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Tag: Clarence Thomas

  • America Has a Supreme Court Problem

    America Has a Supreme Court Problem

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    A decade ago, the idea that a radical Supreme Court would remake our country might have seemed hyperbolic. But that’s exactly what happened. In just the past two terms, the Trumpified Supreme Court ended women’s constitutional right to an abortion, limited the state of New York’s ability to limit concealed carry firearms, struck down affirmative action in college admissions, blocked Joe Biden’s student-debt forgiveness plan, squashed the separation of church and state in a school-prayer case, gutted the Clean Water Act, and backed LGBTQ+ discrimination. This Supreme Court is so deeply emboldened to reshape society that one can’t help but be relieved when they don’t completely shred the Voting Rights Act or when the majority of justices—though not all of them—reject a fringe, right-wing legal theory that could blow up elections in America.

    Some of us saw the possibility of what a conservative majority could do, but I have to admit, I didn’t think Donald Trump would manage to install three Supreme Court justices in four years. Sure, the winner of the November 2016 presidential election would get to at least fill the Antonin Scalia seat, which had been held open since the previous February, as Mitch McConnell blocked then president Barack Obama from filling it. During the final presidential debate between Trump and Hillary Clinton, in October 2016, moderator Chris Wallace mused that the winner could potentially make “two or three appointments” and “in effect determine the balance of the court for what could be the next quarter century.”

    The person who really saw this coming that election year, and tried warning voters, was Clinton. In a Wisconsin speech, she said that the Supreme Court was “at its best, the Court is a place where the least powerful voices in our society are heard and protected,” including those of African Americans “fighting for the right to vote,” or women demanding abortion rights in the face of “humiliating laws that would strip that right away.” So far, we have seen this Supreme Court sign off on those “humiliating laws”; you’ll recall this Supreme Court allowed Texas’s draconian SB8, a precursor to Dobbs, to continue. That law allowed for bounties and citizen enforcement to restrict abortion. Hard to think of a more humiliating law than treating women like criminals when they want to make choices about their own bodies.

    The Supreme Court, Clinton said in that final 2016 debate with Trump, “really raises the central issue in this election.”

    “Namely,” she continued, “what kind of country are we going to be? What kind of opportunities will we provide for our citizens? What kind of rights will Americans have? And I feel strongly that the Supreme Court needs to stand on the side of the American people, not on the side of the powerful corporations and the wealthy. For me, that means that we need a Supreme Court that will stand up on behalf of of women’s rights, on behalf of the rights of the LGBT community, that will stand up and say no to Citizens United, a decision that has undermined the election system in our country because of the way it permits dark, unaccountable money to come into our electoral system.”

    Nine years later these words pierce the flesh.

    Because every June is now an exercise in waiting to see what we’ve lost or what we’re about to lose. A year ago, in their joint Dobbs dissent, justices Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan, and former justice Stephen Breyer wrote that the ruling “breaches a core rule-of-law principle, designed to promote constancy in the law…. It places in jeopardy other rights, from contraception to same-sex intimacy and marriage. And finally, it undermines the Court’s legitimacy.” Sotomayor warned earlier during oral arguments in Dobbs about how the Court’s right-wing trajectory could damage public opinion. “Will this institution survive the stench that this creates in the public perception that the Constitution and its reading are just political acts?” she asked. 

    Turns out the answer was a resounding ‘No’ with the Supreme Court being as unpopular as it’s ever been.

    And then there are the numerous ethical lapses that conservative justices’ have been accused of. Billionaire Harlan Crow bought Clarence Thomas’s mom’s house and renovated it. Crow also paid for Thomas’s grandnephew to go to private school and took the justice on private jet and yacht trips over two decades. There was also Neil Gorsuch becoming embroiled in scandal over his sale of a property to the head of a powerful law firm that has argued cases before the Supreme Court. Most recently, Samuel Alito defended his own private-jet trip with the laughable excuse that he only occupied “a seat that, as far as I am aware, would have otherwise been vacant.”

    Alito decided to get ahead of the scandal by writing an opinion piece in the brain-worms-ridden opinion section of the Rupert Murdoch–owned Wall Street Journal editorial page. “ProPublica has leveled two charges against me: first, that I should have recused in matters in which an entity connected with Paul Singer was a party and, second, that I was obligated to list certain items as gifts on my 2008 Financial Disclose Report. Neither charge is valid,” he wrote. 

    Yeah, totally normal behavior for Supreme Court justices. Meanwhile, Chief Justice John Roberts has refused to testify before Congress as it probes Supreme Court ethics issues and seems to think Americans should simply trust the Court to fix its own legitimacy mess. But Congress is the body that would, ideally, hold a rogue Court in check.

    “Historically, Congress has exercised an array of powers to hold the Court accountable—from exercising more control over the Court’s docket to taking jurisdiction away over certain cases to requiring the justices to travel around the country to docking the Court’s budget to canceling the Court’s entire Term one year,” University of Texas School of Law professor professor Stephen Vladeck told me. “These powers have constitutional limits, but there’s an enormous amount of authority Congress could exercise over the Court before it came within a lightyear of those limits.”

    As Hillary Clinton predicted, we are now a country that needs protection from our rogue judiciary. Congress can provide this protection, but only if there is the will to. The American people need to continue to pressure our elected officials to hold this extremist and ethically challenged Court accountable before it’s too late—if it isn’t already.

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    Molly Jong-Fast

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  • In 370 days, Supreme Court conservatives dash decades of abortion and affirmative action precedents

    In 370 days, Supreme Court conservatives dash decades of abortion and affirmative action precedents

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    WASHINGTON (AP) — Overturning Roe v. Wade and eliminating affirmative action in higher education had been leading goals of the conservative legal movement for decades.

    In a span of 370 days, a Supreme Court reshaped by three justices nominated by President Donald Trump made both a reality.

    Last June, the court ended nationwide protections for abortion rights. This past week, the court’s conservative majority decided that race-conscious admissions programs at the oldest private and public colleges in the country, Harvard and the University of North Carolina, were unlawful.

    Asian shares are mostly higher after a rally on Wall Street driven by reports that showed inflation abating, alleviating fears over the threat of a recession.

    A much-feared backup of U.S. passport applications has snarled summer plans for would-be travelers around the world.

    The United Nations body that regulates the world’s ocean floor is preparing to resume negotiations that could open the international seabed for mining, including for materials vital for the green energy transition.

    Nearly six months after the Democratic Party approved Biden’s plan to overhaul which states lead off its presidential primary, implementing the revamped order has proven anything but simple.

    Precedents that had stood since the 1970s were overturned, explicitly in the case of abortion and effectively in the affirmative action context.

    “That is what is notable about this court. It’s making huge changes in highly salient areas in a very short period of time,” said Tara Leigh Grove, a law professor at the University of Texas.

    As ethical questions swirled around the court and public trust in the institution had already dipped to a 50-year low, there were other consequential decisions in which the six conservatives prevailed.

    They rejected the Biden administration’s $400 billion student loan forgiveness program and held that a Christian graphic artist can refuse on free speech grounds to design websites for same-sex couples, despite a Colorado law that bars discrimination based on sexual orientation and other characteristics.

    The court, by a 5-4 vote, also sharply limited the federal government’s authority to police water pollution into certain wetlands, although all nine justices rejected the administration’s position.

    Affirmative action was arguably the biggest constitutional decision of the year, and it showcased fiercely opposing opinions from the court’s two Black justices, Clarence Thomas and Ketanji Brown Jackson.

    They offered sharply contrasting takes on affirmative action. Thomas was in the majority to end it. Jackson, in her first year on the court, was in dissent.

    The past year also had a number of notable surprises.

    Differing coalitions of conservative and liberal justices ruled in favor of Black voters in an Alabama redistricting case and refused to embrace broad arguments in a North Carolina redistricting case that could have left state legislatures unchecked and dramatically altered elections for Congress and president.

    The court also ruled for the Biden administration in a fight over deportation priorities and left in place the Indian Child Welfare Act, the federal law aimed at keeping Native American children with Native families.

    Those cases reflected the control that Chief Justice John Roberts asserted, or perhaps reasserted, over the court following a year in which the other five conservatives moved more quickly than he wanted in some areas, including abortion.

    Roberts wrote a disproportionate share of the term’s biggest cases: conservative outcomes on affirmative action and the student loan plan, and liberal victories in Alabama and North Carolina.

    The Alabama case may have been the most surprising because Roberts had consistently sought to narrow the landmark Voting Rights Act since his days as a young lawyer in the Reagan administration. As chief justice, he wrote the decision 10 years ago that gutted a key provision of the law.

    But in the Alabama case and elsewhere, Roberts was part of majorities that rejected the most aggressive legal arguments put forth by Republican elected officials and conservative legal advocates.

    The mixed bag of decisions almost seemed designed to counter arguments about the court’s legitimacy, raised by Democratic and liberal critics — and some justices — in response to last year’s abortion ruling, among others. The narrative was amplified by published reports of undisclosed, paid jet travel and fancy trips for Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito from billionaire Republican donors.

    “I don’t think the court consciously takes opinion into account,” Grove said. “But I think if there’s anyone who might consciously think about these issues, it’s the institutionalist, the chief justice. He’s been extremely concerned about the attacks on the Supreme Court.”

    On the term’s final day, Roberts urged the public to not mistake disagreement among the justices for disparagement of the court. “Any such misperception would be harmful to this institution and our country,” he wrote in the student loans case in response to a stinging dissent by Justice Elena Kagan.

    Roberts has resisted instituting a code of ethics for the court and has questioned whether Congress has the authority to impose one. Still, he has said, without providing specifics, that the justices would do more to show they adhere to high ethical standards.

    Some conservative law professors rejected the idea that the court bowed to outside pressures, consciously or otherwise.

    “There were a lot of external atmospherics that really could have affected court business, but didn’t,” said Jennifer Mascott, a George Mason University law professor.

