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Amy Vivian Coney Barrett (born January 28, 1972) is an American lawyer and jurist serving since 2020 as an associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States. [1] The fifth woman to serve on the court, she was nominated by President Donald Trump .
Amy Coney Barrett, associate justice of the United States Supreme Court. [68] Peter Leslie Smith, a Roman Catholic auxiliary bishop of the Archdiocese of Portland in Oregon, has been a member since 1983. [69] [70] Christopher Dietzen, a former associate justice of the Minnesota Supreme Court. [71] Joe Zakas, a former Indiana state legislator. [72]
Of the justices sitting as of February 20, 2025, Amy Coney Barrett is the youngest, at 53 years, 23 days old, while Clarence Thomas is the oldest at 76 years, 242 days. The oldest person to have served on the court was Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. , who stepped down two months shy of his 91st birthday. [ 151 ]
A religious organization tied to Amy Coney Barrett, Trump’s Supreme Court nominee, sought to erase all mentions and photos of her from its website.
Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett served for nearly three years on the board of private Christian schools that effectively barred admission to children of same-sex parents and made it plain ...
Amy Coney Barrett, whom President Donald Trump nominated Saturday to succeed Ruth Bader Ginsburg on the Supreme Court, is an appeals court judge whose most controversial statements have come in ...
To further discern the justices' ideological leanings, researchers have carefully analyzed the judicial rulings of the Supreme Court—the votes and written opinions of the justices—as well as their upbringing, their political party affiliation, their speeches, their political contributions before appointment, editorials written about them at the time of their Senate confirmation, the ...
The following is a table of law clerks serving the associate justice holding Supreme Court seat 6 (the Court's sixth associate justice seat by order of creation), which was established on February 24, 1807, by the 9th Congress through the Seventh Circuit Act of 1807 (2 Stat. 420). [4]