Senator Sasse: Questioning Barrett’s Faith Shows Misunderstanding of Civics, Religious Freedom

Sasse stressed the importance of religious freedom as one of the five “basic pre-governmental rights” enshrined in the First Amendment to the Constitution.

Senator Ben Sasse speaks during the Senate confirmation hearing of Judge Amy Coney Barrett on October12, 2020.
Senator Ben Sasse speaks during the Senate confirmation hearing of Judge Amy Coney Barrett on October12, 2020. (photo: Screenshot / C-SPAN)

WASHINGTON — Senator Ben Sasse, R-Neb., on Monday criticized questions aimed at Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett’s religious beliefs, saying they reflect a fundamental confusion of civics with politics.

“Religious liberty is the basic idea that how you worship is none of the government’s business. Government can wage wars. Government can write parking tickets. But government cannot save souls…Your soul is something that the government can’t touch,” he said in his opening statement at Barrett’s Supreme Court confirmation hearing.

Sasse stressed the importance of religious freedom as one of the five “basic pre-governmental rights” enshrined in the First Amendment to the Constitution.

“Contrary to the belief of some activists, religious liberty is not an exception,” he said. “You don’t need the government’s permission to have religious liberty. Religious liberty is the default assumption of our entire system.”

For this reason, he continued, the Constitution prohibits religious tests for government positions.

“This [Senate Judiciary] Committee isn’t in the business of deciding whether the dogma lives too loudly within someone. This committee isn’t in the business of deciding which religious beliefs are good and which religious beliefs are bad and which religious beliefs are weird.”

Barrett, a judge on the Seventh Circuit appeals court and a Catholic mother of seven, has come under scrutiny in the press and by Democratic senators for her Catholic faith and membership in the ecumenical group People of Praise.

Some reports suggested or alleged a connection between the group, its discontinued use of the term “handmaiden,” and the 1985 dystopian novel and later TV series “The Handmaid’s Tale.” The claim was later corrected by several major publications.

In 2017, during Barrett’s confirmation hearings for the appeals court, Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., told Barrett, “[W]hen you read your speeches, the conclusion one draws is that the dogma lives loudly within you. And that’s of concern.” The senator accused Barrett of having “a long history of believing that your religious beliefs should prevail” over the law.

Some Democratic senators have continued to warn that Barrett’s Catholic beliefs in issues such as abortion and assisted reproductive technology could influence her decision-making on the bench.

In his opening statement, Sasse harshly criticized what he described as problematic lines of questioning, saying, “There are places where this committee has acted like it’s the job of the committee to delve into people’s religious communities. That’s nuts. That’s a violation of our basic civics.”

Sasse noted that Supreme Court justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Antonin Scalia were both able to receive upwards of 90 votes at their confirmation hearing in the Senate, despite their vastly different approaches to law.

Recent hearings, however, have seen confirmation votes sharply divided along partisan lines, the senator said.

“I think some of what happened between then and now is we decided to forget what civics are and allow politics to swallow everything.”

He stressed the importance of distinguishing between politics – the “less important stuff we differ about” – and civics, the “stuff we’re all supposed to agree on, regardless of our policy view differences.”

“Civics is another way we talk about the rules of the road,” Sasse said. “Civics 101 is the stuff like Congress writes laws, the executive branch enforces laws, courts apply them. None of that stuff should be different if you’re a Republican or a Democrat or a Libertarian or a Green party member.”

While the basics of civics provide the stable framework for the American constitutional system, politics is a term for the disagreements about specific policies and approaches within that framework, the senator said, pointing to differing views on finance committee bills as an example.

Recognizing the difference between civics and politics is important in the confirmation hearing of a Supreme Court justice, Sasse said, because it reminds Americans that a judge is not a “super legislator.”

With a clear civics-based understanding of the role of judges, Sasse said, Americans should reject judicial activism, the idea that judges should advance policies to shape society through their decisions.

“This is the confused idea that the Supreme Court is just another arena for politics,” the senator said.

Seeing the court through this lens of judicial activism, Sasse said, reduces the judiciary to progressive or conservative blocs rather than recognizing the fundamental and unique role they play in the American constitutional system.

“When politicians try to get judicial nominees to give their views on cases or to give their views on policies, to try to get them to pre-commit to certain outcomes in future court cases, we are politicizing the courts, and that is wrong,” he said.

“When we have a nominee before us, we should be asking her questions that are not about trying to predetermine how certain cases will be judged,” he added.