    Curt Levey, president of the Committee for Justice, pointed to roughly equal numbers of major decisions that could be characterized as politically liberal or conservative.

    Levey said conservatives “were not disappointed by this term.” Democrats and their allies “warned the nation about an ideologically extreme Supreme Court but wound up cheering as many major decisions as they decried,” Levey wrote in an email.

    But some liberal critics were not mollified.

    Brian Fallon, director of the court reform group Demand Justice, called the past year “another disastrous Supreme Court term” and mocked experts who “squint to find so-called silver linings in the Court’s decisions to suggest all is not lost, or they will emphasize one or two so-called moderate decisions from the term to suggest the Court is not as extreme as we think and can still be persuaded from time to time.”

    Biden himself said on MSNBC on Thursday that the current court has “done more to unravel basic rights and basic decisions than any court in recent history.” He cited as examples the overturning of abortion protections and other decisions that had been precedent for decades.

    Still, Biden said, he thought some on the high court “are beginning to realize their legitimacy is being questioned in ways it hasn’t been questioned in the past.”

    The justices are now embarking on a long summer break. They return to the bench on the first Monday in October for a term that so far appears to lack the blockbuster cases that made the past two terms so momentous.

    The court will examine the legal fallout from last year’s major expansion of gun rights, in a case over a domestic violence gun ban that was struck down by a lower court.

    A new legal battle over abortion also could make its way to the court in coming months. In April, the court preserved access to mifepristone, a drug used in the most common method of abortion, while a lawsuit over it makes its way through federal court.

    The conservative majority also will have opportunities to further constrain federal regulatory agencies, including a case that asks them to overturn the so-called Chevron decision that defers to regulators when they seek to give effect to big-picture, sometimes vague, laws written by Congress. The 1984 decision has been cited by judges more than 15,000 times.

    Just seven years ago, months before Trump’s surprising presidential victory, then-Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg reflected on the term that had just ended and made two predictions. One was way off base and the other was strikingly accurate.

    In July 2016, the court had just ended a term in which the justices upheld a University of Texas affirmative action plan and struck down state restrictions on abortion clinics.

    Her first prediction was that those issues would not soon return to the high court. Her second was that if Trump became president, “everything is up for grabs.”

    Ginsburg’s death in 2020 allowed Trump to put Justice Amy Coney Barrett on the court and cement conservative control.

    Commenting on the student loan decision, liberal legal scholar Melissa Murray wrote on Twitter that Biden’s plan “was absolutely undone by the Court that his predecessor built.”

    ___

    Follow the AP’s coverage of the Supreme Court at https://apnews.com/hub/us-supreme-court

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  • Justices Expand Supreme Court To 40 Right-Wing Buddies

    Justices Expand Supreme Court To 40 Right-Wing Buddies

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    WASHINGTON—Explaining that the move just made sense given the national importance of their rulings, the six conservative justices announced Friday that they had expanded the U.S. Supreme Court to include 40 of their right-wing buddies. “The Supreme Court is pleased to welcome a few stalwart conservative judges from the circuit courts, a dozen reactionaries from Harvard Law School, and my brother-in-law, an accountant,” said Chief Justice John Roberts, adding that he, along with Samuel Alito, Amy Coney Barrett, Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh, and Clarence Thomas, had overruled the court’s three liberal members and sworn in 40 new conservative justices that morning. “We figured Biden or Congress would try to expand the court, given all that’s going on, and we were surprised when they didn’t—but hey, that’s typical Washington gridlock for you. Hanging out with the same nine people all the time is kind of a drag, so we decided to take it upon ourselves to call up the Heritage Foundation and get 15 recommendations. Neil also invited some of his golf buddies, Amy called a couple priests she knows through church, and for diversity, we let a couple of the guys bring their wives. It’ll be nice having Ginni here on the court, for Clarence’s sake. And as a bonus, this should give the Supreme Court a rock-solid right-wing majority that will last until the end of time.” At press time, the Supreme Court had ruled 46-3 to overturn gay marriage.

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  • How did each Supreme Court justice vote in today’s student loan forgiveness ruling? Here’s a breakdown

    How did each Supreme Court justice vote in today’s student loan forgiveness ruling? Here’s a breakdown

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    The Supreme Court decided 6-3 that the Biden administration does not have the authority to wipe out nearly half-a-trillion dollars in student debt.

    The decision denies relief to about 40 million Americans who stood to have up to $20,000 in student debt erased by the plan using the HEROES Act. 

    There were actually two student loan forgiveness decisions made on Friday: The first was about whether two private citizens had the right to challenge the plan. The court unanimously said that the pair did not have standing, and their challenge was thrown out. 

    However, in the case where the decision to strike down the forgiveness plan was made, the court said that Missouri — one of six states that challenged the plan — did have legal standing. This allowed the court to consider whether the secretary of education could use the HEROES Act to forgive student loan debt. 

    Here’s how the court voted on that case. 

    Supreme Court justices who voted against student loan forgiveness

    The Supreme Court’s decision fell along ideological lines, much like Thursday’s decision to end race-based affirmative action

    Chief Justice John Roberts voted against the student loan forgiveness plan and delivered the majority opinion, saying that U.S. Education Secretary Miguel Cardona has the authority to “waive or modify” the HEROES Act, but not “rewrite that statute from the ground up.” 

    “The Secretary’s comprehensive debt cancellation plan cannot fairly be called a waiver—it not only nullifies existing provisions, but augments and expands them dramatically. It cannot be mere modification, because it constitutes ‘effectively the introduction of a whole new regime,’” Roberts wrote. 

    Associate Justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett voted with Roberts.

    Barrett filed a concurring opinion, writing that the court “can uphold the Secretary of Education’s loan cancellation program only if he points to ‘clear congressional authorization’ for it.” 

    Supreme Court justices who voted to uphold student loan forgiveness

    The court’s three liberal voices — Justices Elena Kagan, Sonia Sotomayor and Ketanji Brown Jackson — all opposed the decision. Kagan filed a dissent where she called the decision to take up the case, let alone vote on it, an “overreach.” 

    “The plaintiffs in this case are six States that have no personal stake in the Secretary’s loan forgiveness plan,” Kagan wrote. “They are classic ideological plaintiffs: They think the plan a very bad idea, but they are no worse off because the Secretary differs. In giving those States a forum — in adjudicating their complaint — the Court forgets its proper role. The Court acts as though it is an arbiter of political and policy disputes, rather than of cases and controversies.”

    In the dissent, Kagan wrote that Cardona acted within the “broad authority” provided by the HEROES Act, saying that the decision to alter usual rules “fits comfortably within” the parameters set by the statute. 

    Melissa Quinn contributed to this report.

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  • In Ending Affirmative Action, Clarence Thomas Finally Gets What He Wanted

    In Ending Affirmative Action, Clarence Thomas Finally Gets What He Wanted

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    Chief Justice John Roberts may have written the majority opinion for the U.S. Supreme Court that ended affirmative action on Thursday, but Justice Clarence Thomas may savor the moment the most.

    Thomas, the second of only three Black Supreme Court justices in American history, is the court’s harshest opponent of affirmative action policies. Despite, or rather because of, his experience of being among the first generation of Black students to benefit from affirmative action policies, Thomas views them with the greatest disdain.

    In a solo concurring opinion involving Harvard College and the University of North Carolina, Thomas declared victory and stated his opinion that the precedent in the 2003 case of Grutter v. Bollinger, which had upheld affirmative action, was now dead ― something that Roberts did not do.

    “The Court’s opinion rightly makes clear that Grutter is, for all intents and purposes, overruled,” Thomas wrote. “And, it sees the universities’ admissions policies for what they are: rudderless, race-based preferences designed to ensure a particular racial mix in their entering classes. Those policies fly in the face of our colorblind Constitution and our Nation’s equality ideal. In short, they are plainly — and boldly — unconstitutional.”

    Thomas uses his concurrence to bring all of his past opinions to bear to dance on the grave of a policy of “racial discrimination” that he believes stamped him with the stigma of race ever since he left his home in Pin Point, Georgia.

    After attending College of the Holy Cross, Thomas chose to go to Yale Law School. The law school had just implemented an affirmative action policy that set a quota of 10% of incoming classes to be people of color. Thomas was among 12 other Black students in his class.

    He has since recounted feeling unnerved by the smiling faces of white liberals telling him that he was there due to their beneficence. He would connect this to a favorite song of his at the time, The Undisputed Truth’s “Smiling Faces Sometimes” with its lyrics:

    Smiling faces, smiling faces, sometimes

    They don’t tell the truth

    Smiling faces, smiling faces tell lies

    “As much as it had stung to be told I’d done well … despite my race, it was far worse to feel that I was now at Yale because of it,” Thomas wrote in his 2007 memoir.

    Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas has been a longtime opponent of affirmative action policies.

    Alex Wong via Getty Images

    The white liberal acting out of supposed charity to the Black student was actually just enacting a sort of perverse inversion of the old racism, Thomas would later say. He would frequently equate the policies of racial segregation and affirmative action.

    “I believe that there is a ‘moral [and] constitutional equivalence’ … between laws designed to subjugate a race and those that distribute benefits on the basis of race in order to foster some current notion of equality,” Thomas wrote in a 1995 affirmative action opinion.

    He echoed this belief Thursday in his concurrence supporting the plaintiffs, Students for Fair Admissions Inc.: “Then, as now, the views that motivated Dred Scott and Plessy have not been confined to the past, and we must remain ever vigilant against all forms of racial discrimination.”

    Thomas has long written and opined that affirmative action started from a premise that Black people were “inferior” and in need of white people’s helping hand. This made white people the central character in the affirmative action narrative while making the Black recipient ― and the rest of society ― question their achievements, Thomas argued.

    “[Blacks] owe all their achievements to the ‘anointed’ in society who supposedly changed the circumstances ― not to their own efforts,” Thomas wrote in 1995 for The Weekly Standard.

