Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Health Care Is Focus as Barrett Supreme Court Hearing Opens
gvw_ap_news
By Associated Press
Published 4 years ago on
October 12, 2020

Share

WASHINGTON โ€” Senate Democrats branded Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett a threat to Americansโ€™ health care during the coronavirus pandemic Monday at the start of a fast-tracked hearing that Republicans are confident will end with Barrettโ€™s confirmation to replace the late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg before Election Day.

โ€œHealth care coverage for millions of Americans is at stake with this nomination.โ€ โ€” Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California, the committeeโ€™s senior Democrat

In a competing effort to approvingly define the 48-year-old Barrett, who sat silent and wearing a face mask, Republican senators called President Donald Trumpโ€™s pick a thoughtful judge with impeccable credentials.

Barring a dramatic development, Republicans appear to have the votes to confirm Barrett to a lifetime seat on the Supreme Court. If she is confirmed quickly she could be on the Supreme Court when it hears the latest challenge to the Affordable Care Act, a week after the election.

One after another, Democrats sought to tie her nomination to the upcoming court case.

โ€œHealth care coverage for millions of Americans is at stake with this nomination,โ€ said Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California, the committeeโ€™s senior Democrat.

Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., said the nomination is a โ€œjudicial torpedo aimedโ€ at the lawโ€™s protection for people with pre-existing health conditions among its provisions. The Trump administration wants the court to strike down the entire law popularly known as โ€œObamacareโ€ on Nov. 10. Barrett has criticized the courtโ€™s two earlier major rulings supporting the law.

Among Republicans, Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, dismissed warnings Barrett will undo the Obama-era healthcare law as โ€œoutrageous.โ€

Republicans also warned against making Barrettโ€™s Catholicism an issue in the confirmation debate, especially in regard to her stance on abortion, with Sen. Josh Hawley of Missouri lambasting what he called a โ€œpattern and practice of religious bigotryโ€ by Democrats. However, Democratic senators made clear in advance of the hearing that they didnโ€™t plan to question the judge on the specifics of her religious faith.

Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett listens during her Senate Judiciary Committee confirmation hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington, Monday, Oct. 12, 2020. (Erin Schaff/The New York Times via AP, Pool)

โ€˜This Is Going to Be a Long, Contentious Week.โ€™

Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden, also a practicing Catholic, told reporters ahead of a campaign trip to Ohio that he doesnโ€™t think โ€œthereโ€™s any question about her faith.โ€

The Senate Judiciary Committee, meeting on a federal holiday, kicked off four days of statements and testimony in an environment that has been altered by the coronavirus pandemic. Some senators were taking part remotely, and the hearing room itself was arranged with health concerns in mind.

Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., opened the hearing acknowledging โ€œthe COVID problem in America is real.โ€ But he said, โ€œWe do have a country that needs to move forward safely.โ€

Graham acknowledged the obvious: โ€œThis is going to be a long, contentious week.โ€

Barrett, a federal appeals court judge, was to tell senators that she is โ€œforever gratefulโ€ for Ginsburgโ€™s trailblazing path as a woman. But she is resolved to maintain the perspective of her own mentor, the late conservative Justice Antonin Scalia and โ€œapply the law as written,โ€ according to her prepared opening remarks for the hearings.

โ€œCourts are not designed to solve every problem or right every wrong in our public life,โ€ Barrett says in the remarks, which The Associated Press obtained.

Republicans are moving at a breakneck pace to seat Barrett before the Nov. 3 election to secure Trumpโ€™s pick, which would put her on the bench for any election-related challenges.

Democrats are trying in vain to delay the fast-track confirmation by raising fresh concerns about the safety of meeting during the pandemic after two GOP senators on the panel tested positive for the novel coronavirus.

Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, one of those who tested positive, was in the hearing room Monday after his spokesman said he was symptom-free. The other affected senator, Thom Tillis of North Carolina, was participating remotely, though he too is symptom-free, his spokesman said. Both tested positive 10 days ago.

The Country Will Get an Extended Look at Barrett Over the Next Three Days

Among senators who will not set foot in the hearing room because of coronavirus concerns is Democratic vice presidential nominee Kamala Harris.

โ€œWe are 22 days away from an election and people are voting right now. And thatโ€™s the focus given that theyโ€™re trying to push through, ram through a Supreme Court justice for a lifetime appointment while almost seven million people have already voted,โ€ Harris said as she arrived at her Senate office.

