The mockery of an unelected monarchy
SCOTUS' embarrassing code of ethics announces that it answers to no-one
Virginia Thomas, Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito (Photo illustration by Salon/Getty Images)
Published in State Affairs, Salon, Chicago Tribune, RawStory, OutSFL, and Howey Political Report
The foundational pin holding the American rule of law together is that no man is above it.
Early on, when George Washington refused to be king, he did so in recognition of man’s worst instincts. If the colonists embraced another king, free to write the law as he went along, they soon would be right back under lawless control and plunder, a fate too many Patriots gave their lives to escape. It wasn’t “if” early America would fall back under tyranny, the lawless caprice of monarchy, but when.
Despite the historical imperative of assuring that all free governments answer to one (and only one) rule of law, the U.S. Supreme Court recently announced, with its empty code of ethics, that it answers to none.
The Supreme Court insulated itself from oversight
Self-proclaimed Federalists, now a 6 to 3 majority on the high court, claim to adhere to the original intentions of the men who drafted the Constitution, which they tease from a subjectively curated version of history. But no legal scholar has ever doubted or even seriously questioned whether the drafters intended for the three branches of government to exist co-equally.
By design and text, no branch of federal government- executive, legislative or judicial- was given primacy over another. The powers of each were carefully delineated in the Constitution’s structural components, Articles I, II, and III, which wove an ingenious system of checks and balances among the three.
And yet, today’s “originalist” jurists reject the drafters’ original intent to structure co-equal branches of government into perpetuity, by claiming that the Supreme Court stands alone and above the other two branches. Justice Alito, ever the quarterback for guns and big oil, claims Congress is powerless to impose ethics on the Supreme Court, and the embarrassing code of conduct they drafted concurs.
The Court’s reluctant response
The opening statement of the “Code of Conduct” drips with hubris: “The absence of a Code has led in recent years to the misunderstanding that the Justices of this Court, unlike all other jurists in this country, regard themselves as unrestricted by any ethics rules.” Someone should hand up the memo: America’s “misunderstanding” didn’t form in a vacuum. Justices Alito and Thomas don’t just “regard themselves” as unrestricted by ethics, they have so egregiously violated the rules of fair play they shouldn’t be allowed to serve.
Alito accepted an expensive Alaskan fishing retreat with Paul Singer, a major GOP donor, fossil fuel investor, and hedge-fund manager with multiple cases before the court. Following the junket, Alito failed to recuse himself from at least ten cases involving Singer. Alito also voted to dismantle EPA climate protections while his wife was profiting from fossil fuel sales on family land. Right after Mrs. Alito leased her Oklahoma land for oil and gas production, negotiating profits of 3/16ths of the fossil fuel sales, Alito voted to block the EPA from limiting greenhouse gas emissions.
Around the same time as Alito’s 2008 fishing trip, a not-for-profit called Citizens United released a film to hurt Hillary Clinton in the Democratic primary. When it was challenged under limits set by the FEC, a judge granted summary judgement to the Election Commission, and the Supreme Court took up the case. Alito then joined a 5-4 majority to change 100 years of election law, striking the Election Act’s century-old limit on corporate campaign expenditures, opening the floodgates for corporate dark money- particularly from big oil and the NRA- to buy the outcome of national elections.
Thomas, for his part, has luxuriated for decades in extravagant gifts from his own conservative benefactor, Harlan Crow, who has spent billions funding cases before the court. Crow, a politically conservative megadonor, lavished Thomas with extravagant gifts valued at millions, which Thomas failed to disclose. Crow directly represented corporate interests that filed briefs in eight different Supreme Court cases, and Thomas supported Crow’s preferred outcome in every single one of them.
An aspirational Code of Conduct has no teeth
One of the most glaring deficits of the Court’s new code is its lack of enforcement. Instead of mandating, directing, or using the word “shall,” the code grovels before its own authors, flattering them with meek suggestions that justices “should,” “should not” and might “endeavor to” act in certain ways.
The code only looks forward, not backward, and there are no penalties and no provisions for investigating Alito and Thomas’ unethical conduct. The code fails to create an inspector general, a retired jurist panel, or any other entity with oversight authority over the court, so the members will continue to be their own personal judges.
Another outrageous defect is the lack of recusal, a matter raised consistently after Alito and Thomas ruled in favor of their benefactors and self-interests, and after Thomas flat out refused to recuse himself from a case involving Trump’s efforts to stay in power, a cause in which his wife, Virginia, was deeply involved. While the Federal law on recusal mandates recusal in conflicts like these, SCOTUS’ code merely suggests the justices “should” disqualify themselves.
Recusal is a matter of life and death
Alito and Thomas are in bed with donors protecting the lucrative-but-deadly NRA and fossil fuelagendas. Coney Barrett comes from oil too; her father was heavily involved with the American Petroleum Institute for decades. These justices, and any others with NRA or oil and gas connections, should automatically recuse from climate and gun cases. Their refusal to do so has had and will continue to have enormous life and death implications for the rest of us.
Over 600,000 Americans have died by gunshot since SCOTUS re-wrote the 2nd Amendment in the 2008 Heller decision.
As for fossil fuels, no industry has benefited more from Citizens United than oil and gas, whose expenditures on federal elections- including a massive decades-long disinformation campaign- quadrupled from 2010 to 2020. Even as the planet burns, Alito continues to double down on Citizens United; he regularly delivers speeches defending the nefarious outcome, while simultaneously disputing climate science. The oil-funded Federalist Society, equally dismissive of climate science and enamored of Citizens United, features a Youtube video on their website explaining how allowing corporations to influence elections is a matter of “free speech.”
Fossil fuel origins of climate destruction are scientifically irrefutable; rejecting science to protect private profits is morally indefensible. When coastal cities are underwater and Midwestern crops refuse to grow, it will be up to Supreme Court justices of the future to serve justice on dark money and its gilded beneficiaries like Alito, Thomas, Singer and Leonard Leo, whose destructive legacy will be sealed in the history books.
It seems we’ve entered an unelected monarchy phase after all.
one of the things I most love about your writing is your wonderful ability to turn a phrase....I mean, who has more aptly described the Federalists with their supposed adherence to original intent of the founders than you do when you assert their approach is "teased from a subjectively curated version of history."
To paraphrase a great line from Seinfeld, "That's GOLD, Sabrina, that's GOLD!"
I love your writing