Law Justice Amy Coney Barrett Megathread

So the announcer at the rose garden announced her as she walked out with the president.

will find an article soon.

e: he official announced her as his third pick.

e2:

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The long-term academic, appeals court judge and mother of seven was the hot favourite for the Supreme Court seat.

Donald Trump - who as sitting president gets to select nominees - reportedly once said he was "saving her" for this moment: when elderly Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg died and a vacancy on the nine-member court arose.

It took the president just over a week to fast-track the 48-year-old conservative intellectual into the wings. This is his chance to tip the court make-up even further to the right ahead of the presidential election, when he could lose power.

Barrett's record on gun rights and immigration cases imply she would be as reliable a vote on the right of the court, as Ginsburg was on the left, according to Jonathan Turley, a professor of law at George Washington University.

"Ginsburg maintained one of the most consistent liberal voting records in the history of the court. Barrett has the same consistency and commitment," he adds. "She is not a work-in-progress like some nominees. She is the ultimate 'deliverable' for conservative votes."

And her vote, alongside a conservative majority, could make the difference for decades ahead, especially on divisive issues such as abortion rights and the Affordable Care Act (the Obama-era health insurance provider).

Barrett's legal opinions and remarks on abortion and gay marriage have made her popular with the religious right, but earned vehement opposition from liberals.

But as a devout Catholic, she has repeatedly insisted her faith does not compromise her work.

Barrett lives in South Bend, Indiana, with her husband, Jesse, a former federal prosecutor who is now with a private firm. The couple have seven children, including two adopted from Haiti. She is the oldest of seven children herself.

Known for her sharp intellect, she studied at the University of Notre Dame's Law School, graduating first in her class, and was a clerk to Justice Antonin Scalia, who, in her words, was the "staunchest conservative" on the Supreme Court at the time.

Like her mentor Scalia, she is an originalist, which is a belief that judges should attempt to interpret the words of the Constitution as the authors intended when they were written.

Many liberals oppose that strict approach, saying there must be scope for moving with the times.

Barrett has spent much of her career as a professor at her alma mater, Notre Dame, where she was voted professor of the year multiple times. One of students, Deion Kathawa, who took a class with her earlier this year, told the BBC she was popular because she involved everyone in discussions. He found her "collegial, civil, fair-minded, intellectually sharp, and devoted to the rule of law secured by our Constitution".

Another student told the WBEZ new site: "I feel somewhat conflicted because … she's a great professor. She never brought up politics in her classroom... But I do not agree with her ideologies at all. I don't think she would be good for this country and the Supreme Court."

Barrett was selected by President Trump to serve as a federal appeals court judge in 2017, sitting on the Seventh Circuit, based in Chicago. She regularly commutes to the court from her home - more than an hour and half away. The South Bend Tribune once carried an interview from a friend saying she was an early riser, getting up between 04:00 and 05:00. "It's true," says Paolo Carozza, a professor at Notre Dame. "I see her at the gym shortly after then."

Carozza has watched Barrett go from student to teacher to leading judge, and speaks about her effusively. "It's a small, tight-knit community, so I know her socially too. She is ordinary, warm, kind."

A religious man himself, he thinks it is reasonable to question a candidate about whether their beliefs would interfere with their work. "But she has answered those questions forcefully... I fear she is now being reduced to an ideological caricature, and that pains me, knowing what a rich and thoughtful person she is."

Her confirmation hearing for the appeals court seat featured a now-infamous encounter with Senator Dianne Feinstein, who voiced concerns about how her faith could affect her thinking on the law. "The dogma lives loudly within you," said Mrs Feinstein in an accusatory tone. Defiant Catholics adopted the phrase as a tongue-in-cheek slogan on mugs.

Barrett has defended herself on multiple occasions. "I would stress that my personal church affiliation or my religious belief would not bear in the discharge of my duties as a judge," she once said.

However, her links to a particularly conservative Christian faith group, People of Praise, have been much discussed in the US press. LGBT groups have flagged the group's network of schools, which have guidelines stating a belief that sexual relations should only happen between heterosexual married couples.

LGBTQ advocacy group Human Rights Campaign has voiced strong opposition to Barrett's confirmation, declaring her an "absolute threat to LGBTQ rights".

The Guttmacher Institute, a pro-choice research organisation, declined comment on Barrett specifically, but said appointing any new conservative Supreme Court justice would "be devastating for sexual and reproductive health and rights".

To secure the position on the Supreme Court - a lifelong job - Barrett will still have to pass a gruelling confirmation hearing, where Democratic senators are likely to take a tough line, bringing up many of their voters' concerns.