    This beneficence from the “anointed” not only creates doubt and confusion for the Black recipients of affirmative action but also undermines their accomplishments to themselves, their peers and in society at large. It doesn’t matter whether a given Black person achieved thanks to affirmative action or not.

    “Who can differentiate between those who belong and those who do not?” Thomas wrote in his opinion in Grutter.

    This leaves a question mark over the accomplishments of all successful Black people and marks them with a stigma of inferiority, he reasoned.

    “The problem of stigma does not depend on determinacy as to whether those stigmatized are actually the ‘beneficiaries’ of racial discrimination,” Thomas continued in Grutter. “When blacks take positions in the highest places of government, industry, or academia, it is an open question today whether their skin color played a part in their advancement. The question itself is the stigma ― because either racial discrimination did play a role, in which case the person may be deemed ‘otherwise unqualified,’ or it did not, in which case asking the question itself unfairly marks those blacks who would succeed without discrimination.”

    “As much as it had stung to be told I’d done well … despite my race, it was far worse to feel that I was now at Yale because of it.””

    – Clarence Thomas, 2007

    This all may sound eerily familiar to liberals who have familiarized themselves with contemporary literature steeped in critical race theory, like Ibram X. Kendi’s book “Stamped From the Beginning.” That’s because Thomas agrees.

    “For Thomas, the most important form that racism takes is the stigma or mark it puts on black people, designating them as less worthy or capable than white people. … What distinguishes Thomas’s jurisprudence is that he accepts these liberal claims about the secret and no-so-secret life of race, while refusing the conclusions that liberals believe must follow from them,” the political theorist Corey Robin writes in his book “The Enigma of Clarence Thomas.”

    He rejects what liberals believe must follow ― integration, diversity goals, affirmative action, equity ― because he says they only serve the interests of white people.

    “[A]s the universities define the ‘diversity’ that they practice, it encompasses social and aesthetic goals far afield from the education-based interest discussed in Grutter,” Thomas wrote in his concurrence on Thursday.

    His opinions on affirmative action are frequently peppered with talk of “aesthetics.” By this, Thomas means that the aesthetic appearance provided by a diverse student body at exclusive educational institutions serves only the interests of the rising white elite. If diversity means admitting more Black students because they are supposed to bring diverse perspectives, then the people they are bringing those perspectives to are the non-beneficiaries of affirmative action: white people. Therefore, affirmative action for Black people is meant only to help white people obtain an aesthetic air of racial diversity.

    It also helps elite schools maintain their exclusivity. Harvard is only Harvard because it admits so few people, after all. Affirmative action provides a tool to increase racial diversity while keeping exclusive admissions policies.

    In this way, affirmative action is a “solution to the self-inflicted wounds of [an] elitist admissions policy,” Thomas wrote in Grutter.

    In his concurrence in Students for Fair Admissions, Thomas gathers these arguments and deploys them with great venom at the dissent written by Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, the nation’s third Black justice. In her own dissent, Jackson not only outlines the history of gaps in opportunity that made affirmative action policies necessary but argues that it is a matter of respect for identity, in contrast to Thomas’ argument that affirmative action is inherently demeaning.

    “To demand that colleges ignore race in today’s admissions practices — and thus disregard the fact that racial disparities may have mattered for where some applicants find themselves today — is not only an affront to the dignity of those students for whom race matters. It also condemns our society to never escape the past that explains how and why race matters to the very concept of who ‘merits’ admission,” she writes.

    “[Thomas’ opinion] demonstrates an obsession with race consciousness that far outstrips my or UNC’s holistic understanding that race can be a factor that affects applicants’ unique life experiences,” Jackson continued in a footnote, before concluding: “[B]y insisting that obvious truths be ignored, [Thomas] prevent[s] our problem-solving institutions from directly addressing the real import and impact of ‘social racism’ and ‘government-imposed racism,’ thereby deterring our collective progression toward becoming a society where race no longer matters.”

    Thomas, in turn, accuses Jackson of arguing that all outcomes are determined by race and the country’s history of racism. In envisioning this “black and white world (literally),” Thomas says that Jackson would hand over policy to a self-appointed elite class to use race to sort out the winners and losers.

    Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson sparred with Thomas in their dueling dissent and concurrence in the Students for Fair Admissions cases.
    Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson sparred with Thomas in their dueling dissent and concurrence in the Students for Fair Admissions cases.

    OLIVIER DOULIERY via Getty Images

    “Her dissent is not a vanguard of the innocent and helpless,” Thomas writes. “It is instead a call to empower privileged elites, who will ‘tell us [what] is required to level the playing field’ among castes and classifications that they alone can divine.”

    Though they do not say so, Jackson and Thomas may simply not believe in the same end point. Thomas argued in his concurrence and in the past that affirmative action policies hurt Black people by admitting them to schools that are a “mismatch.”

    “[T]hose policies sort at least some blacks and Hispanics into environments where they are less likely to succeed academically relative to their peers,” Thomas wrote in his concurrence on Thursday, adding, “These policies may harm even those who succeed academically.”

    Instead, Thomas believes that Black students should go to schools where they would not be “stamped” with the “stigma” of affirmative action and would find a match to help them succeed. What would that match be? Historically Black colleges and universities “demonstrate a marked ability to improve the lives of their students,” Thomas wrote in his concurrence.

    “Why, then, would this Court need to allow other universities to racially discriminate?” Thomas asks. “Not for the betterment of those black students, it would seem. The hard work of HBCUs and their students demonstrate that ‘black schools can function as the center and symbol of black communities, and provide examples of independent black leadership, success, and achievement.’”

    In his opinions and public comments, Thomas has long talked up the ills of integration and the promise of separation. “The whole push to assimilate simply does not make sense to me,” Thomas once said.

    “I am the only one at this table who attended a segregated school,” The New Yorker’s Jeffrey Rosen reported Thomas to have said during deliberations on a desegregation case in 1995. “And the problem with segregation was not that we didn’t have white people in our class. The problem was that we didn’t have equal facilities.”

    And instead, Thomas felt that affirmative action simply exposed him to social experimentation by white liberals.

    “I have been the guinea pig for many social experiments on social minorities. To all who would continue these experiments, I say, ‘Please, no more,’” Thomas said in a 1986 speech.

    As Robin writes in his biography of the justice, Thomas never left behind his Black radical politics of the 1970s. He has instead transmuted them into a deeply pessimistic conservative politics of race. White racism can never be overcome. Efforts to ameliorate historic racial inequalities are actually a new form of white racism and control. Integration is detrimental to Black people. Separation is the ideal.

    Jackson, now representing an alternate view from the bench as a Black woman, takes a different view in her dissent when she says that affirmative action programs “reflect universities’ clear-eyed optimism that, one day, race will no longer matter.”

    Thomas has now achieved one of his great career goals. It remains to be seen whether his vision for the future comes to pass.

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  • Ketanji Brown Jackson Torches Clarence Thomas for Bulls–t Take on Affirmative Action

    Ketanji Brown Jackson Torches Clarence Thomas for Bulls–t Take on Affirmative Action

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    As the Times notes, “Prosecutors often continue investigating strands of a criminal case after charges have been brought, and sometimes their efforts go nowhere. But post-indictment investigations can result in additional charges against people who have already been accused of crimes in the case.”

    A spokesman for Trump declined the Times’ request comment.

    It definitely must have just been a happy coincidence that a wealthy Ron DeSantis donor who reportedly lent the Florida governor his private plane on at least 12 occasions received $92 million from the DeSantis administration for his real estate project, right?

    Right?? Per The Washington Post:

    The administration of Florida governor Ron DeSantis steered $92 million last year in leftover federal coronavirus stimulus money to a controversial highway interchange project that directly benefits a top political donor, according to state records. The decision by the Florida Department of Transportation to use money from the 2021 American Rescue Plan for the I-95 interchange at Pioneer Trail Road near Daytona Beach fulfilled a yearslong effort by Mori Hosseini, a politically connected housing developer who owns two large tracts of largely forested land abutting the planned interchange. The funding through the DeSantis administration, approved shortly after the governor’s reelection, expedited the project by more than a decade, according to state documents.

    Hosseini plans to develop the land—which includes a sensitive watershed once targeted for conservation by the state—into approximately 1,300 dwelling units and 650,000 square feet of nonresidential use, including an outdoor village shopping district. He has called the Woodhaven development, which has already begun construction, his “best project yet” and promised to pull out all the stops for its success. “With or without the interchange, we would have built Woodhaven there, but it certainly helps,” he told The Daytona Beach News Journal in March 2019.

    Before the Post story was published, a spokesman for DeSantis posted the outlet’s request for comment on Twitter, later writing in an email to the newspaper, “You are trying to make an accusation to play ‘gotcha’,” in response to a question about whether DeSantis had discussed the project with Hosseini or advocating for funding it.

    Elsewhere!

    Supreme Court decision a “travesty of justice” says UNC, Harvard litigator

    The Hill • Read More

    Court has “gone out of its way” to unravel basic rights, Biden says

    NBC News • Read More

    The End of Affirmative Action Is Only the Beginning

    Intelligencer • Read More

    Judge rejects Trump’s “presidential immunity” defense in second E. Jean Carroll case

    Politico • Read More

    Consumers and retailers brace for student loans payment restart

    Washington Post • Read More

    Prosecutors charge three men with insider trading scheme related to Trump’s media company

    Politico • Read More

    Trump, Who Has the Mind of a Child, Still Thinks the Classified Documents He Got Indicted for Keeping Belong to Him: Report

    Vanity Fair • Read More

    Italian teacher sacked for 20 years of absence vows to defend herself

    BBC • Read More

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    Bess Levin

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  • Supreme Court rejects affirmative action at colleges as unconstitutional

    Supreme Court rejects affirmative action at colleges as unconstitutional

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    The Supreme Court on Thursday ruled that the affirmative action admission policies of Harvard and the University of North Carolina are unconstitutional.

