US Senate Democrats pursue Supreme Court ethics legislation
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[July 19, 2023]
By John Kruzel
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Senate Democrats are pursuing legislation this
week that would set a binding ethics code for the U.S. Supreme Court
following revelations that some conservative justices have failed to
disclose luxury trips and real estate transactions - a measure facing an
uphill battle thanks to Republican opposition.
Senate Judiciary Committee members on Thursday are set to debate and
vote on a bill introduced by Democratic Senator Sheldon Whitehouse that
would impose on the top U.S. judicial body new requirements for
financial disclosures and for recusal from cases in which a justice may
have a conflict of interest.
Unlike other members of the federal judiciary, the Supreme Court's nine
life-tenured justices have no binding ethics code of conduct. They are
subject, as many high-level federal officials are, to disclosure laws
requiring them to report outside income and certain gifts, though food
and other "personal hospitality" such as lodging at an individual's
residence is generally exempted.
Justices also decide for themselves whether to step aside from cases
involving a possible conflict of interest.
Democratic lawmakers have said that news reports in recent months
detailing ties between wealthy benefactors and some conservative
justices show the court cannot be trusted to police itself.
"To hold these nine justices to the same standard as every other federal
judge is not a radical or partisan notion," Whitehouse and the
committee's Democratic chairman Senator Dick Durbin said last week in a
joint statement.
The legislation, even if it manages to gain committee approval, would
face long odds to win passage on the Senate floor, where it would need
some Republican support to advance. And it appears to have little chance
to get through the Republican-led House of Representatives.
The news outlet ProPublica has detailed ties spanning decades between
conservative Justice Clarence Thomas and billionaire Republican donor
Harlan Crow, including real estate purchases and luxury travel paid for
by the Dallas businessman. ProPublica also has reported that
conservative Justice Samuel Alito failed to disclose a private flight to
Alaska provided by a billionaire hedge fund manager whose business
interests have come before the court as the justice took a luxury
fishing trip.
Separately, the news outlet Politico has reported that conservative
Justice Neil Gorsuch failed to disclose that the buyer of a Colorado
property in which he had a stake was the chief executive of a major law
firm whose attorneys have been involved in various Supreme Court cases.
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U.S. Supreme Court justices Amy Coney
Barrett, Neil M. Gorsuch, Brett M. Kavanaugh, Ketanji Brown Jackson,
Sonia Sotomayor, Clarence Thomas, Chief Justice John G. Roberts,
Jr., Samuel A. Alito, Jr. and Elena Kagan pose for their group
portrait at the Supreme Court in Washington, U.S., October 7, 2022.
REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein/File Photo
The court's public approval cleaves along partisan lines as its 6-3
conservative majority continues to steer the law in a rightward
direction, with 44% of respondents - including 28% of Democrats and
72% of Republicans - expressing a favorable view of it in a Reuters/Ipsos
poll conducted in June.
Some Judiciary Committee Republicans have sought to portray the
ethics reform push as an effort by liberals and Democrats to smear
the court, and have argued that it should set its own rules.
"The Supreme Court does a good job of that on their own," Republican
Senator Mike Lee of Utah, who sits on the Senate Judiciary
Committee, told Reuters, referring to ethics rules. "My general
inclination is to let them do it."
Senator John Kennedy, another Republican panel member, questioned
whether lawmakers possess the power to impose ethics standards on
the court.
"I'm not sure that Congress has the authority to do it under the
separation of powers," Kennedy told reporters, referring to the U.S.
Constitution's division of powers among the U.S. government's
executive, legislative and judicial branches.
The Judiciary Committee held a hearing on Supreme Court ethics
concerns in May, but conservative Chief Justice John Roberts
rebuffed Durbin's invitation to testify, citing "the importance of
preserving judicial independence."
Roberts has said the justices, in assessing their own ethics
obligations, consult a code of conduct adopted by the policymaking
body for the broader federal judiciary. That code, binding to lower
federal court judges but not the justices, requires judges to avoid
even the "appearance of impropriety."
Whitehouse's legislation would require the justices to adopt a code
of conduct as well as create a mechanism to investigate alleged
violations. Whitehouse has accused the justices of reading current
ethics rules "in unique and eccentric ways."
"And when they're caught out of bounds," Whitehouse said at the May
hearing, "they refuse to allow any investigation of the facts."
(Reporting by John Kruzel; Editing by Will Dunham)
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