Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Donald Trump nominates Amy Coney Barrett to Supreme Court
Donald Trump nominates Amy Coney Barrett to Supreme Court
Jul 15, 2025 5:36 PM

President Donald Trump has nominated Amy Coney Barrett to the U.S. Supreme Court. The 48-year-old will fill the seat left vacant by the death of 87-year-old Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg on September 18.

President Trump called Barrett “a woman of unparalleled achievement, towering intellect, sterling credentials and unyielding loyalty to the Constitution,” as he introduced hthe nominee in a ceremony in the White House’s Rose Garden at 5 p.m. Eastern on Saturday.

He reminded the nation of the impact a new justice, his third appointment, would have on jurisprudence. “Rulings that the Supreme Court will issue in ing years will decide the survival of our Second Amendment, our religious liberty, our public safety, and so much more. To maintain security and liberty and prosperity, we must preserve our priceless heritage of a nation of laws,” he said.

“I love the United States and the United States Constitution,” Barrett said in her speech Saturday, adding she felt “humbled” by her nomination.

In a moment of great consequence, Barrett recognized former originalist Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, for whom she clerked in 1998-1999, as “my mentor.”

“His judicial philosophy is mine, too,” Barrett said. “A judge must apply the law as written. Judges are not policymakers, and they must be resolute in setting aside any policy views they may hold.”

Members of Scalia’s family, as well as every member of Barrett’s own multiracial family, attended the announcement.

Barrett has earned the trust of conservative legal scholars with her outspoken support for interpreting the Constitution according to the original intent of the Founders. “Judge Barrett’s record demonstrates mitment to the Constitution’s text and its purpose,” said Kelly Shackelford, president of the First Liberty Institute. “Judge Barrett understands that government exists to protect the God-given rights of the people and the Constitution exists to prevent government from infringing on those rights.” Dr. Grazie Christie of The Catholic Association agreed that Barrett is “brilliant, plished, mitted to interpreting the text of the Constitution as written.”

Barrett, who is five years Neil Gorsuch’s junior, would be the youngest justice on the court.

Barrett has served on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit since 2017, when she faced bruising questions about her religious faith during contentious Senate confirmation hearings.

Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., seemed to imply that being a faithful Roman Catholic disqualified Barrett from serving on the court. “When you read your speeches, the conclusion one draws is that the dogma lives loudly within you. And that’s of concern,” she said. Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., also probed Barrett about her view of what it means to be an “orthodox Catholic.” Legal scholars argued that the harsh criticism of Barrett’s Catholic faith came close to violating the U.S. Constitution, which bars officials from requiring a “religious test” of appointees (Article VI, Clause 3).

Ultimately, the Senate confirmed Barrett by a vote of 55-43 on October 31, 2017.

If confirmed, Barrett could tip the Supreme Court’s jurisprudence back to a strict constructionist reading of the Constitution absent since at least the Warren Court of the 1950s. Some are already bracing for another round of ugly personal attacks and inappropriate questions about the nominee’s traditional faith. Family Research Council President Tony Perkins condemned “the startling level of anti-Christian bias already on display against Barrett.” The Catholic League for Religious and Civil Rights noted that mentators who are not at all friendly to Barrett or President Trump, have advised Senate Democrats against savaging Barrett over her religion:

S.E. Cupp advises Democrats that a repeat of the bigoted attacks on Barrett will only get Trump reelected. Bonnie Kristian, writing for Yahoo News, says that an attack on Barrett’s faith is the “wrong way” to go. Democratic Senator Joe Manchin flatly said, “It’s awful to bring in religion. It truly is.” Professor Jonathan Turley, who says he is “fervently secular” in his views, opined that Democrats should leave Barrett’s religious beliefs alone. … Brandeis University professor Eileen McNamara said it best: “Let’s keep the focus during this nomination and confirmation fight – whenever es – on the Constitution, not on the Baltimore Catechism.”

President Trump said that Barrett’s confirmation process should be “straight-forward and extremely prompt,” as well as devoid of “personal or partisan attacks.” The Senate Judiciary Committee could begin confirmation hearings the week of October 10, paving the way for a Senate confirmation vote by October 26, according to Sen. Mike Braun, R-Ind.

Thus far, the substantive opposition to Barrett’s nomination to the Supreme Court has focused on her criticism of Chief Justice John Roberts’ ruling on the Affordable Care Act, which recast the ACA’s individual mandate as a tax in order to maintain its constitutionality.

Today, President Trump nominated Judge Amy Coney Barrett to the Supreme Court — a jurist with a written track record of disagreeing with the Court’s decision to uphold the Affordable Care Act.

Vote like your health care is on the ballot — because it is.

— Joe Biden (@JoeBiden) September 26, 2020

Sen. Durbin renewed his opposition to Barrett after her selection for the U.S. Supreme Court became public knowledge, saying, “It is nothing short of outrageous that they want to approve her in fewer than 30 days.” Since 1987, the average Supreme Court nominee has received a confirmation vote 30 calendar days after the first day of his or her Senate confirmation hearings. Justices Ginsburg, Stephen Breyer, and Chief Justice John Roberts were confirmed within 15, 18, and 17 days of their confirmation mencement, respectively.