    The ruling is a massive blow to decades-old efforts to boost enrollment of minorities at American universities through policies that took into account applicants’ race.

    “Eliminating racial discrimination means eliminating all of it,” wrote Chief Justice John Roberts in the majority opinion, which all five of his fellow conservative justices joined in.

    Roberts wrote said that both Harvard’s and UNC’s affirmative action programs “unavoidably employ race in a negative manner, involve racial stereotyping, and lack meaningful end points.”

    “We have never permitted admissions programs to work in that way, and we will not do so today,” Roberts wrote, finding that the universities’ policies violated the equal protection clause of the Constitution’s 14th Amendment. The clause bars states from denying people equal protection under the law.

    Protesters gather in front of the U.S. Supreme Court as affirmative action cases involving Harvard and University of North Carolina admissions are heard by the court in Washington on Monday, October 31, 2022.

    Bill Clark | Cq-roll Call, Inc. | Getty Images

    The chief justice added, however, that “nothing prohibits universities from considering an applicant’s discussion of how race affected the applicant’s life, so long as that discussion is concretely tied to a quality of character or unique ability that the particular applicant can contribute to the university.”

    Justice Clarence Thomas, a Black conservative who wrote a concurring opinion, said that the schools’ affirmative action admissions policies “fly In the face of our colorblind Constitution.”

    “Two discriminatory wrongs can not make a right,” wrote Thomas.

    In her dissent to the majority, liberal Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, who is Black, called the ruling “truly a tragedy for us all.”

    Her fellow liberal, Justice Sonia Sotomayor, said, “Today, this Court stands in the way and rolls back decades of precedent and momentous progress.”

    Sotomayor, calling the ruling “profoundly wrong” and “devastating,” said that the majority “holds that race can no longer be used in a limited way in college admissions to achieve such critical benefits.”

    U.S. Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor

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    In doing so, she argued the Supreme Court “cements a superficial rule of colorblindness as a constitutional principle in an endemically segregated society where race has always mattered and continues to matter.”

    Thursday’s ruling dealt with two separate, but related cases, one for Harvard, the other for UNC.

    In the Harvard case, the vote on the decision was 6-2, with Jackson taking no part in considering the case. Jackson last year during her Senate confirmation hearings agreed to recuse herself in the case involving Harvard, whose Board of Overseers she served on until early 2022.

    Proponents for affirmative action in higher education rally in front of the U.S. Supreme Court before oral arguments in Students for Fair Admissions v. President and Fellows of Harvard College and Students for Fair Admissions v. University of North Carolina on October 31, 2022 in Washington, DC.

    Chip Somodevilla | Getty Images

    In the UNC case, the vote was 6-3, with Jackson participating in considering the case and dissenting with Sotomayor and Justice Elena Kagan, the court’s third liberal.

    President Joe Biden said, “The court has effectively ended affirmative action in college admissions, and I strongly, strongly disagree with the court’s decision.”

    “Discrimination still exists in America,” Biden said at the White House, repeating that phrase several times. “Today’s decision does not change that.”

    Asked by a reporter if “this a rogue court,” Biden paused at a door he was about to exit through, and was silent for several seconds.

    “This is not a normal one,” Biden finally said.

    People exit Harvard Yard in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on June 29, 2023.

    Joseph Prezioso | AFP | Getty Images

    Harvard in a lengthy statement said, “We will certainly comply with the Court’s decision.”

    But the statement added, “In the weeks and months ahead, drawing on the talent and expertise of our Harvard community, we will determine how to preserve, consistent with the Court’s new precedent, our essential values.”

    Harvard, which began classes in 1636, did not admit Black undergraduates until 1847, the university noted.

    UNC Chancellor Kevin Guskiewicz, in a statement, said, “Carolina remains firmly committed to bringing together talented students with different perspectives and life experiences and continues to make an affordable, high-quality education accessible to the people of North Carolina and beyond.”

    “While not the outcome we hoped for, we will carefully review the Supreme Court’s decision and take any steps necessary to comply with the law,” Guskiewicz said.

    Jean Camejo, a student at the University of North Carolina, speaks on campus to Reuters about affirmative action as the Supreme Court weighs the issue of race-conscious admissions to colleges, in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, U.S., March 28, 2023. 

    Jonathan Drake | Reuters

    Former President Donald Trump, who is seeking the 2024 Republican presidential nomination, in a statement said, “This is a great day for America.”

    “We’re going back to all merit-based — and that’s the way it should be!” said Trump, who graduated from the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania, an Ivy League school like Harvard, after growing up the son of a wealthy New York real estate developer.

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    In a footnote to the majority opinion in the case, Roberts indicated that the decision does not apply to the United States military academies.

    The Biden administration had filed a legal brief arguing that race-based admissions to American colleges further “compelling interests” at the military academies, Roberts noted.

    “No military academy is a party to these cases, however, and none of the courts below addressed the propriety of race-based admissions systems in that context,” he wrote. “This opinion also does not address the issue, in light of the potentially distinct interests that military academies may present.”

    NAACP CEO Derrick Johnson blasted the ruling, saying in a statement, “Today the Supreme Court has bowed to the personally held beliefs of an extremist minority.”

    “We will not allow hate-inspired people in power to turn back the clock and undermine our hard-won victories,” said Johnson.

    “The tricks of America’s dark past will not be tolerated. Let me be clear – affirmative action exists because we cannot rely on colleges, universities, and employers to enact admissions and hiring practices that embrace diversity, equity and inclusion. Race plays an undeniable role in shaping the identities of and quality of life for Black Americans.”

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  • Justices Clarence Thomas and Ketanji Brown Jackson criticize each other in unusually sharp language in affirmative action case | CNN Politics

    Justices Clarence Thomas and Ketanji Brown Jackson criticize each other in unusually sharp language in affirmative action case | CNN Politics

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    Washington
    CNN
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    The Supreme Court’s landmark ruling Thursday on affirmative action pitted its two Black justices against each other, with the ideologically opposed jurists employing unusually sharp language attacking each other by name.

    The majority opinion authored by Chief Justice John Roberts said colleges and universities can no longer take race into consideration as a specific basis for granting admission, saying programs at Harvard and the University of North Carolina violated the Equal Protection Clause because they failed to offer “measurable” objectives to justify the use of race.

    Justice Clarence Thomas and the court’s other four conservatives joined Roberts’ opinion. But Thomas, who in 1991 became the second Black person to ascend to the nation’s highest court, issued a lengthy concurrence that attacked such admissions programs and tore into arguments posited by liberal Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, the first Black woman to join the court, who penned her own fiery dissent in the case.

    Thomas has previously acknowledged that he made it to Yale Law School because of affirmative action, but he has long criticized such policies. He spoke in personal terms in his concurrence as he put forth his argument against the use of the policies, which he described as “rudderless, race-based preferences designed to ensure a particular racial mix in their entering classes.”

    “Even in the segregated South where I grew up, individuals were not the sum of their skin color,” Thomas wrote.

    “While I am painfully aware of the social and economic ravages which have befallen my race and all who suffer discrimination,” he added, “I hold out enduring hope that this country will live up to its principles so clearly enunciated in the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution of the United States: that all men are created equal, are equal citizens, and must be treated equally before the law.”

    As he read his concurrence from the bench on Thursday, Jackson, who joined the court last year, stared blankly ahead. Though Justice Sonia Sotomayor read her dissent from the bench, Jackson did not read her own dissent, in which she went after Thomas’ concurrence and accused the majority of having a “let-them-eat-cake obliviousness” in how the ruling announced “‘colorblindness for all’ by legal fiat.”

    A footnote near the end of Jackson’s dissent went after the concurrence by Thomas, with the liberal justice accusing her colleague of demonstrating “an obsession with race consciousness that far outstrips my or UNC’s holistic understanding that race can be a factor that affects applicants’ unique life experiences.”

    “Justice Thomas ignites too many more straw men to list, or fully extinguish, here,” Jackson wrote. “The takeaway is that those who demand that no one think about race (a classic pink-elephant paradox) refuse to see, much less solve for, the elephant in the room – the race-linked disparities that continue to impede achievement of our great Nation’s full potential.”

    In her broader dissent, Jackson said that the argument made by the challengers that affirmative action programs are unfair “blinks both history and reality in ways too numerous to count.”

    “But the response is simple: Our country has never been colorblind,” Jackson said.

    (While Jackson recused herself from the Harvard case, she did hear the UNC case, and her dissent was focused on the latter.)

    Thomas then explicitly attacks Jackson’s opinion.

    “As she sees things, we are all inexorably trapped in a fundamentally racist society, with the original sin of slavery and the historical subjugation of black Americans still determining our lives today,” Thomas wrote.

    “Worse still, Justice Jackson uses her broad observations about statistical relationships between race and select measures of health, wealth, and well-being to label all blacks as victims,” Thomas wrote at another point in his concurrence. “Her desire to do so is unfathomable to me.”

    ‘You don’t have to be perfect’: Watch Judge Jackson’s emotional message to her girls

    Thomas, one of the court’s most conservative members, has long been known for his distaste for affirmative action policies. He has been open about the fact that he made it to Yale because of affirmative action, but says the stigma of preferential treatment made it difficult for him to find a job after college.

    In his memoir, “My Grandfather’s Son,” Thomas says he felt “tricked” by paternalistic Whites at Yale who recruited Black students.

    “After graduating from Yale, I met a black alumnus of the University of Michigan Law School who told me that he’d made a point of not mentioning his race on his application. I wished with all my heart that I’d done the same,” he wrote.

    “I learned the hard way that a law degree from Yale meant one thing for White graduates and another for blacks, no matter how much anyone denied it,” Thomas wrote. “As a symbol of my disillusionment, I peeled a fifteen-cent price sticker off a package of cigars and stuck it one the frame of my law degree to remind myself of the mistake I’d made by going to Yale.”

