The Margin: 5 things to know about Trump’s possible Supreme Court picks — like how Barbara Lagoa could help him in Florida

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While speculation swirls around whom President Trump will name as his third justice to the Supreme Court, political analysts have largely centered around two contenders: Amy Coney Barrett, an appeals judge in Indiana, and Barbara Lagoa, a federal appeals judge in Florida.

Trump said on Monday that he’ll likely name a nominee for late Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s seat by Friday or Saturday, and that he has five appointees in mind.

But as Trump has also said that he plans to pick a woman to replace Ginsburg, the second female justice ever named to the high court, a number of conservative female judges are topping the president’s rumored short list — although a male justice backed by Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell could also be in the mix.

Here’s a look at five potential Supreme Court nominees, and how they could influence the presidential election in November.

They’re mostly women. Analysts including Height Capital Markets have centered the potential picks around a group of conservative women, including Barrett and Lagoa, as well as White House Deputy Counsel Kate Todd, and North Carolina federal judge Allison Jones Rushing.

There are a number of forces at play here. First, Ginsburg was a champion of equal rights, and there have only been four women to serve on the Supreme Court. If Trump names a woman, as he has said he’ll do, she would be the fifth woman to ever serve on the Supreme Court; there are currently two: Justices Elena Kagan and Sonia Sotomayor. Trump’s support among women, and suburban women in particular, is weak, according to his poll numbers.

The top two contenders appear to be Barrett, who worked as a law professor at the University of Notre Dame for almost two decades before serving on the seventh Circuit in Indiana, and Lagoa, a Miami native and Columbia Law School grad who worked as a pro bono lawyer for Elian Gonzalez’s family in the 2000 international custody battle over the then 5-year-old Cuban boy found floating off the Florida coast. Barrett was also on Trump’s short list following the Brett Kavanaugh hearings two years ago; Axios reports he said at the time that, “I’m saving her for Ginsburg.” But Lagoa, while largely unknown in D.C., has the support of Florida Republicans like Sen. Marco Rubio, Rep. Matt Gaetz and Gov. Ron DeSantis — and Florida will be a key state in deciding the November election.

Opinion:Why Trump and McConnell may not be able to choose Ginsburg’s successor at the Supreme Court

Lagoa could help Trump win votes in Florida. Lagoa, the first Hispanic woman to serve on the Florida Supreme Court, is a Cuban-American and Florida native. The analysts at Capital Alpha Partners wrote that picking Lagoa could “upend the presidential race,” as naming her to the highest court could mobilize Florida’s Hispanic community behind Trump, not to mention Hispanic voters across the country. Meanwhile, Biden’s polling among Hispanic voters is behind where Hillary Clinton was at this time in 2016, hitting one of the Democratic candidate’s weak points. What’s more, Lagoa would be a historic pick: only the second Latina justice to serve on the Supreme Court, following Obama-era nominee Sotomayor. “The president wants a conservative jurist and he wants to win the biggest battleground. How do Democrats in the Senate vote against a Latina?” a Republican source told Politico.

They’re fairly young conservatives, who could have lasting influence. Barrett is 48, Lagoa is 52 and Rushing is 38 — which would make any one of them the youngest justice currently serving on the Supreme Court. This means that whichever one is picked could be in a position to decide landmark cases for a generation, if not longer. And they have voiced opinions that cater to Trump’s base. Barrett is a devout Catholic who has said that “life begins at conception,” according to Notre Dame Magazine, and that justices should not be bound by Supreme Court precedents. Liberals have interpreted this as a sign that she could vote to overturn the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision legalizing abortion. Lagoa has only spent a year serving on the federal level, so she doesn’t have as much of a record to scrutinize. But she did join in a major ruling that upheld a law requiring people with felony convictions to pay all court fees, fines and restitution before they regain their right to vote. Rushing has worked with the Alliance Defending Freedom, a Christian nonprofit that has been called an “anti-LGBTQ” organization by the Southern Poverty Law Center.

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Many have clerked for conservative Supreme Court justices. Barrett clerked for the late Justice Antonin Scalia in the late 1990s, and is considered a Scalia-like textualist who believes the law should be interpreted based on the ordinary meaning of the legal text, and not non-textual sources such as the intention of the law. Rushing clerked for Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas for the 2010-11 term, and also clerked for current Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch before he was on the high court. Todd also clerked for Thomas, during the 2000-01 term.

Related: Analysts worry Ginsburg replacement fight will take Congress’ eye off ball of fiscal aid

Amul Thapar could also be a contender. While Trump has said he’ll pick a woman, he’s also known for changing his mind, and Thapar was one of four finalists to replace Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy when he retired in 2018. Thapar, 51, a conservative who serves the sixth Circuit in Kentucky, would be the first Asian-American on the Supreme Court. Sen. McConnell recommended him for the district bench and the appellate court, and he’s also a favorite of the Federalist Society, a conservative group that believes the Constitution should be interpreted as it was written. While he has not written about abortion, his father told The Courier Journal in 2018 that Thapar “nearly wouldn’t speak to me after I voted for Barack” Obama. Then again, Thapar has also argued against “politicians in robes” who put their personal views before the law, and has written that the three branches of government should “stay in their lanes.”