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Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett defended Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health, which overturned Roe v. Wade in an interview with CBS on Sunday.
Odonel asked Barrett about objections written by Justices Barrett Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan and former Judge Stephen Breyer, who believed the court would face issues regarding the application of abortion regulations to health care. The opposing justice raised questions about morning pills, intrauterine devices, and in vitro fertilization (IVF).
“The Dobbs didn’t make abortion illegal. The Dobbs didn’t say anything about whether abortion was immoral. Dobbs said these questions were the remaining questions. And all of them. All of these questions – the decision you mentioned that requires medical judgment – our constitution is not the labor that our constitution is associated with the courts, what you know is, you know how much labor there is. Dobbs said the appeals are correct.

Senior CBS correspondent Norah O’Donnell interviewed Judge Amy Coney Barrett on September 2, 2025 in Washington, DC. (Mary Kouw/CBS News via Getty Images)
Justice Barrett defends Jackson in rare public appearance
Odonel said Dobbs’ decision raised questions about the future of other rights. Dobbs’s decision Effectively ends the awareness of the constitutional right to abortion and gives States the power to fully allow, restrict or prohibit such practices.
“So when Hillary Clinton said what was next, she said: ‘My prediction is that the courts will take gay marriages, what did they do with abortion.’”
Barrett replied: “I think the people who criticize the court say a lot of different things, but the point I put forward in the book is that we have to adjust these things.”

The U.S. Supreme Court saw it in Washington, DC on November 8, 2024. ((Nicholas Economy/Cats by Getty))
Barrett, appointed by the president Donald Trump In October 2020, in order to succeed the late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, a book was released entitled “Listen to the Law: Reflection on the Court and the Constitution.”
Barrett described her Working to reconcile personal beliefs with the excerpts she has in the forthcoming book in Free Media.
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Barrett also talked about her confirmation hearing and She is a The Supreme Court Justice was interviewed at Lincoln Center on Thursday.
Her confirmation was done behind closed doors, thanks to the then 19th pandemic and social precautions. This also makes A lengthy confirmation process She said she said to laughter on the first day of justice on the U.S. Supreme Court “embarrassing.” “It’s embarrassing.”

U.S. Supreme Court Deputy Judges Donald Trump and Amy Coney Barrett stood on the balcony at a ceremony on the southern lawn in Washington, D.C. on Monday, October 26, 2020. (Ken Cedeno/CNP/Bloomberg via Getty Image)
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Breanne Deppisch and Ashley Oliver of Fox News contributed to the report.