    He dissented in the 2003 case Grutter v. Bollinger, which allowed for the limited use of race in college admissions.

    “I believe blacks can achieve in every avenue of American life without the meddling of university administrators,” he wrote in his dissent.

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  • Federal judge defends Clarence Thomas in new book, rejects ‘pot shots’ at Supreme Court | CNN Politics

    Federal judge defends Clarence Thomas in new book, rejects ‘pot shots’ at Supreme Court | CNN Politics

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    CNN
     — 

    A federal appeals court judge previously on short lists for the Supreme Court is taking the rare step to broadly and publicly reject allegations that Justice Clarence Thomas has been improperly influenced by lavish gifts provided by a conservative billionaire, dismissing “pot shots” at the Supreme Court in general.

    “Judges are just like every other human being. We have a diverse group of friends, and those friends don’t influence the way we do our job,” Judge Amul Thapar, who sits on a Cincinnati-based appeals court, told CNN in an interview.

    Thapar this past week released a new book about Thomas entitled “The People’s Justice,” in which he explores the justice’s favored judicial philosophy of originalism. Thapar posits that the theory is wrongly described as always favoring the “rich over the poor, the strong over the weak, the corporation over the consumer.”

    He walks through Thomas’ reasoning in a handful of cases dealing with affirmative action, the Second Amendment, school vouchers, a cross burning law and public takings of private property, among others, and contends that Thomas’ originalism “more often favors the ordinary people who come before the court – because the core idea behind originalism is honoring the will of the people.”

    RELATED: Supreme Court limits federal prisoners’ ability to bring some post-conviction challenges

    President Donald Trump nominated Thapar in to serve on the 6th US Circuit Court of Appeals in 2017, and he was also on Trump’s short list for Supreme Court vacancies. Thapar, 54, is a favorite of Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, who handpicked him to serve as the US attorney for the Eastern District of Kentucky in 2006.

    Thapar declined to talk about specifics regarding real estate magnate Harlan Crow’s hospitality to Thomas that included rides on private jets and luxury yachts. But he said that any determination about whether judges or justices have been improperly influenced must begin with a look at the body of their work.

    “You can judge their works, and what they do, against what they’ve done in the past,” Thapar told CNN. “And if it’s consistent, then it’s hard to say anything influenced them.”

    Thapar added that he finds it “disheartening that people who know better are taking pot shots at the court.”

    And while Thomas speaks often about his cross-country travels with his wife, Ginni, in their RV every summer, he never publicly detailed the extent of luxury travel associated with Crow until the news was fleshed out by ProPublica in April.

    Thapar, however, said the media has ignored Thomas’ other friends.

    “What they don’t tell you,” Thapar said, “is that he also has friends who are homeless, friends he meets in RV parks across the nation.”

    In his book, the judge wrote: “It makes sense that a justice who would rather spend his time in Walmart parking lots than at cocktail parties is an originalist.”

    Virginia Canter, chief ethics counsel at the Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, said the title of Thapar’s book is “completely disingenuous.”

    “Given the hundreds of thousands of dollars in private jet travel, luxurious vacations and other extravagant gifts he has accepted from his wealthy benefactor, Thomas represents anything but a justice for the people,” Canter said.

    Thapar rejects suggestions that Thomas should have disclosed the hospitality provided by Crow on annual financial disclosure forms.

    In April, Thomas released a statement saying he hadn’t disclosed the hospitality because the ethics rules – that have since changed – didn’t require disclosure at the time. The Crow dispute has been referred to the Administrative Office of the US Courts, the policy arm of the federal judiciary.

    “As judges, we try not to disclose more than is required under the rules because otherwise it becomes a game of ‘gotcha’ – you disclosed ‘x,’ why didn’t you disclose ‘y’?” Thapar said.

    “So, what the Administrative Office has recommended is we disclose what is required by the rules, and I think it’s important we do that,” Thapar said. “I wish the rules were crystal clear, and when they are, we disclose whatever is required, or we should, and if we make a mistake ,we should own up to it.”

    But when it comes to recusing themselves from cases when there’s a possible conflict of interest with a party to the case, Thapar said it’s easier for a lower court judge – who often sits on multimember panels – to make that choice.

    “I’m one of 16,” Thapar said. “Another judge can step in my shoes.”

    But the Supreme Court, on the other hand, only has nine members, Thapar pointed out, “and they have no provision – if they recuse – for someone to take their spot, so it’s a lot harder for them.”

    Thapar’s book is a ringing endorsement of originalism, a judicial theory that requires the Constitution to be interpreted based on its original public meaning.

    “Originalists believe that the American people, not nine unelected judges, are the source of the law that governs us – through the Constitution and statutes enacted by our elected representatives,” the judge writes.

    He says Thomas has been misunderstood over his career.

    “By cherry-picking his opinions or misrepresenting them, Justice Thomas’s critics claim that his originalism favors the rich over the poor, the strong over the weak, and corporations over consumers. They have called Justice Thomas ‘the cruelest justice,’ ‘stupid,’ and even an ‘Uncle Tom’ a traitor to his race,” Thapar writes.

    Elizabeth Wydra, president of the liberal Constitutional Accountability Center, which supports what it calls a progressive view of originalism, believes the text and history of the entire Constitution, as amended, is “remarkably progressive.”

    She rejects the views taken by Thapar and Thomas.

    “While it is true that originalism can lead to wins for the ‘little guy,’ it only works that way if you give sufficient weight to the amendments that have, over time, pushed our Constitution along an arc of progress and made it a more inclusive and equality-focused document,” Wydra said.

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  • Opinion: Affirmative Action Is In Danger, Again

    Opinion: Affirmative Action Is In Danger, Again

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    Barbara Grutter, a white lady from Michigan, filed suit when she was rejected by the University of Michigan Law School, which admitted that it took steps to ensure a racially diverse student body. In Grutter v. Bollinger, a landmark case on affirmative action that caught national attention in 2003, the U.S. Supreme Court determined the law school’s admissions policies were not unconstitutional.

    However, the companion case, Gratz v. Bollinger, saw a different ruling: The Supreme Court deemed Michigan’s undergraduate affirmative action process — in which an automatic 20 extra points were given to Blacks, Latinos and Native Americans on a 150-point admission scale — unconstitutional.

    I was in my senior year at Michigan in 2003, and I remember all the eyes on us. As I was wrapping up an enriching and life-changing scholastic career at the university, I’d hoped against hope that the high court — and the rest of the world — saw the value in having more people who looked like me matriculate at such a prestigious university.

    Two decades later, we’re back at it as bored septuagenarian Edward Blum continues his tireless crusade toward keeping universities as white as possible with not one but two lawsuits by his nonprofit Students for Fair Admissions against the University of North Carolina and Harvard University.

    Perhaps the most visible and vocal plaintiff in these cases is Jon Wang, a Chinese American teenager who believes he was rejected by Harvard and five other top universities despite stellar grades and a 1590 SAT score because of affirmative action.

    However, one of those six schools, the University of California, Berkeley, cannot employ race-based affirmative action in its admissions policies, making Wang one of the many qualified applicants who simply didn’t get in.

    Considering we have the most conservative Supreme Court in generations, no one is optimistic about the future of affirmative action as a means of diversifying American universities. Justice Clarence Thomas, who has been engaged in a personal battle against affirmative action despite benefiting from it as a highly successful Black man born in the 1940s South, will almost certainly disappoint the ancestors (once again) by voting against it later this month.

    My personal experiences may seem inconsequential in the grand scheme of the affirmative action discussion, but, while whole books have been written about affirmative action in scope, not enough ink has been spilled about what diversity, or lack of it, feels like.

    The University of Michigan had a roughly 6% Black student population when I started attending in 1999. At a bit under 50,000 students, that’s roughly 3,000 Black folks — less than the population of my entire high school.

    We kept things tight — there was never more than a degree of separation between any Black student — because culture dictated that we do so. Our parties were policed harder than others’ and we leaned hard on each other, as well as the university’s Black support staff, to make it to caps and gowns at one of the most challenging state universities in the country.

    We had our Black homecomings, our Black graduation ceremonies, a Black Student Union and even “Black dorms” (word to Markley Hall in the mid-1990s). I’m a core member of a Black male support group that exists to this day; I remain connected to current students after 20 years away.

    I couldn’t give you exact numbers, but most of the Black folks with whom I attended Michigan are unqualified winners in life. Even in my immediate crew of close Black male friends, I’m the only liberal arts chump among engineers and a medical doctor.

    There’s a good chance a lot of us wouldn’t have even made it to Michigan without affirmative action.

    My high school GPA wasn’t mind-blowing. But my ACT score was decent, I wrote a damn good essay for my application and I attended a selective enrollment Detroit public school with a 90-plus-percent Black student population that fed to the University of Michigan — at some other school with the same grades, I might not have been accepted.

    Considering it’s a state institution a half-hour drive from Detroit, one of the Blackest major U.S. cities, Michigan recognized the importance of race-based admissions policies. But Gratz v. Bollinger made things harder for us: Michigan had only 4% Black enrollment in 2021 — a one-third drop from my time there.

    When I visit the campus today, I can feel the change: The spaces we carved out for ourselves have been either transformed or no longer exist. Testimonies from Black students from the last 15 years suggest that the university is simply … whiter.

    Richard Sander and Stuart Taylor Jr. argue in their piece “The Painful Truth About Affirmative Action” for The Atlantic that lower-performing minority students placed in high-performing environments are set up for failure, but I disagree: Michigan didn’t accept the scrubs skipping school four times a week to kick it at McDonald’s just because they were Black. The 20 points it added were for students who took care of business in high school … the valedictorians and folks active in extracurriculars.

