Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett stands with her husband, Jesse, on the front plaza of the Supreme Court building in Washington, D.C. (Al Drago/Bloomberg via Getty)
Barrett, 53, spoke easily about her family, her faith and the kindness of her newfound colleagues on the Supreme Court, whom she says lent her not only the use of their office supplies and bench memos during her first days on the job, but also temporarily dispatched their own staff to help her answer phones and restock supplies.
"There is an indispensable human element to judging," Barrett observes in her memoir, something she says is all the more true when serving on a nine-person bench.
"Thinking in categories of left and right — it's just the wrong way to think about the law," she said Thursday night to the jam-packed audience at Alice Tully Hall.
Even so, Barrett artfully dodged some of the more polarizing issues the court has faced in the past eight months.
She was demonstrably less candid on questions involving the so-called emergency, or "shadow" docket, the vehicle by which President Donald Trump has sought to temporarily stay lower court decisions that would have paused or halted some of his most sweeping executive orders from taking force.
The Supreme Court has presided over a record blitz of emergency appeals and orders filed by the administration and other aggrieved parties during Trump's first eight months back in office. Justices on the 6-3 conservative bench have ruled in Trump’s favor in the majority of emergency applications, allowing the administration to proceed with its ban on transgender service members in the military, its termination of millions of dollars in Education Department grants and its firing of probationary employees across the federal government, among many other actions.
The court has sided with Trump in the majority of these requests, prompting a fresh level of scrutiny — and rare public criticism from some of her colleagues on the bench.
The Supreme Court "is at its best when it can review cases that have been fully adjudicated" by the lower courts, she offered, before the conversation moved on.
President Trump and Amy Coney Barrett on the balcony of the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, D.C., Oct. 26, 2020. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)
Barrett also sought to defend the court as a body that operates beyond the politics of a given moment, and (ideally) outside the reach of public opinion. She noted that public perceptions of what a judge ought to do is, at times, at odds with what the Constitution and existing Supreme Court precedent prescribe.
"I think everyone expects the court to deliver the results it likes," Barrett said Thursday night. There's a "disconnect between what people want in the moment" and what the court should deliver, she said.
People "want what they want," and will inevitably be disappointed by the results, she said.
Like other justices who have authored memoirs while on the bench, Barrett offered a lofty and, at times, idealistic view of the court.
Pressed by journalist Bari Weiss about her majority opinion in Trump v. CASA earlier this year, Barrett insisted that her "spicy" remarks toward Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson were nothing more than an attempt to "set the calibration right."
"I thought Justice Jackson had made an argument in strong terms that I thought warranted a response," Barrett said.






