A Promising Initial Move: The Supreme Court’s Code of Conduct

A Promising Initial Move: The Supreme Court’s Code of Conduct



The Supreme ‌Court’s code of​ conduct‌ is a good first step

FOR 50 years all but nine of America’s around ⁤2,000 federal⁢ judges have been subject to ⁣a code of conduct laying out ethical guidelines for jurists’⁢ behaviour on and off the bench. On November 13th the exceptions—the justices of⁤ the Supreme​ Court—announced that ⁢they had decided to join their lower-court​ peers.

The new rules do not arrive in a vacuum. Calls for the court to clean up its act have followed investigative reports from ProPublica and other publications uncovering ⁢several ⁤justices’ ethical lapses. Justice Clarence Thomas, the main target of those​ articles, failed to declare decades of luxury⁤ travel on the tab of Harlan Crow, a generous donor to conservative causes. Mr Crow also bought a ⁣home ⁢Justice Thomas owned in Georgia and footed the tuition bill for his grandnephew’s private school.

A ​Senate‍ committee found last month ‍that another friend of Justice ​Thomas apparently⁢ forgave‌ “a substantial ⁣portion” of a ‍$267,230‍ loan ⁢financing⁤ the justice’s ⁢Prevost Marathon motor coach (which he has referred to as his‌ “land yacht”). This ⁤too was not declared. And although his wife Virginia lobbied⁤ President ‍Donald Trump’s chief of‍ staff‍ to⁤ help overturn⁢ the 2020 ​election outcome, Justice Thomas opted not ⁢to recuse ‍himself from cases challenging the election results and involving Mr Trump’s role in the riot ​at the Capitol ​on January 6th 2021.

2023-11-15 16:09:30
Original from www.economist.com
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