    Some beneficiaries of affirmative action did flame out of Michigan, but so did many of the white students who made it in — depending on your major, the university can be brutally difficult, and the work requires discipline regardless of how you got admitted.

    Few opponents of affirmative action account for the positive effects a diverse student body has on everyone: Nothing bad will come of exposing students and staff to multiculturality on a collegiate level. To that end, the abolition of affirmative action in schools could also have a detrimental effect on the job market as it pertains to corporate diversity programs and the fact that businesses could again suffer the consequences of having C-suites that resemble a frat from “Animal House.”

    Harvard has admitted that there’s no more efficient means of diversifying its student population than affirmative action policies; if the Supreme Court ruling goes badly, hopefully, universities can get creative and backdoor their ways into affirmative action.

    Black matriculation and graduation from four-year universities remain frustratingly lower than for any other ethnicity, and data suggests that white women (who tend to push back against affirmative action) have historically been affirmative action’s biggest beneficiary.

    The sad irony is that many right-wing Black folks and other underrepresented minorities love to suggest that racism is all gone because … hey, they worked really hard and became winners without handouts! A very notable exception is Colin Powell, who became the first Black secretary of state following a storied military career that began in a U.S. Army that had just been desegregated.

    Powell was a Republican, and he wasn’t exactly loud on behalf of Black folks, but even he recognized the value of affirmative action.

    I’ve always empathized with the classic affirmative action counterpoint: the idea that a white male can work hard his entire life to get accepted to a prestigious school, only to “lose” his spot to an underrepresented minority whose grades weren’t as good as his.

    However, as is the case with Wang, one cannot prove that affirmative action is the explicit reason they aren’t accepted to one or several schools that weigh several factors to determine who gets in. Sometimes, you just get a bad break, and it’s easier to point the finger at Black and brown folks.

    Also, to understand socioeconomic and ethnic disadvantages is to realize why two candidates with different ethnicities and high school scores might be more comparable than what we see on paper. Since I’m sure Black Americans will be given the runaround for reparations until our great-grandkids are pushing daisies, I’ll take whatever academic bonuses we can get — especially when applied to someone who will do them justice.

    If you don’t view this as a greater social good, then chances are you feel like your “spot” in society is in danger. Or perhaps you’re simply a delusional “I get mine out the mud” ethnic minority.

    If you fit in either category, I encourage you to read a book or three.

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  • Clarence Thomas Asked for an Extension on His Financial Disclosures, Which Probably Means Harlan Crow Bought Him an Island

    Clarence Thomas Asked for an Extension on His Financial Disclosures, Which Probably Means Harlan Crow Bought Him an Island

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    Of course, it’s also possible that Thomas simply asked for a delay because Crow showered him with even more absurd gifts this past year, and he’s just trying to figure out a way to make them sound less bad than they are. Guess we’ll find out in three months time.

    Report: Trump may be able to commute by car to potential federal trial

    According to The Washington Post, most of the proceedings could be a hop, skip, and a jump from his Palm Beach home:

    >Justice Department prosecutors are planning to bring a significant portion of any charges stemming from the possible mishandling of classified documents at Mar-a-Lago, the home of former president Donald Trump, at a nearby federal court in south Florida, according to people familiar with the matter. The legal rationale for such a move is that the bulk of the conduct at issue in the investigation occurred in the southern district of Florida, in and around Trump’s Palm Beach residence and private club, even if much of the investigation—led by special counsel Jack Smith—has been handled by a grand jury in DC, these people said.

    >That approach by prosecutors does not rule out the possibility of some charges, such as perjury or false statements, being filed in Washington in connection with grand jury appearances or law enforcement interviews that took place there, according to these people, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe the internal discussions.

    Trump’s advisers are reportedly bracing for an indictment. On Wednesday, the former president and legal mind of a generation took to Truth Social to say: “No one has told me I’m being indicted, and I shouldn’t be because I’ve done NOTHING wrong, but I have assumed for years that I am a Target of the WEAPONIZED DOJ & FBI.”

    Surprise: Mike Pence thinks a national abortion ban would be great

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  • Roberts Says Supreme Court Can Do More On Ethics, But Offers No Specifics

    Roberts Says Supreme Court Can Do More On Ethics, But Offers No Specifics

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    WASHINGTON (AP) — Chief Justice John Roberts said Tuesday that there is more the Supreme Court can do to “adhere to the highest standards” of ethical conduct, an acknowledgment that recent reporting about the justices’ ethical missteps is having an effect on public perception of the court.

    Speaking at a law dinner where he was honored with an award, Roberts provided no specifics but said the justices “are continuing to look at the things we can do to give practical effect to that commitment.”

    He said he is “confident there are ways to do that consistent with our status as an independent branch of government and the Constitution’s separation of powers.”

    The court has resisted adopting an ethics code of its own, and Roberts has raised questions about whether Congress could impose a code of conduct on the court.

    All nine justices recently signed a statement of ethics that Roberts provided to the Senate Judiciary Committee. His remarks Tuesday suggested he knows that statement is not enough to quiet critics.

    The chief justice’s remarks follow a series of stories, mainly by the investigative news site ProPublica, that have detailed lavish trips and other gifts provided to Justice Clarence Thomas by Republican megadonor Harlan Crow.

    Democrats have used the revelations to call for stronger ethics rules for the Supreme Court, and the Democratic-controlled Senate has held two hearings on ethics issues in recent weeks. Republicans have defended Thomas.

    Roberts, who has led the court since 2005, also said the hardest decision he has made as chief justice was to keep protesters away from the court last year, in the wake of the leak of the draft opinion overturning Roe v. Wade.

    “The hardest decision in 18 years I had to make was whether to erect fences and barricades around the Supreme Court. I had no choice but to go ahead and do it,” he said at the American Law Institute dinner in Washington.

    The fencing was removed before the court’s new term began in October.

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  • Ron DeSantis spells out possibility to cement ‘7-2 conservative majority’ on Supreme Court | CNN Politics

    Ron DeSantis spells out possibility to cement ‘7-2 conservative majority’ on Supreme Court | CNN Politics

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    CNN
     — 

    Ahead of an expected White House bid in the coming days, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis spelled out the possibility to build a “7-2 conservative majority” on the US Supreme Court.

    The Republican pointed to four justices – three appointed by Republican presidents – who he believed are poised to leave the bench during the next eight or nine years, during a speech at the National Religious Broadcasters Convention in Orlando on Monday.

    “If you look over the next two presidential terms there is a good chance that you could be called upon to seek replacements for Justice Clarence Thomas and Justice Samuel Alito. And the issue with that is you can’t really do better than those two. They are the gold standard for jurisprudence, so you gotta make sure that we are appointing people as close to that standard as possible,” DeSantis said, referring to two conservative stalwarts.

    Alito is 73, Thomas is 74.

    DeSantis also highlighted what he sees as a potential opportunity to replace conservative Chief Justice John Roberts, 68, or liberal Justice Sonia Sotomayor, 68, to cement a conservative majority for years. The court currently has a 6-3 conservative supermajority.

    “If you replace a Clarence Thomas with someone like a Roberts or somebody like that then you’re actually gonna see the court move to the left, and you can’t do that. I also think if you look over those eight years, you very well could be called upon to replace Chief Justice John Roberts, and perhaps even, someone like Justice Sotomayor,” DeSantis said.

    “So, it is possible that in those eight years we would have the opportunity to fortify justices Alito and Thomas, as well as actually make improvements with those others and if you were able to do that then you would have a 7-2 conservative majority on the Supreme Court that would last a quarter century, so this is big stuff,” he added.

    As governor, DeSantis spoke about tilting the Florida Supreme Court to a conservative majority, with the help of age limits.

    “We have age limits for justices,” DeSantis said. “The minute I got elected to office, three of the four liberal justices were off the court, because of age. So, I was able in my first term of office to replace three liberal justices with three conservative justices.”

    He teased another judicial appointment this week to replace a retiring conservative justice.

    “I will have ended up doing seven appointments throughout my tenure,” DeSantis said. “Judicial activism in Florida is now officially dead.”

    Like all federal judges, Supreme Court justices are appointed for life.

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  • Wealthy Donor Rents Out Entire Water Park For Clarence Thomas

    Wealthy Donor Rents Out Entire Water Park For Clarence Thomas

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    MANASSAS, VA—Claiming that the gift was simply a gesture of kindness rather than an ethics violation, Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas stated Friday that there was nothing wrong with a wealthy donor renting out an entire D.C.-area water park just for him. “One friend is allowed to treat another friend to a nice, relaxing day of wet and wild fun in the sun, aren’t they?” said Thomas from the middle of a cozy tube floating down SplashDown’s lazy river, explaining how much easier it was to enjoy all 13 acres of northern Virginia’s largest water park when there were no lines or other people sharing the attractions. “Harlan Crow and I go back many years, so there’s nothing unusual or nefarious about him paying $600,000 for them to open up before their season has even started and attend to my every whim to make sure I have a total blast. Show me in the bylaws where I’m violating a condition of my employment by riding the Tropical Twister as many times as I want with no wait. Plus, Neil and Sonya are going to be so jealous when I go back to work with a solid tan and a belly full of free ice cream.” At press time, Crow had reportedly tipped a teenaged pool attendant $1,500 to carry Thomas up the wooden stairs at Pipeline Tower so he could go for another ride.

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  • Federal judge calls out judicial panel’s handling of 2011 ethics complaints against Clarence Thomas | CNN Politics

    Federal judge calls out judicial panel’s handling of 2011 ethics complaints against Clarence Thomas | CNN Politics

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    Washington
    CNN
     — 

    Leaders of the policy-making body for the federal courts repeatedly failed to inform its full membership of complaints raised by lawmakers and watchdog groups about Justice Clarence Thomas’ pattern of nondisclosure on his financial reports more than 10 years ago, a sitting federal judge testified to a Senate panel on Wednesday.

