Trump to name Amy Coney Barrett to US Supreme Court, say reports


US media reports that President Donald Trump intends to name Amy Coney Barrett to the Supreme Court to fill the vacant seat left by the late liberal icon Ruth Bader Ginsburg. – EPA pic, September 26, 2020.

PRESIDENT Donald Trump intends to name judge Amy Coney Barrett to the Supreme Court, US media reported yesterday, who if confirmed would cement a solid conservative majority on the apex court.

The president said this week he will announce his pick to replace the late Ruth Bader Ginsburg today, and various media outlets said it would be the 48-year-old conservative judge.

Citing sources close to the process, various media outlets, including The New York Times and CNN, said Trump will nominate Barrett.

If she is confirmed, the court will shift to a 6-3 conservative majority.

Asked by journalists if Barrett will indeed be nominated, Trump responded: “I haven’t said that.”

But he added that he had already made a decision “in my own mind” and that Barrett is “outstanding.”

The media reports noted the mercurial Trump could still change his mind before the official announcement, expected at 5pm today.

Democratic opponents, led by presidential candidate Joe Biden, have demanded that Republicans back off on replacing liberal icon Ginsburg – who died last week – until after the November 3 election, when they’ll know whether Trump is getting a second term.

Leaders of the Republican majority in the Senate, which is tasked with confirming Supreme Court nominees, said they have enough support to hold a vote on the nomination either before the election or at worst during the “lame duck” session between the election and the inauguration of the next president in January.

“We will certainly do that this year,” Republican Senate leader Mitch McConnell said.

Barrett, a practising Catholic and law professor, was only appointed to the bench for the first time in 2017. Deeply conservative, she is considered hostile to abortion rights – a key issue for many Republicans.

In 2018, she was on the shortlist presented by Trump for a seat vacated by the retirement of justice Anthony Kennedy, a position ultimately filled by Brett Kavanaugh after a ferocious confirmation battle. – AFP, September 26, 2020.


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