Amy Coney Barrett: Trump Supreme Court nominee sidesteps questions
US Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett has evaded questions about her views on key issues on day two of her Senate confirmation hearing.
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US Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett has evaded questions about her views on key issues on day two of her Senate confirmation hearing.
In the recent presidential and vice presidential debates, Democratic nominee Joe Biden and his running mate Kamala Harris refused to answer where they stand on adding seats to the Supreme Court.
During Wednesday night's vice presidential debate, professors from around the country sounded off on social media.
Facebook has said it will stop running all political and social-issue adverts after polls close in the US presidential election on 3 November.
Days after banning ads prematurely declaring victory in the presidential election, Facebook has now banned those questioning the US electoral process.
Judge Amy Coney Barrett is an alumna and a current professor at the University of Notre Dame Law School, but students, faculty members, and alumni of the university are divided over her nomination to the Supreme Court.
Facebook, YouTube and Twitter have agreed a deal with major advertisers on how they define harmful content.
Tech firms have been urged to stop advertising to under-18s in an open letter signed by MPs, academics and children's-rights advocates.