Professor Turley thinks she will take it her stride, due to the "civil and unflappable disposition" she showed during the hostile questioning for the appeals court position.

"She is someone who showed incredible poise and control… her [appeals court] confirmation hearing was a dry run for a Supreme Court confirmation. She has already played in the World Series."

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President Trump on Saturday announced he has chosen Amy Coney Barrett as his pick to fill the Supreme Court seat vacated by the late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg -- a move that could significantly shift the nation's highest court to the right if she's confirmed by the Senate.

“Today it is my honor to nominate one of our nation's most brilliant and gifted legal minds to the Supreme Court," Trump said in the Rose Garden alongside Barrett. "She is a woman of unparalleled achievement, towering intellect, sterling credentials and unyielding loyalty to the Constitution -- Judge Amy Coney Barrett.”

Trump announced Barrett, a judge on the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals, who had been considered by Trump for the vacancy left by the retiring Justice Anthony Kennedy in 2018. Trump eventually chose now-Justice Brett Kavanaugh instead.

Ginsburg, a liberal trailblazer who was a consistent vote on the court’s liberal wing, died last week at 87. The announcement sets up what is likely to be a fierce confirmation battle as Republicans attempt to confirm Barrett before the election on Nov. 3.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has promised to put the nominee up for a vote, despite the objections of Senate Democrats -- who cite McConnell’s refusal to give Obama nominee Merrick Garland a hearing in 2016.

A source familiar with the process told Fox News that Oct. 12 is the target date for the beginning of confirmation hearings. This means that Barrett, 48, could potentially be confirmed by the end of the month and just days before the election.

Barrett, a former Notre Dame professor and a mother of seven, is a devout Catholic and pro-life -- beliefs that were raised as a problem by Democrats during her 2017 confirmation hearing to her seat on the 7th Circuit.

"The dogma lives loudly within you, and that's of concern," Senate Judiciary Committee Ranking Member Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., told Barrett. She was eventually confirmed 55-43.

Trump was also believed to have been considering candidates including 11th Circuit Judge Barbara Lagoa. Trump had said publicly that he had five potential picks he was considering.

A source told Fox News that Trump had taken note of how “tough” Barrett was when she faced the tough confirmation fight in 2017 and had kept her very much at the front of his mind since then.

The source said Trump met her during the considerations on who to replace Kennedy in 2018, talked to a lot of people about her and wanted to keep her in place through the Kavanaugh vetting process in case there was an issue. Kavanaugh did face hurdles in his confirmation battle, but that came after his nomination was announced.

The source said that after Ginsburg died, Barrett was the only candidate he met and spoke with at length, although he made a few calls to Lagoa because some people were pushing him very hard to do so. But ultimately Barrett was always at the front of Trump’s mind to fill a Ginsburg vacancy.

Should she be confirmed, Barrett would be Trump’s third Supreme Court confirmation. That’s more than two-term Presidents Barack Obama, Bill Clinton and George W. Bush -- who each put two justices on the court.

Democrats have vowed to oppose the pick, but the Senate math does not appear to be in their favor. Republicans have 53 Senate seats and Barrett only needs 50 to be confirmed -- with Vice President Mike Pence acting as a tie breaker in such a case.

So far, only Sens. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, and Susan Collins, R-Maine, have indicated they oppose moving forward with a confirmation before the election. Murkowski has since suggested she still may vote for the nominee.

Fox News' John Roberts, Mike Emanuel and Tyler Olson contributed to this report.

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That's funny too because Manchin voted for ACB when she was nominated to the 7th Circuit as a federal judge, Tim Kaine did as well, Hillary's pick to be her VP in 2016.
Indeed. But the Democrats are all pissed off because of the Garland thing. If Republicans were equally vindictive, Ginsburg, Breyer, Sotomayor, and Kagan wouldn't have been confirmed because of Bork, whose architects are, respectively, running for President and (probably) in Hell.
 
Manchin is the best chance for a Democratic vote, by far.
Manchin was up for reelection in 2018 when he voted for Kavanaugh and it was a much closer race than 2012 was for him relatively speaking. He had to balance being possibly the last Blue Dog in the Senate with how conservative WV is. His seat is safe this year so I wouldn't count on it.
 
The pissing match in Washington has begun. It will get much worse.

blm-vs-acb.jpg
 
Maybe Manchin or one of the other actual blue dogs left.
Those don't exist. Pull your head out of your ass already. Every single Democrat in the Senate voted to remove Trump from office because he asked Ukraine (with whom we have a treaty) to investigate potential criminal activity. There are no reasonable Democrats. They are ALL far left lunatics.
Any chance on a Democratic Senator to vote to confirm her to the Supreme Court after the hearings this week?