    In 2011, the Judicial Conference received a number of complaints from lawmakers and watchdog groups about Thomas after media reports revealed that he failed to disclose income his wife earned between 1998 and 2003 from The Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank.

    The complaints asked the conference to refer the matter to the US attorney general to probe whether the justice’s behavior ran afoul of a federal ethics law. Thomas quickly amended his reports when the allegations were brought to his attention, leading the body to conclude that no further action was needed.

    But US District Judge Mark Wolf, an appointee of President Ronald Reagan, said on Wednesday that the full Judicial Conference did not receive notice of the complaints sent to leaders of the conference and therefore couldn’t decide how the body should act on them.

    “This concerned me because the issues raised by the letters were serious,” Wolf said in testimony to a Senate Judiciary subcommittee looking into court ethics.

    “Pursuant to established conference policies and procedures, if the committee (on financial disclosures) had considered the letters, my colleagues on the Judicial Conference and I should have been informed of them in its reports to the Conference, even if the committee was not recommending any action by the Conference,” he said.

    “Such information would have afforded me and the other members of the conference the opportunity to discuss and decide whether there was reasonable cause to believe Justice Thomas had willfully violated the act and, if so, to make the required referral to the attorney general,” Wolf added.

    The decade-old complaints have reentered the spotlight amid recent reports about Thomas’ decision to not disclose years of luxury travel and expensive gifts that were paid for by GOP megadonor Harlan Crow, as well as a real estate deal he and his family cut with the donor.

    Those reports have fueled similar calls by lawmakers and watchdog groups for the Judicial Conference to refer the justice to the attorney general for potential violations of the ethics law, and CNN has reported that Thomas intends to amend his financial disclosure forms to reflect the 2014 real estate deal.

    They’ve also put the Judicial Conference, which among other things handles financial disclosure forms submitted by justices and federal judges, in the hot seat. When the 2011 complaints were made, Wolf was serving on the conference, which is comprised of a small selection of federal judges from various courts around the country.

    Earlier this week, the conference defended its decision more than 10 years ago to not refer Thomas to the DOJ to investigate allegations that his pattern of nondisclosure on his financial reports broke federal law.

    Roslynn Mauskopf, the conference’s secretary, explained its reasoning in a letter Monday to Democratic Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, who chairs the Senate Judiciary subcommittee looking into court ethics, noting that Thomas “immediately amended his reports” after the issue was raised with the justice.

    “The then-chair of the committee, the Honorable Bobby R. Baldock, reviewed the January 2011 allegations and the amended reports and concluded that the reports were properly amended and that no further action was warranted,” Mauskopf wrote.

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  • Oops: Ginni Thomas’s Firm Also Received Cash Payments From a Conservative With Business Before the Supreme Court

    Oops: Ginni Thomas’s Firm Also Received Cash Payments From a Conservative With Business Before the Supreme Court

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    If you keep tabs on possible corruption at the Supreme Court, you likely know that the last month has involved a constant, comical stream of revelations about Clarence Thomas and his GOP sugar daddy, Harlan Crow. First, we learned that Crow had spent years treating the justice and his wife to lavish gifts, luxury vacations, and yacht/private jet rides—none of which Thomas felt the need to disclose. Then, it came out that Crow had purchased multiple properties from Thomas and his family, including one from the justice’s mother. (Again, none of these sales were disclosed.) And just yesterday, it emerged that Crow paid the private school tuition of the grand-nephew Thomas raised as a son. Obviously all of this is completely ridiculous, as is the fact that there will very likely be no repercussions whatsoever for Thomas, despite the fact that basically every other government employee would be fired for much less.

    But if you thought ethics concerns in the Thomas marriage started and ended with the guy in the robes, you thought wrong!

    Here’s a fun one from The Washington Post:

    Conservative judicial activist Leonard Leo arranged for the wife of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas to be paid tens of thousands of dollars for consulting work just over a decade ago, specifying that her name be left off billing paperwork, according to documents reviewed by The Washington Post. In January 2012, Leo instructed the GOP pollster Kellyanne Conway to bill a nonprofit group he advises and use that money to pay Virginia “Ginni” Thomas, the documents show. The same year, the nonprofit, the Judicial Education Project, filed a brief to the Supreme Court in a landmark voting rights case.

    Leo, a key figure in a network of nonprofits that has worked to support the nominations of conservative judges, told Conway that he wanted her to “give” Ginni Thomas “another $25K,” the documents show. He emphasized that the paperwork should have “No mention of Ginni, of course.”

    According to the Post, Conway’s firm, the Polling Company, sent Leo’s Judicial Education project a bill for $25,000 and, per Leo’s directive to keep Ginni’s name off of it, listed the description as “Supplement for Constitution Polling and Opinion Consulting.” In total, documents show the Polling Company paid Ginni Thomas’s firm, Liberty Consulting, $80,000 between June 2011 and the same month the following year, with plans to pay another $20,000 before 2012 was up. Incidentally, in 2001, Clarence publicly complained about his salary on the Court, reportedly saying, “The job is not worth doing for what they pay.” That year, he made $178,300 per year; in 2022, his salary was $274,200. So an additional $80,000 to $100,000 would not have been anything to sneeze about!

    Meanwhile, if you’re wondering if the nonprofit organization Leo advises had business before the Supreme Court the very year he was directing tens of thousands of dollars into Ginni Thomas’s pocket, wonder no longer. In December of 2012, per the Post, “the Judicial Education Project submitted an amicus brief in Shelby County v. Holder, a case challenging a landmark civil rights law aimed at protecting minority voters. The Court struck down a formula in the Voting Rights Act that determined which states had to obtain federal clearance before changing their voting rules and procedures. Clarence Thomas was part of the 5-to-4 majority.” Thomas also wrote a concurring opinion favoring “the outcome the Judicial Education Project and several other conservative organizations had advocated in their amicus briefs,” though he did not cite the Judicial Education Project’s brief.

    Washington University law professor Kathleen Clark told the Post that Thomas should have, quite obviously, recused himself from the case. And while NYU law professor Stephen Gillers said the current interpretation of recusal laws would not have necessitated such a move, it’s more than obvious that the Court’s ethics and disclosure rules are a joke.

    For his part, Leo naturally issued a series of statements defending the whole arrangement as totally proper and not at all corrupt. “I have known Clarence and Ginni Thomas since 1990,” he told the Post. “They are dear friends and are people of tremendous good will and integrity. Anybody who thinks that Justice Thomas is influenced in his work by what others say or do, including his wife Ginni, is completely ignorant of who this man is and what he stands for. And anybody who thinks Ginni Thomas would seek to influence the Supreme Court’s work is completely ignorant of the respect she has for her husband and the important role that he and his colleagues play in our society.”

    Of his directive to keep Ginni Thomas’s name off of documents, he wrote, “Knowing how disrespectful, malicious and gossipy people can be, I have always tried to protect the privacy of Justice Thomas and Ginni.” Because what else is he going to say? I knew how bad this looked and I wanted to avoid it coming out in public?

    Neither Thomas responded to requests for comment.

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    Bess Levin

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  • Activist Helped Direct Payments To Ginni Thomas But Kept Her Name Off Bills: Report

    Activist Helped Direct Payments To Ginni Thomas But Kept Her Name Off Bills: Report

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    Ginni Thomas, the wife of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, was paid tens of thousands of dollars for consulting work in 2012, but a conservative activist instructed her name be left off billing paperwork, The Washington Post reported Thursday.

    Leonard Leo, a powerful figure in conservative circles who was the vice president of the Federalist Society, instructed pollster Kellyanne Conway to bill a conservative nonprofit group $25,000 and “give” the money to Ginni Thomas, according to documents reviewed by the newspaper. Conway billed the group, the Judicial Education Project, that day, citing “supplement for constitution polling and opinion consulting” as the service.

    “No mention of Ginni, of course,” Leo added to Conway of the payment for Thomas.

    The Post said Conway’s firm, The Polling Company, ultimately paid Thomas’ own firm $80,000 from June 2011 to June 2012, with more money to follow. Conway later became a 2016 campaign manager and then White House counselor to Donald Trump.

    Leo defended the payments in a statement to the Post, saying it was “no secret that Ginni Thomas has a long history of working on issues within the conservative movement.”

    “Part of that work has involved gauging public attitudes and sentiment,” he added. “The work she did here did not involve anything connected with either the Court’s business or with other legal issues.”

    Leo added he kept Ginni Thomas’ name off the billing paperwork because he knew “how disrespectful, malicious and gossipy people can be.”

    “I have always tried to protect the privacy of Justice Thomas and Ginni,” he said.

    The revelation only adds to the controversy around Justice Thomas. ProPublica has issued a series of shocking reports detailing decades of lavish trips the Thomases received from a billionaire GOP mega-donor, Harlan Crow. The website also reported on a real estate transaction in which Crow purchased three properties from Clarence Thomas and his family members, including a property where the justice’s mother still lives rent-free.

    And on Thursday, ProPublica issued a new report that showed Crow paid for two years of private school tuition for Thomas’ grandnephew.

    Clarence Thomas did not report any of those financial dealing on his federal disclosure forms. He said last month he didn’t believe he needed to disclose “personal hospitality” from a friend.

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  • Report: Republican donor paid tuition for Clarence Thomas’ grandnephew

    Report: Republican donor paid tuition for Clarence Thomas’ grandnephew

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    Report: Republican donor paid tuition for Clarence Thomas’ grandnephew – CBS News


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    A report from ProPublica has found that billionaire Republican donor Harlan Crow paid thousands of dollars in tuition for the grandnephew of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas at two private schools. This follows an earlier report that Thomas and his wife Ginni Thomas went on several extravagant vacations, also paid for by Crow.

