In thinking about the vast ethical sucking noise
that’s consumed virtually all of the federal government, it’s easy to feel
hopeless as 2022 grinds to an end. Donald Trump’s taxes, years ahead dedicated
to Benghazi-style hearings, Supreme
Court justices partying with election deniers—Bah, humbug, rinse, repeat.
That’s
why the criminal referrals lobbed at Trump
this week from the Jan. 6 committee are heartening and tangible. The
committee’s decision to state that Trump and his most lawless supporters have
committed actual crimes laid down a powerful historical marker and
put important pressure on the Justice
Department for future accountability.
And
yet, there is something that feels entirely unsatisfying about celebrating this
as a landmark win. Two years after we watched the crime happen in plain sight,
and the criminals fêted and enriched, we now see criminal charges humbly suggested, for a handful of people?
It’s OK to be frustrated at the limits of the executive summary of the committee’s
final report. The report itself remains forthcoming. But just for starters,
Monday’s release failed to take seriously the spectacular failures of law
enforcement and intelligence agencies; the limited efficacy of ethics referrals for
GOP House members who failed to comply with subpoenas; and the culpability of so very many Republicans who have
aided and abetted Trump’s big lie for two straight years.
For
its own obvious reasons, the committee
opted to focus its gaze on Donald Trump and the
weirdest weirdos in his orbit, thus sparing some of the worst denialists, liars, and
insurrectionists in the GOP from the prospect of serious
accountability. But Trump himself was already slipping from “hot” to “not” at
meteoric speeds, which is perhaps why the focus on the former (or—as the panel
sordidly referred to him Monday—the “ex”) president seems so painfully narrow.
It’s
at least possible to surmise that the biggest winners after the committee
finished its superb work would be Ron DeSantis, the Murdochs, Liz Cheney, and
all those advocating that the GOP dump Donald in favor of literally anyone who
can push wildly conservative outcomes without the added peril of his bottomless
unhinged-ness. By that token, Monday was a very good day for the GOP, as
measured by the opening of yet another offramp for anyone still in search of an
offramp.
Consider that Ginni Thomas was nowhere mentioned in the executive summary—nor, aside from an
opinion citation, was her husband, the sitting Supreme Court justice who will not recuse himself
from cases that involve the Jan. 6 attempted insurrection in which his wife had both participated in the
efforts and a vested interest in the outcome. Given the committee’s deference to the Thomases throughout its hearings, no surprises there.
But it is still disappointing, for those of us who bought into the idea that
the committee could restore some real idea of justice across government.
Instead, no matter what they may tell you about
the rule of law and the need for consequences and accountability, absolutely
nobody in the GOP as it is currently constituted has any interest in stopping
the goose that has laid the conservative legal establishment’s golden egg. Love
him or hate him, Thomas has been the single most effective jurist in modern history, and even those conservatives who deplore Trump’s
incitement and violence and threats will gleefully turn a blind eye to Thomas’
ethical lapses if it means securing enduring wins on abortion, guns, massive
deregulation, and ascendant corporate power.
Virtually nobody who is winning at the Supreme
Court in a decades-long conservative legal project aimed at dismantling
environmental protections, subverting minority voting rights, and imposing
theocratic supremacy is going to take seriously the myriad ethical conflicts and structural failings that plague the current court. Better to keep pretending that Donald Trump is
the problem than concede that the problem is actually that both Trump and the
Thomases operate as if the law is for the little people, and the law lets them.
Clarence and Ginni Thomas were ultimately
untouchable for the Jan. 6 investigators for the same reason they are
untouchable for purposes of Supreme Court ethics reform: When you’re a justice,
they let you do it. And when you are delivering long-sought victories, even
ethical Never Trumpers like Liz Cheney will let you do whatever it takes to
deliver the goods.
I’ve
been struck that in recent reporting on ethical lapses at the high court,
conservative legal enthusiasts have begun to advance the claim that there is no
need for binding ethics rules because conservative triumphs are so plainly and
self-evidently correct that there can be no other outcome.
Here’s a version of that argument applied to Leonard Leo of the Federalist Society
assisting Kellyanne Conway in selling her polling business while she
was lobbying the Trump White House in its judicial selections: “It seems
bizarre to think that any possible lobbying by Kellyanne Conway would have
added to the force of [the court’s] commitment or to the influence that Mitch
McConnell and Don McGahn had already wielded,” said Ed Whelan, a former clerk
to Antonin Scalia.