They really have nothing on her and she seems extemely qualified for the position of Justice.
I expect her vote to look exactly like the impeachment vote. Every Democrat voting against with 1 or 2 Republicans also defecting.
 
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Those don't exist. Pull your head out of your ass already. Every single Democrat in the Senate voted to remove Trump from office because he asked Ukraine (with whom we have a treaty) to investigate potential criminal activity. There are no reasonable Democrats. They are ALL far left lunatics.

I expect her vote to look exactly like the impeachment vote. Every Democrat voting against with 1 or 2 Republicans also defecting.
Uhhh... have you actually looked at his voting record? Manchin is by far one of the most conservative sitting senators, and you're accusing him of being an idpol leftist because he voted along party lines for an already predetermined act of performative theater that was the impeachment?
 
With all this talk about how few people answer the polls. A very dumb idea crossed my mind. That seems easy as shit to sabotage. I mean, they get a very low number of answers. Therefore. What would happen if there was a concerted effort by a sufficiently large group of people to all simultaneously claim to be lifelong democrats which due to (insert stupid reason of choice here) have decided to for once in their life vote to JEB.

I just wanna know how hard the DNC would flip their shit if they became convinced by their polls that they are loosing a significant portion of their voters to a fucking meme. "Pokemon go to the polls" would be forgotten in the wake of the sperg.
 
With all this talk about how few people answer the polls. A very dumb idea crossed my mind. That seems easy as shit to sabotage. I mean, they get a very low number of answers. Therefore. What would happen if there was a concerted effort by a sufficiently large group of people to all simultaneously claim to be lifelong democrats which due to (insert stupid reason of choice here) have decided to for once in their life vote to JEB.

I just wanna know how hard the DNC would flip their shit if they became convinced by their polls that they are loosing a significant portion of their voters to a fucking meme. "Pokemon go to the polls" would be forgotten in the wake of the sperg.
The most hilarious of gay ops
 
Uhhh... have you actually looked at his voting record? Manchin is by far one of the most conservative sitting senators
Maybe when it comes to far left loons (read: Democrats.) GovTrack ranks him as the 46th most conservative Senator. Out of 100.

and you're accusing him of being an idpol leftist because he voted along party lines for an already predetermined act of performative theater that was the impeachment?
So I shouldn't hold him accountable for voting to remove a duly elected Republican president who did nothing wrong?
 
Maybe when it comes to far left loons (read: Democrats.) GovTrack ranks him as the 46th most conservative Senator. Out of 100.


So I shouldn't hold him accountable for voting to remove a duly elected Republican president who did nothing wrong?
Looking at his ratings from govtrack.us, he's the most right leaning of the Democratic Senators and has a more conservative record than Murkowski or Collins.

As for the Impeachment, no, it literally didn't matter. There was no way he'd be getting impeached, and Manchin's stuck in a Catch 22 situation where he needs his party's support to stay in office and they needed to pull the wool over the eyes over the average dumbfuck American voter that they had uniform support for impeachment. Hey may end up voting against Barrett's nomination, but he is the most likely of the Democrats to cross the aisle.
 
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Yes, college students think they know everything. That's why they're college students and not nominees for the Supreme Court. Anyone who's taken a single course in psychology can attest to the students making it two chapters into the book before they start to psychoanalyze their friends and family like a bunch of fucking speds who think they know every intricacy of Sigmund Freud and his influences on Jungian psychology.

And then they hit the third chapter and all of that flies out the window.

Progressives are angry at Feinstein because she hugged Graham.

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In keeping with its betrayal of the alleged "hands off" policy, Facebook is killing The Babylon Bee's posts about Barrett:

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It is also threatening to demonetize The Babylon Bee:

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Big anti-Barrett hoe-tenanny in Washington D.C. today:

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Only one visible Handmaiden?

I wonder how large the freak out will be after the Senate Vote on the 22nd. Not a thing they can do about it but pout thanks to good old Harry Reid opening the box.
 
Roe v. Wade must be like the second or third commandment of the new age feminist athiest secular liberal religion.

Overturning that law will give power back to the states. And liberals for some reason are obsessed with abortions in Mississippi.

Also this might be a edgy take but fuck all of them cum dumpsters protesting during the virus, I hope they all catch it. Apparently the mainstream media is trying to use doctors to call Trump rallies as hotspots for the virus.

I don't even care about abortion that much and I hope it gets overturned so abortion gets banned and the black community grows as a result.
 
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