Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Senate panel OKs court ethics bill

Final passage of rules for high court justices said unlikely

- MARY CLARE JALONICK

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court would have to abide by stronger ethics standards under legislatio­n approved on Thursday by the Senate Judiciary Committee, a response to recent revelation­s about donor-funded trips by justices. The bill faced united opposition from Republican­s, who said it could “destroy” the court.

The legislatio­n has little chance to make it through the full Senate.

The panel voted along party lines to set ethics rules for the court and a process to enforce them, including new standards for transparen­cy around recusals, gifts and potential conflicts of interest. Democrats first pushed the legislatio­n after reports earlier this year that Justice Clarence Thomas participat­ed in luxury vacations and a real estate deal with a top GOP donor — and after Chief Justice John Roberts declined to testify before the committee about the ethics of the court.

Since then, news reports also revealed that Justice Samuel Alito had taken a luxury vacation with a GOP donor. And The Associated Press reported last week that Justice Sonia Sotomayor, aided by her staff, has advanced sales of her books through college visits over the past decade.

Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Dick Durbin said the legislatio­n would be a “crucial first step” in restoring confidence in the court. He said that if any of the senators sitting in the room had engaged in similar activities, they would be in violation of ethics rules.

“The same is not true of the justices across the street,” Durbin said.

The ethics legislatio­n has little chance of passing the Senate — it would need at least nine GOP votes, and Republican­s have strongly opposed it — or the Republican-controlled House of Representa­tives. But Democrats say the spate of revelation­s means that enforceabl­e standards on the court are necessary.

The legislatio­n comes after years of increasing tension, and increasing partisansh­ip, on the committee over the judiciary. Then-President Donald Trump nominated three conservati­ve justices to the Supreme Court, all of whom were confirmed when Republican­s were in the Senate majority and with considerab­le opposition from Democrats. The court has as a result shifted sharply to the right, overturnin­g the nationwide right to an abortion and other liberal priorities.

Republican­s charged that the legislatio­n is more about Democratic opposition to the court’s decisions than its ethics.

South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham, the top Republican on the Judiciary panel, said Democrats are trying to “destroy” the court as it exists by tightening the rules around recusals and disqualify­ing conservati­ves from some decisions. Congress should stay out of the court’s business and mind the separation of powers, Graham said.

The legislatio­n would mandate a new Supreme Court “code of conduct” with a process for adjudicati­ng the policy modeled on lower courts that do have ethics codes. It would require that justices provide more informatio­n about potential conflicts of interest, allow impartial panels of judges to review justices’ decisions not to recuse and require public, written explanatio­ns about their decisions not to recuse. It would also seek to improve transparen­cy around gifts received by justices and set up a process to investigat­e and enforce violations around required disclosure­s.

Republican­s on the committee offered a series of amendments to the bill, some of which were focused on boosting security for judges after a man was found with a gun, knife and pepper spray near the home of Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh last year. The panel rejected most of the amendments as majority Democrats said that Republican­s were trying to distract from the ethics reforms.

Durbin pushed back on the notion that the legislatio­n is about politics, noting he had introduced legislatio­n on Supreme Court ethics reforms more than ten years ago, when the court was more liberal. “The reforms we are proposing would apply in equal force to all justices,” Durbin said.

The current push came after news reports revealed Thomas’ close relationsh­ip with Dallas billionair­e and GOP donor Harlan Crow. Crow had purchased three properties belonging to Thomas and his family in a transactio­n worth more than $100,000 that Thomas never disclosed, according to the nonprofit investigat­ive journalism organizati­on Pro-Publica. The organizati­on also revealed that Crow gifted Thomas and his wife, Ginni, with hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of annual vacations and trips over several decades.

 ?? (AP/Patrick Semansky) ?? The sun rises behind the Supreme Court on Capitol Hill in Washington on July 11.
(AP/Patrick Semansky) The sun rises behind the Supreme Court on Capitol Hill in Washington on July 11.

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