China News Service, September 27, according to foreign media reports, on September 26 local time, US President Trump nominated the Federal Court of Appeals conservative judge Amy Coney Barrett (Amy Coney Barrett) to replace the late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg (Ruth Bader Ginsburg) serves on the Supreme Court.

Data map: Trump wears a mask publicly for the first time.

  Trump called it a "really very proud moment" in the announcement, calling Barrett a woman with "excellent intelligence" and "loyalty to the Constitution."

  Trump said Barrett is "one of the most outstanding legal talents in our country."

  US media reported that the Senate led by the Republican Party will soon begin the confirmation process for Barrett.

Some Republican senators said that they would act quickly to accept Barrett’s nomination.

  According to the US media, according to a possible timetable circulated in the Senate on the 26th, it is confirmed that Barrett’s hearing may begin on October 12 and a public statement will be issued in the Senate Judiciary Committee.

There will be a round of questioning on October 13th and October 14th, and there will be a closed-door meeting of external witnesses on October 15th.

  The analysis said that if Barrett's nomination can be confirmed as quickly as Republicans hope, then the fate of some major cases, including Obama health insurance, is just around the corner.

  Barrett was appointed by Trump as a judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit in 2017. Due to her conservative opinions on religious beliefs and the law, rightist supporters supported her nomination.

The Seventh Circuit is based in Chicago and covers cases in Illinois, Indiana, and Wisconsin.

  According to analysis, if the Senate can complete the nomination confirmation before the November general election, it will mark Trump's third appointment of a Justice of the United States Supreme Court in a presidential term, and will consolidate the Supreme Court’s absolute conservative position.

  In addition to serving as a judge on the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals, the 48-year-old Barrett also served as a law professor at the University of Notre Dame.

She was the former clerk of the late conservative justice Antonin Scalia.

  Barrett is the mother of seven children, born in New Orleans, Louisiana, and now lives in South Bend, Indiana with her husband Jesse Barrett.