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  • Nothing To See Here: Clarence Thomas’s Billionaire Buddy Paid For His Grand-Nephew’s Private School Tuition

    Nothing To See Here: Clarence Thomas’s Billionaire Buddy Paid For His Grand-Nephew’s Private School Tuition

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    Not only did Harlan Crow shower Clarence Thomas with lavish gifts and luxury vacations, and purchase three properties owned by the right-wing justice and his family — the conservative billionaire also apparently footed the bill for Thomas’s grand-nephew’s private school tuition. ProPublica reported Thursday that Thomas in 2008 sent his grand-nephew — whom he had legal custody over and was “raising like a son” — to Hidden Lake Academy, a Georgia boarding school where tuition ran over $6,000 a month. Crow, a Republican donor, “picked up the tab,” Christopher Grimwood, a former administrator at the school, told ProPublica, which obtained a bank statement showing that Crow’s real estate company was funding Thomas’s grand-nephew’s education there. 

    As in the travel and real estate transactions previously reported by ProPublica, Thomas did not publicly disclose the tuition payments from Crow.

    “This is way outside the norm,” Richard Painter, the former chief ethics lawyer in George W. Bush’s White House, told ProPublica. “This is way in excess of anything I’ve seen.”

    Thomas did not comment on the payments to ProPublica, and the Supreme Court did not respond to Vanity Fair’s request for comment. But Crow defended the tuition payments, telling ProPublica in a statement from his office that it is “disappointing that those with partisan political interests would try to turn helping at-risk youth with tuition assistance into something nefarious or political.” And Mark Paoletta, a close ally and family friend of Clarence and Ginni Thomas, released a statement effusively praising the justice and his wife for their having made “immeasurable personal and financial sacrifices” for their grand-nephew and claiming that Crow’s financial support “did not constitute a reportable gift.

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    “This malicious story shows nothing,” the former Trump administration counsel wrote, “except for the fact that the Thomases and the Crows are kind, generous, and loving people who tried to help this young man.”

    In actuality, of course, the report shows the glaring need for ethics reform at the Supreme Court, whose nine unelected justices with lifetime appointments have been able to operate in a black box with little accountability, transparency, and outside oversight. Democrats — and one RepublicanLisa Murkowski — have pushed to change that, renewing calls to hold the Supreme Court justices at least to the same standard as other federal judges. “Congress can — and must — step in if the Supreme Court won’t police itself,” Democratic Senator Sheldon Whitehouse, a longtime proponent of court reform, said this week. “The justices have been playing out of bounds for a long time.” But most of the GOP has brushed off the scandals, accusing Democrats of politically targeting conservative justices Thomas and Neil Gorsuch — who also failed to fully report a suspicious real estate transaction — and leaving any ethics reform up to Chief Justice John Roberts, who has long made clear that he doesn’t think such action is necessary or appropriate. “This is not about making the [Supreme Court] better,” Lindsey Graham, ranking member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, said during a hearing earlier this week. “This is about destroying a conservative court.”

    But, as Graham and other conservatives have inadvertently acknowledged, this is not a partisan issue. While Thomas’s disregard for ethics may be more brazen and far-reaching than most, members of the liberal minority have also invited scrutiny over potential conflicts of interest. And without taking action to weed out what is at best the appearance of impropriety and at worst outright corruption, the court is going to continue to hemorrhage public trust. “People want to believe there’s some transparency to their decision-making and that they’re not being influenced,” as Senate Judiciary Committee Chair Dick Durbin told me this week, and such revelations raise “questions about their objectivity and reliability.”

    That erodes the legitimacy of the court, as well as confidence in a legislative branch that apparently cannot provide a check on the judiciary’s power — all because the Republicans who built this right-wing court refuse to rein it in and cast efforts to conduct even basic oversight as “unseemly,” as Graham put it in the Judiciary Committee hearing Tuesday. But what’s actually unseemly is Thomas’s egregious disregard for ethics — and the system that has enabled his conduct, shielded him from accountability, and resisted long overdue reform. 

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    Eric Lutz

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  • The Supreme Court Is Doing Whatever It Wants. Will Democrats Ever Investigate?

    The Supreme Court Is Doing Whatever It Wants. Will Democrats Ever Investigate?

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    The Supreme Court is facing the most public scrutiny it has seen in decades, following revelations that Justice Clarence Thomas hid lavish gifts he received from a billionaire conservative donor ― revelations that in turn have snowballed into stories about other justices’ ethically dubious financial arrangements.

    In response, Democrats in Congress, led by Senate judiciary committee Chairman Dick Durbin (D-Ill.), have sent letters to Chief Justice John Roberts politely requesting that he appear before a committee (or send another justice in his stead), and asked for answers on a range of ethics-related questions. Roberts has largely rebuffed Congress with separation-of-powers claims, saying the court will continue to police itself.

    Late Monday afternoon, Roberts provided a brief reply to questions Durbin posed about the court’s lack of a binding ethics code after the chief justice refused to testify.

    A Senate judiciary committee hearing on Supreme Court ethics reform is set for Tuesday. But it will be only the second hearing Congress has held over the past two years on the subject, even as a steady flood of corruption scandals and ethical lapses have emerged from the court.

    The slow movement by Democrats on Capitol Hill raises questions about whether they actually want to challenge the courts’ power grabs and ethical failures, even as public opinion on the court and its decisions plummets.

    “The Senate Judiciary Committee’s scheduled hearing is a step in this direction, but we need to see more consistent oversight and strong action to [rein] in the Court’s ‘emperor has no clothes’ approach to ethics and address the Court’s legitimacy crisis,” Russ Feingold, president of the American Constitution Society and a former Democratic senator from Wisconsin who served on the judiciary committee, said in a statement to HuffPost.

    Chief Justice John Roberts (at right) declined to testify to the Senate judiciary committee after reports revealed that Justice Clarence Thomas (left) failed to report gifts from billionaire Harlan Crow.

    Alex Wong via Getty Images

    There is a lot that Congress could investigate. Over the past two decades, Justice Clarence Thomas failed to disclose hundreds of thousands of dollars’ worth of luxury gifts from the billionaire conservative donor Harlan Crow. Thomas also failed to disclose his sale of a property to Crow, who has helped fund efforts to push the court to the right. Justice Neil Gorsuch, meanwhile, failed to report that the head of a major law firm with business before the court purchased more than $1 million in property from him.

    These disclosure failures follow the May 2022 leak of Justice Samuel Alito’s decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization that ended women’s federal right to an abortion by overturning Roe v. Wade. Roberts ordered an internal investigation, which failed to find the leaker. A final report revealed that the investigation only lightly probed the justices about their possible role and did not make them sign sworn affidavits like all other staffers.

    Later, Rev. Rob Schenck, a former evangelical leader who ran a lobbying campaign to influence the court to overturn Roe, alleged that Alito previously leaked his 2014 Hobby Lobby decision to a supporter.

    The House judiciary committee held one hearing featuring Schenck’s testimony in 2022, before Democrats handed the gavel to Republicans. The Senate judiciary committee is set to hold a hearing on the court’s ethics on Tuesday. Durbin has also exchanged letters with Roberts, as has Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.), the chair of the judiciary subcommittee that covers the courts.

    “They need to investigate Clarence Thomas and Harlan Crow and all the related corruption,” Sarah Lipton-Lubet, president of the Take Back the Court Action Fund, said. “They need to pass ethics legislation that will mean for the first time the Supreme Court has an actual binding code of ethics.”

    As with a lot of issues in the Democratic Party at the moment, Democrats in Congress may be kicking the wheels here in part because of the party’s generational divide.

    Older and long-serving Democratic elected officials “came of age in the warm afterglow of the Warren Court,” a rare period when the court expanded rather than restricted rights, “and who thus cling to the outdated view of the Supreme Court as a force for good,” Harvard Law School Professor Maya Sen theorized after Roberts declined Durbin’s invite to testify.

    This attitude could impede an actual investigation into the court, as older Democrats still believe that the court’s legitimacy is owed, not earned.

    Senate judiciary committee Chairman Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) has taken a go-slow approach to oversight of the Supreme Court.
    Senate judiciary committee Chairman Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) has taken a go-slow approach to oversight of the Supreme Court.

    Drew Angerer via Getty Images

    “Old habits die hard,” Brian Fallon, executive director of Demand Justice, a progressive legal group, said. “There’s still an instinctive urge among Democrats of a certain age to defend even a broken institution because of the lessons they learned in fifth grade civics class.”

    There is also a pervasive cynicism that afflicts many long-serving lawmakers who come to believe that it’s not worth the effort to use their power to force legislative or interbranch fights, Fallon said.

    Just look at how Democrats have handled the situation of judiciary committee member Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), who has been absent from the Senate since February due to illness and age. Durbin asked Republicans to “show a little kindness” and allow Democrats to replace her on the panel. But Republicans refused to support a new organizing resolution to switch Feinstein out on the committee, because that would help Democrats confirm more judges.

    “The reaction to the aftermath of the Republicans predictably blocking it is like, ‘Well, we tried,’” Fallon said.

    This doesn’t mean the investigation into the court’s ethical morass won’t be serious, even if Democrats can’t pass legislation to require the court to adopt a code of conduct. There is increased support from judiciary committee members, including Whitehouse and Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.), to fully investigate the court. The court should consider subpoenas for not only Thomas and Roberts, but also Crow, Blumenthal told MSNBC last week.

    A “charitable explanation” for Durbin’s slow-walking and deference to the court is that he “would like to lay a marker down that he gave Roberts repeated opportunities to clean up his own house and he’s sort of reluctantly being pressed into conducting his own investigation because the judicial branch won’t tend to its own affairs,” Fallon said.

    “Instead of declining to call Clarence Thomas to testify because you think he won’t comply, call him to testify,” Lipton-Lubet said. “Let him refuse. Let the people see that. Doing that can illustrate the problem better than half a dozen sternly worded statements.”

    But if the committee’s efforts turn into “a box-checking exercise” that just looks to “toss the hot potato into Roberts’ lap,” Fallon says, “that would be a failure.”

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