The Sentinel-Record

Supreme Court ethics

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After months of reports about questionab­le conduct by justices of the U.S. Supreme Court, the Senate Judiciary Committee on Thursday will consider legislatio­n that would lead to a binding code of conduct for members of the high court. Given the failure of the court to establish a code on its own — despite suggestion­s from some justices that such an initiative is under considerat­ion — congressio­nal action is overdue.

Unfortunat­ely, enactment of such legislatio­n is clouded by the same partisansh­ip that has infected the selection of Supreme Court justices. But that mustn’t deter Congress from pressing for reforms that would make the court more transparen­t and accountabl­e.

Although Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. has said that justices “consult” the Code of Conduct for United States Judges, justices aren’t formally covered by it. Justices are subject to financial-disclosure requiremen­ts, but Pro Publica reported this year that Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel A. Alito Jr. accepted travel from wealthy individual­s without disclosing that largesse. (Both justices said they didn’t believe they were obliged to disclose that informatio­n. Earlier this year the Judicial Conference of the United States clarified its guidance to say that judges must disclose travel by private jet.)

As for transparen­cy, justices are not required to explain why they choose not to participat­e in some cases, though, according to a statement by the justices sent to the Senate Judiciary Committee, a justice “may provide a summary explanatio­n of a recusal decision.” “May” should be “must.”

The bill to be taken up on Thursday, the Supreme Court Ethics, Recusal and Transparen­cy Act of 2023, would require the court to establish a code of conduct for its members; mandate public written explanatio­ns for all recusal decisions; and provide a mechanism for investigat­ion of complaints that a justice had behaved unethicall­y. These are all important objectives.

Ideally, improving judicial transparen­cy would be a bipartisan cause. But the parties are mostly split on this issue. The bill is sponsored by Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.), a caustic critic of the current court, and has only Democratic co-sponsors. Meanwhile, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) has ridiculed Democrats on the Judiciary Committee for “trying to tell a coequal branch of government how to manage its internal operations, ostensibly to clean up its ‘ethics.’”

This criticism is rich coming from McConnell, who did more than anyone in recent memory to politicize the Supreme Court when he and his colleagues in 2016 shamefully refused to consider President Obama’s nomination of Merrick Garland to the court. McConnell’s original rationale for leaving that seat open was that 2016 was an election year, and that “(t)he American people should have a voice in the selection of their next Supreme Court justice.” …

Not all Republican­s oppose court reform. Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) has co-sponsored an ethics bill with Sen. Angus King of Maine, an independen­t who caucuses with Democrats. In some respects their proposal, the Supreme Court Code of Conduct Act, is preferable to the Whitehouse bill. …

Questions about ethics aren’t the only or even the principal reason for dissatisfa­ction with the Supreme Court. It has sullied its reputation for being above politics with a series of politicall­y charged decisions in which Republican appointees predictabl­y lined up on one side and Democratic appointees on the other. The court’s image also has suffered, deservedly, because of its disastrous decision last year to overrule Roe vs. Wade and dismantle nearly half a century’s judicial protection for abortion rights.

Yet the lack of a binding ethics code and inadequate oversight of gifts and travel are also a blot on the court’s reputation. Congress must begin the process of enacting reforms that the court itself has refused to undertake.

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