“President Trump has chosen an absolute all-star in Judge Amy Coney Barrett to serve as our nation’s newest Supreme Court justice,” said Susan B. Anthony List President Marjorie Dannenfelser. “Amy Coney Barrett is a brilliant jurist in the mold of the late Justice Scalia.”

Both President Trump and Barrett took the opportunity to laud the late Justice Ginsburg, whom Barrett said “not only broke glass ceilings, she smashed them.” Barrett, a mother of seven, would break barriers of her own, ing the first woman on the Supreme Court to have school-age children.

Barrett promised to be “mindful of who came before me,” even as she potentially ushers in a new era of reverence for the Constitution and replaces the Supreme Court’s most reliable judicial activist.

“There is no one better,” President Trump told Barrett. ”You are going to be really fantastic.”

Photo / Alex Brandon.)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Fossil Fuel Follies
The religious crusade against fossil fuels and various methods of extracting it to heat and light our homes, offices, and factories continues apace. The 2014 proxy shareholder season is a veritable spider web of networked religious-affiliated activist groups decrying coal, natural gas, oil, hydraulic fracturing and mining. Ceres, for example, reports “35 institutional investors have filed 142 resolutions in a coordinated effort to spur action by panies” on what it calls climate-related measures. Based in Boston, Mass., the nonprofit group...
Is Knowledge Of Religion Important To Culture?
We Americans are rather ignorant about religion. We claim to be a religious folk, but when es to hard-core knowledge, we don’t do well. The Pew Forum put together a baseline quiz of religious knowledge – a mere 32 multiple choice questions – and on average, Americans only got about half of them right. A few sample questions (without the multiple choice answers): Which Bible figure is most closely associated with leading the exodus from Egypt?What is Ramadan?In which religion...
Why Resegregation Happens—And How School Choice Can Fix It
With its decision in Brown vs. Board of Education, the Supreme Court ended systemic racial segregation in public education. Now, sixty years later, courts have released hundreds of school districts from enforced integration—with the result being an increase in “resegregation” of public schools. Numerous media outlets have recently picked up on a story by the investigative journalism nonprofit ProPublica about schools in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. According to the report: In recent years, a new term, apartheid schools—meaning schools whose white population...
The Love Of A Father And The Economy Of Family
255 Triathlons (6 Ironman distances, 7 Half Ironman), 22 Duathlons, 72 Marathons (32 Boston Marathons), 8 18.6 Milers, 97 Half Marathons, 1 20K, 37 10 Milers: That’s a lot of miles. A lot of training. A lot of numbers. It’s an economy of sorts for athletic achievement. These are some of the stats for Team Hoyt, the father-son team of Dick and Rick Hoyt who have raced together for 37 years. Rick was born with cerebral palsy in 1962, and...
Art at Acton: ‘Perpetual Order’ and the Struggle for Permanence
Yesterday, I had the honor of contributing to a panel discussion on the art of Margaret Vega here at the Acton Institute. Her exhibition is titled, “Angels, Dinergy, and Our Relationship with Perpetual Order.” Some fuller coverage may be ing on the PowerBlog, but in the meantime I have posted the text of my presentation, “Death and the Struggle for Permanence” at Everyday Asceticism. Excerpt: Angels … represent hope amid the human struggle for permanence in a life so characterized...
Let’s All Join the Tenth Commandment Club
In our modern era, the ancient sin of covetousness primarily manifests itself in three forms: greed, theft, and arguments about inequality. The greedy selfishly desire to acquire what others have, thieves illicitly acquire what others have, and equality advocates want the government to redistribute what others have. It would be unfair, of course, to assume that all critics of inequality are driven by covetousness. But if you stripped away that sin as a motivation, the number of people who care...
Does Religion Do Us Any Good, Even If We’re Not Religious?
Is there any societal reason to protect religion? That is, do we get anything out of religion, as a society, even if we’re not religious, and is that “anything” worth protecting? Mark Movsesian thinks so. In First Things, Movsesian says religion does do good for a society – a good that is worthy of protection. Religion, munal religion, provides important benefits for everyone in the liberal state—even the non-religious. Religion encourages people to associate with and feel responsible for others,...
Tornadoes, Disaster Relief, and the Power of the Christian Community
At the bottom of this storm and tornado roundup from The Weather Channel, there is a powerful slideshow on the devastation in Arkansas, Mississippi, and Alabama. The death count in the region stands at 31. Mississippi’s Governor Phil Bryant described yesterday as “The most active tornado day in Mississippi history.” Some people forget that it is denominational church agencies that often are the first to meet the material needs and fort to the afflicted. Southern Baptist Disaster Relief is well...
Live from Rome: Faith, State, and the Economy: Perspectives from East and West
Watch our new conference series live from Rome on April 29 at 10:00 a.m. EST. The embedded player below will display our conference stream when it es available. You can also visit the event on our Livestream page in order to see more information and to ask questions during the event. ...
Burke vs. Paine on Choice, Obligation, and Social Order
I recently read Yuval Levin’s new book, The Great Debate: Edmund Burke, Thomas Paine, and the Birth of Right and Left, and found it remarkably rich and rewarding. Though the entire book is worthy of discussion, his chapter on choice vs. obligation is particularly helpful in illuminating one of the more elusive tensions in our social thought and action. In the chapter, Levin provides a helpful summary of how the two men differed in their beliefs about social obligation and...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved