (Joe Donnelly, Tim Kaine, and Joe Manchin). Barrett was the first woman appointed to the federal courts during Trump's presidency, and the first of four Trump appointees to the Seventh Circuit Court.

During Barrett's time on the Seventh Circuit, she has written two opinions considered of particular importance. In Doe v. Purdue University (2019), Barrett wrote the majority opinion finding in favor of an anonymous male student at Purdue University who had been suspended and stripped of his scholarship by university administrators who had ruled him guilty of sexual assault. Barrett noted that the administrators had utterly failed to provide the student with due process, and had arbitrarily favored his female accuser's testimony over his. "It is plausible," she concluded, that the university "chose to believe {John Doe's accuser} because she is a woman and to disbelieve John because he is a man....John's allegations raise a plausible inference that he was denied an educational benefit on the basis of his sex."[10]

Barrett's other significant opinion, her dissent in Kanter v. Barr (2019), regarded the issue of gun-ownership rights for convicted felons. The majority upheld a lower-court decision that Kanter (the plaintiff), who had earlier been found guilty of mail fraud, was automatically disqualified from owning a firearm; in her dissent, Barrett argued that Kanter's crime, though a felony, was nonviolent, and to lose one's gun-ownership rights regardless of the nature of the felony was based neither on the wording of the Constitution nor on standards of common sense. Furthermore, she added, it ought to be the rule that, even if felons, citizens retained their constitutional rights by default, unless or until their rights were curtailed by government action (rather than automatically losing them by falling into a designated category).[11]

As of September 20, 2020, Judge Barrett had dissented only seven times in nearly 3 years on the Seventh Circuit.

Immigration

In Cook County v. Wolf, 962 F.3d 208 (7th Cir. 2020), Barrett dissented in her 40-page disagreement with the panel majority's decision to uphold a preliminary injunction against President Trump's public charge rule cutting off entitlements to some immigrants. Judge Barrett pointed out that an overwhelming majority of those within the scope of the rule were not eligible for government benefits anyway. Judge Barrett wrote that Trump's rule fell within the broad scope of discretion granted by Congress in the Immigration and Nationality Act to the Executive Branch.

In Yafai v. Pompeo, 924 F.3d 969 (7th Cir. 2019), Judge Barrett wrote a decision for the 2-1 panel which rejected a wife's claim for a visa which had twice been denied by a consular officer, despite how her husband was a United States citizen. Judge Barrett wrote for the court that the plaintiff’s claim was properly dismissed under the doctrine of consular nonreviewability. Judges Barrett and Joel Flaum wrote opinions concurring in the subsequent denial of the petition for rehearing en banc.

Coronavirus jurisprudence

Judge Amy Barrett and her husband Jesse.

In a challenge to a broad shutdown order by Illinois Democrat Gov. J.B. Pritzker which prohibited gatherings of more than 50 people, Judge Barrett joined an opinion by liberal Judge Diane Wood which ruled against the state Republican Party.[12] The effect of the shutdown order is to block energetic Trump rallies, while allowing BLM rallies.

The Chairman of the Illinois Republican Party, Tim Schneider, declared in connection with filing this lawsuit in June:

"Gov. Pritzker is ruling Illinois like an unaccountable king where only he gets to decide which violations of his executive order have his blessing."[13]

The opinion joined by Judge Barrett even included a warning against the state GOP not to complain too much about the shutdown order, lest the governor remove exemptions for religious services which the court said he could do.[13]

Views

In terms of her judicial philosophy, Barrett is, like the late Justice Scalia for whom she clerked, an originalist and a textualist, meaning that she seeks to interpret the Constitution according to what it actually says, not according to what others wish to read into it. On several occasions, she has praised Scalia for holding such a position and for being so attentive to the actual text of statutes he reviewed.[14]

Some of Barrett's more notable legal publications regard the doctrine of stare decisis, that previous legal precedents can, in certain cases, be binding on future courts. She has suggested the doctrine is sometimes applicable, but only in relatively limited circumstances, for instance on matters in which a court decision has such overwhelming support from the legal community and from the broader public that overturning it would be practically unthinkable. Brown v. Board of Education, according to Barrett, would be an example of this. Otherwise, stare decisis is not inviolable; in situations where precedent and the Constitution come into conflict, the Constitution must have first consideration.[15]

References