And here’s Mark Paoletta, the former Clarence Thomas clerk who
worked on Thomas’ Senate confirmation and who now represents Ginni Thomas in
Jan. 6 matters testifying in opposition to Supreme Court ethics reform earlier
this month: His argument was that a campaign in which big donors forked
over cash to the Supreme Court Historical Society in order to put pressure on
justices to overturn Roe v. Wade was not an ethics problem at all. Why was
that? Because pushing Alito, Thomas, or Scalia rightward was laughable, you
see, since their opposition to Roe was
already known. They’re so conservative, it’s not possible to corrupt them with
money.
Wait. So, the justices who swore at their
confirmation hearings that Roe was binding precedent were in truth so in the tank for
overturning Roe that no amount of pressure to do so would have made a
difference? Since everyone knew that overturning Roe was why they were appointed? Got it. No wonder Supreme Court
ethics reform is a dumb idea.
If a code of ethical conduct isn’t necessary
because conservative legal thinkers are impervious to influence and bribes from
those with whom they are in lockstep, there’s no need for any limits on who
they party with or travel with or accept gifts from. Of course, at that point,
we should probably stop characterizing the place as a “court.”
In thinking about the ethical emptiness that’s
swallowing all three branches of our federal government, I’ve been revisiting the speech that Rep. Gerald Ford, then House minority leader and future president
of the United States, gave when he attempted unsuccessfully to impeach Justice
William O. Douglas, in 1970. While Ford’s efforts to impeach the wild man
that was Douglas failed, and are largely derided as motivated by political
partisanship and score settling, the text of his speech is illuminating.
Douglas, to be sure, was a piece of work. According to one book review by
Jeffrey Rosen: “His neglected children found him ‘scary’ and noted that he spoke
to them only when ‘press photographers wanted a picture.’ They also resented
his treatment of their mother, his first wife, whom he threw over after 28
years of marriage for a series of younger women. He left his third wife for a
high school student who had asked him to sponsor her senior thesis, and then
divorced her after 24 months for a college student whom he had met while she
was a waitress in a cocktail lounge. He kept a room at the University Club, to
which his messenger would drive Supreme Court secretaries who caught his fancy.
In his sixties, he routinely invited flight attendants to visit him at the
Court, where he would lunge at them in his chambers.”
Most of Ford’s speech was devoted to the proposition
that Justice Douglas was a dirty, dirty boy, who wrote for dirty, dirty
magazines and dabbled in some kind of “international gambling fraternity,” and
palled around with dubious sorts of former casino owners and “young hothead
revolutionaries.” It’s mostly very silly. But it’s pretty striking that in
1970, a purely partisan witch hunt against a liberal jurist for alleged
pornographic violations was taken more seriously by Congress as an ethics
scandal than one involving a Supreme Court justice whose wife was involved with
an attempt to subvert a presidential election.
Republicans, for all their past sins, did in
relatively recent history say that there were lines that people in power could
not cross. As a result of the conduct of Ford’s immediate White House
predecessor, many voted to say that orchestrating and covering up the Watergate
break-in crossed a line. With Ford’s crusade against Douglas, a justice’s
alleged sexual impropriety had crossed a line.
Today’s GOP—be it at the Supreme Court or in
Congress or in the White House—proved once again this week (and in the months
and years preceding it) that there are no real lines between its dreams and its
victories. Judicial corruption, a violent coup attempt—whatever. For every
working Republican power player, including the two Republican members of the
Jan. 6 Committee, accountability stops at the courthouse door.
Pay
very close attention as you read the final report, to where the bipartisanship
around the Jan. 6 Committee recommendation begins and ends. Liz Cheney and Adam
Kinzinger have done yeoman’s work to shore up the rule of law and
accountability for Donald Trump and the worst of his confederates. But the work
will also provide a pretty flawless map to which legal and ethical lapses are
disqualifying and which are tacitly encouraged.
One branch of government is checked and the other is
given a pass. It’s clear that whatever part law enforcement, House Republicans,
MAGA election deniers still in office, and particularly any Supreme Court
justice or their spouse may have played in an attack on the republic in 2021
will be forgiven and forgotten. They’re still all on one team, and—law and
ethics notwithstanding—that team is all in on winning the fights that really matter.
-Dahlia
Lithwick, “Why the Jan. 6 Committee Let Ginni and Clarence Thomas Off the Hook,”
Slate
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