While disagreeing with the majority over Trump, Amy Coney Barrett chastised the leftists instead.

in #steemit9 months ago

In her one-page ruling on Monday, Justice Amy Coney Barrett conveyed two very different points, as the Supreme Court ruled that states could not remove former President Donald Trump from the ballot.

She criticized her right-wing colleagues for going too far in their legal reasoning, breaking important and, in her opinion, unneeded ground.

She then used unusually harsh language to chastise the court's three liberal justices, who had also disagreed with the majority's legal reasoning.

Barrett remarked, "In my opinion, now is not the time to accentuate disagreement with stridency." In the turbulent period leading up to a presidential election, the Court has resolved a contentious political matter. Writings on the Court, especially in this context, ought to lower rather than raise the public temperature.

The 52-year-old Trump appointee highlighted that the justices were generally in agreement, implying that the liberals' writing undermined this reality.

Barrett stated, "All nine Justices agree on the outcome of this case." "That's the lesson that needs to be learned by Americans."

However, rather than reducing the tensions between ideological groups and the authority of the conservative majority, Barrett's statement—which was supported by none of the other justices—had the opposite effect. Liberal judges frequently use a sarcastic tone, especially in the dissent. It was ironic that Barrett used more language than normal while chastising them on Monday.

As the justices hear further cases pertaining to the Trump election in April and start handing down rulings this spring on a range of challenges to Biden administration policy, there will probably be a growing ideological rift inside the court.

The Supreme Court has never been in a position to significantly influence a presidential election since the Bush v. Gore case in 2000, when the court decided to shut down vital Florida recounts by a vote of 5 to 4, giving Texas Governor George W. Bush the advantage over Vice President Al Gore.

Barrett was selected by Trump to be his third high court appointee just before the election in November 2020 and the untimely passing of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg in September of the same year. Before the election, the Senate confirmed Barrett, making him the most important new justice at once.

On the nine-member bench, her mere presence established a conservative six-justice supermajority. Her vote also started to define the court's new course, particularly when the judges overturned the historic Roe v. Wade ruling in 2022 and eliminated constitutional abortion rights across the country.

Sort:  

Thank you, friend!
I'm @steem.history, who is steem witness.
Thank you for witnessvoting for me.
image.png
please click it!
image.png
(Go to https://steemit.com/~witnesses and type fbslo at the bottom of the page)

The weight is reduced because of the lack of Voting Power. If you vote for me as a witness, you can get my little vote.

Upvoted! Thank you for supporting witness @jswit.