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Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
Entertainment
Nardine Saad

Protesting Amy Coney Barrett's hearing, these 'handmaids' take on new meaning

Activists dressed in the crimson robes and white bonnets made famous by Hulu's Emmy-winning drama "The Handmaid's Tale" marched on Capitol Hill Sunday to oppose the Senate confirmation hearing of Amy Coney Barrett. The judge would fill late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg's seat on the Supreme Court.

The Sunday demonstrators wore face coverings as precautions during the COVID-19 pandemic, rather than the gags worn by the show's characters to silence disobedient handmaids _ fertile women who are forcibly impregnated during religious ceremonies in the series' fictional, totalitarian Gilead.

The handmaid-styled protesters have become a touchstone for women's and reproductive rights since the publication of Margaret Atwood's 1985 novel. They were a silent, yet powerful presence in 2018 during then-Judge Brett Kavanaugh's volatile confirmation hearings, among other historical events surrounding women's rights.

The women take on a more charged significance during Barrett's hearing this week due to the Trump nominee's affiliation with the People of Praise religious community, whose high-ranking female leaders are also called handmaids.

The Associated Press reported last week that Barrett, a Roman Catholic, served as a handmaid in the multi-denominational Christian organization. The community opposes abortion and holds that men are divinely ordained as the "head" of both the family and faith, while it is the duty of wives to submit to them.

The legal scholar has thus far refused to discuss her membership in the group. Her opening statement, which was released Sunday, emphasized that policy decisions should be made by elected officials not the courts.

Following Monday's opening statements and remarks from Barrett, senators will have a few days to question the conservative appeals-court judge. On Thursday, they'll hear from legal experts and people who know Barrett well.

Her nomination has become contentious since Ginsburg's death last month. Democrats are outraged by the Republican push to confirm her even after voting in the presidential election has begun in many states. President Trump's rival, Joe Biden, has also warned that Barrett will side with conservative efforts to gut the Affordable Care Act, or Obamacare.

Barrett's ascension would cement a conservative majority on the Supreme Court, whose justices serve for life.

By Monday morning, the crimson handmaids weren't the only costumed demonstrators at the Capitol.

Anti-Barrett protesters in pandemic-inspired hazmat costumes appeared to protest the proceedings for taking place during the COVID-19 crisis. Other protesters were met by anti-abortion demonstrators and conservative students dressed in white wigs and black robes who tried to drown them out, according to reporters tweeting from the scene.

Several protesters were arrested by Capital Police.

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