The Sentinel-Record

Texts stir debate on justices’ ethics

Election messages by Thomas’ wife prompt call for recusal

- MARK SHERMAN AND JESSICA GRESKO

WASHINGTON — Reports that the wife of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas implored Donald Trump’s White House chief of staff to act to overturn the 2020 election results have put a spotlight on how justices decide whether to step aside from a case.

Individual justices make their own unreviewab­le calls on a court that lacks a code of ethics. And the issue is not always clear, particular­ly when spouses also have prominent careers.

While the Supreme Court did not step into any election cases brought by Trump and other Republican­s, Thomas took part in the considerat­ion of whether to hear those cases. He also was the lone vote to keep House lawmakers investigat­ing the Jan 6. Capitol riot from obtaining contested White House documents.

Thomas did not immediatel­y respond Friday to a request for comment made through the court’s spokeswoma­n.

Thomas’ wife, Virginia, is a longtime conservati­ve activist who backed Trump’s reelection as president in 2020. In the weeks leading up to the election, Thomas used her Facebook page to amplify claims of corruption by Joe

Biden, Trump’s opponent.

Once it was over, Thomas, who goes by the name Ginni, sent text messages for weeks imploring White House chief of staff Mark Meadows, to further Trump’s falsehoods that the vote was marred by fraud, according to copies of the messages obtained by The Washington Post and CBS News.

“The majority knows Biden and the Left is attempting the greatest Heist of our History,” Thomas wrote.

She also urged lawyer Sidney Powell, who promoted claims about the election, to be “the lead and the face” of the Trump legal team. In the same period, Powell brought cases to the Supreme Court, which were denied without any noted recusals or dissent.

The court, with Thomas participat­ing, also threw out a challenge from Texas calling on the justices to temporaril­y set aside electoral votes from four states Biden won — enough votes to potentiall­y undo the outcome. Trump sought to join Texas’ side in the case.

Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., said Thomas should not take part in any future cases about the Jan. 6 investigat­ion or the 2024 election, should Trump decide to run again.

“Judges are obligated to recuse themselves when their participat­ion in a case would create even the appearance of a conflict of interest. A person with an ounce of commonsens­e could see that bar is met here,” Wyden said in a statement.

But Arthur Hellman, a University of Pittsburgh ethics expert, said the Thomas situation reflects the progress women have made in pursuing their own careers and not living in the shadow of their husbands.

Judges should distinguis­h between cases in which their spouses take part and issues on which they have been active, Hellman said. Only the first category requires recusal, he said.

“It’s not absolute. There may be some cases in which the issue is so directly involved in the case that the judge ought to recuse,” Hellman said. “I don’t think see that in the Ginni Thomas situation.”

Ginni Thomas, for her part, downplayed any potential conflict in an interview with the conservati­ve Washington Free Beacon earlier this month, before the text messages’ publicatio­n. “Like so many married couples, we share many of the same ideals, principles and aspiration­s for America,” Thomas said. “But we have our own separate careers, and our own ideas and opinions, too. Clarence doesn’t discuss his work with me, and I don’t involve him in my work.”

The revelation­s about Thomas’ texts come at a time when groups have already been calling for ethics guidelines for justices. Congress has also been looking at the issue.

Under federal law, federal judges, including Supreme Court justices, are supposed to recuse themselves when they previously participat­ed in a case or have a financial interest in it or when a close relative is involved.

A judge is also supposed to do so “in any proceeding in which his impartiali­ty might reasonably be questioned.” But that’s open to interpreta­tion.

Gabe Roth, of the court transparen­cy group Fix The Court, said an ethics code would help the justices make consistent decisions about recusals.

“Every justice sees their own ethical obligation­s different from one another. There should be some hard and fast rules that everyone follows,” Roth said.

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