โ€œWe are 22 days away from an election and people are voting right now. And thatโ€™s the focus given that theyโ€™re trying to push through, ram through a Supreme Court justice for a lifetime appointment while almost seven million people have already voted.โ€ โ€” Kamala Harris

Trump chose Barrett after the death last month of Ginsburg, a liberal icon. Itโ€™s the opportunity to entrench a conservative majority on the court for years to come with his third justice.

Outside groups are pushing Democrats to make a strong case against what they call an illegitimate confirmation, when people are already voting in some states, saying the winner of the presidency should make the pick. No Supreme Court justice has ever been confirmed so close to a presidential contest.

The country will get an extended look at Barrett over the next three days in hearings like none other during the heated election environment and the pandemic limiting public access.

Faith and family punctuate her testimony, and she said would bring โ€œa few new perspectivesโ€ as the first mother of school-age children on the nine-member court.

Barrett says she uses her children as a test when deciding cases, asking herself how she would view the decision if one of her children were the party she was ruling against.

Chairman Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., left, and ranking member Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., talk before the confirmation hearing for Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett at the Senate Judiciary Committee on Capitol Hill in Washington, Monday, Oct. 12, 2020. (Caroline Brehman/Pool via AP)

Barrett and Her Family Went Maskless at the Event

โ€œEven though I would not like the result, would I understand that the decision was fairly reasoned and grounded in the law?โ€ she says in the prepared remarks.

A Roman Catholic, she says she believes in the โ€œpower of prayer.โ€ Barrettโ€™s religious views and past leadership role in a Catholic faith community pose a challenge for Democrats as they try to probe her judicial approach to abortion, gay marriage and other social issues without veering into inappropriate questions of her faith.

Ordinarily, Barrett would get to show off her family and seven children. But the White House event announcing her nomination, in which most of the audience did not wear masks, has been labeled a โ€œsuperspreaderโ€ for the coronavirus.

More than two dozen people linked to the Sept. 26 Rose Garden event, including the two GOP senators, have contracted COVID-19 since then. Barrett and her family went maskless at the event. She and her husband, Jesse, tested positive for the virus earlier this year and recovered, two administration officials have said.

Democrats already were enraged that Republicans are moving so quickly having refused to consider President Barack Obama nominee in February 2016, well before that yearโ€™s election.

Barrett is the most openly anti-abortion Supreme Court nominee in decades and her vote could provide a majority to restrict if not overturn abortion rights.

DON'T MISS

First California EV Mandates Hit Automakers This Year. Most Are Not Even Close

UP NEXT

Giants Suffer Second Straight Shutout Loss to Reds

No Joke. Jay Leno Helps Fresno Legislator Advance Car Bill

1 hour ago

New Plan to Accelerate CA High-Speed Rail Construction Deserves Attention, Support

1 hour ago

Dow Surges 2,600 as US Stocks Soar in Relief After Trump Pauses Some of His Tariffs

NEW YORK โ€” U.S. stocks are soaring on a euphoric Wall Street Wednesday after President Donald Trump said he would temporarily back off on mo...

7 minutes ago

Anthony Matesic works on the floor at the New York Stock Exchange in New York, Wednesday, April 9, 2025. (AP/Seth Wenig)
7 minutes ago

Dow Surges 2,600 as US Stocks Soar in Relief After Trump Pauses Some of His Tariffs

President Donald Trump speaks at the National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC) dinner at the National Building Museum in Washington, Tuesday, April 8, 2025. (Pool via AP)
54 minutes ago

Trump Pauses Tariffs on Most Nations for 90 Days, Raises Taxes on Chinese Imports

1 hour ago

Wired Wednesday: Fresno DA Warns New Copper Theft Ordinance Could Clash with State Law

1 hour ago

No Joke. Jay Leno Helps Fresno Legislator Advance Car Bill

1 hour ago

New Plan to Accelerate CA High-Speed Rail Construction Deserves Attention, Support

2 hours ago

CAโ€™s Big Pension Funds Lost Billions in Stock Market Selloff. Can They Recover in Time?

2 hours ago

Fake Student Aid: California Colleges Detect More Fraudsters Stealing Millions

The campus of Cornell University in Ithaca, N.Y., April 10, 2023. The Trump administration has frozen more than $1 billion in funding for Cornell and $790 million for Northwestern amid civil rights investigations into both schools, two administration officials said. (Heather Ainsworth/The New York Times)
2 hours ago

Trump Administration Freezes $1 Billion for Cornell and $790 Million for Northwestern

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend