Supreme Court
Old McCheney had a judge
Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia mocked those who questioned his ethics by quacking like a duck. He should have oinked.
Quack, quack. So much for the constitutionally mandated separation of powers.
Quack, quack. Say goodbye to judicial integrity. Quack, quack. Forget about holding the nation’s vice president accountable for his dealings. Quack, quack. Trash the right of citizens to transparent government. Quack, quack.
Bizarre as it sounds, Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia quacked like a duck last week during his defensive denial that a duck-hunting trip with Vice President Dick Cheney was improper. According to Scalia, the visit of the two men to the private game reserve of a top oil executive was merely a pleasant social engagement.
But Scalia’s glib response was disingenuous, coming shortly before the Supremes will rule on a White House appeal in a case involving private meetings of Cheney’s energy task force. It’s outrageous that he does not intend to recuse himself.
“It did not involve a lawsuit against Dick Cheney as a private individual,” Scalia said of the appeal while speaking at Amherst College last Tuesday. “This was a government issue. It’s acceptable practice to socialize with executive branch officials when there are not personal claims against them. That’s all I’m going to say for now. Quack, quack.”
The case in question is not a legalistic quibble, and Scalia seems determined to vote in what may be a hotly contested decision with enormous political effect. His Louisiana outing with Cheney came three weeks after the Supreme Court agreed to hear Cheney’s appeal of a lower court order that he turn over records of the closed task force meetings he held with executives of the oil, coal, gas and nuclear companies in 2001. Those meetings became the basis for the president’s national energy policy, which is chockablock with tax breaks and subsidies for these same industries. This all has particular resonance for Californians, who, during the manufactured “energy crisis,” saw our state and household budgets go up in flames. Many of the same companies represented at Cheney’s meetings, such as Kenneth Lay’s Enron, had “gamed,” or manipulated, electricity prices using federal loopholes created by previous GOP administrations under the broad banner of “deregulation.”
Unfortunately for us, the Constitution has a glaring loophole: If a Supreme Court justice doesn’t have the moral fiber or humility to do the right thing in a case like this — federal rules instruct a judge to disqualify himself “in any proceeding in which his impartiality might be questioned” — there is no check or balance whereby that decision can be reviewed or rebuked.
According to an Amherst official, Scalia — with his waterfowl impression — may have been trying to preempt protesters he thought were going to perform their own impromptu noises. Nevertheless, by arrogantly trying to make a joke out of his unethical behavior, Scalia has again made a mockery of the enormous responsibility the Constitution places on our highest court. After all, it was Scalia who led the Supreme Court with flimsy legal logic to validate the dubious 2000 Florida election results that were the difference in placing the current president in power. This time he may have gone too far in shredding the Supreme Court’s vaunted reputation of impartiality.
“I’m surprised he’s sticking by his guns. I would hope he does see the light,” Georgetown University law professor Paul Rothstein said of Scalia’s stubbornness to acknowledge what is simple common sense: If you are a longtime friend of the vice president and are accepting free junket flights from him, you’d best remove yourself from the fray when it comes time to rule on a decision that may damage his career.
Finally, we should remember what the legal case in question is about: transparency in government, which is one of the taproots of democracy. While Scalia twists and turns to avoid the obvious appearance of a conflict of interest, the case’s co-plaintiffs — the liberal Sierra Club and the conservative Judicial Watch — have joined forces to demand accountability in government, so that we might see how corporate interests wield disproportionate power in the halls of government. The Scalia-Cheney hunting tryst shows that the old-boy network is still scamming the public.
Robert Scheer is a syndicated columnist. More Robert Scheer.
John Roberts’ Gilded Age SCOTUS
Jeffrey Toobin shows how the Citizens United ruling challenged a century of efforts to rein in corporate power
John Roberts (Credit: AP/Pablo Martinez Monsivais) The most important revelation in Jeffrey Toobin’s 10,000-word New Yorker piece on Chief Justice John Roberts’ takedown of campaign finance laws in the Citizens United case is the extent to which modern conservatism is trying to restore the Gilded Age. That was a time when corporations had more rights than individuals, when a conservative Supreme Court did its best to protect those corporate rights, and wealth and corruption ran unchecked. Of course, we live in a neo-Gilded Age, when income inequality is more pronounced than at any time since the Great Depression, and the Roberts court’s decisions in the Citizens United case helps bring us all the way back to those bad old days.
Continue Reading CloseJoan Walsh is Salon's editor at large. More Joan Walsh.
Obama destroys Constitution with mild Supreme Court criticism
Conservatives and moderates declare SCOTUS-bashing to be "intimidation"
(Credit: AP) Ruth Marcus is unsettled. Maybe even queasy. There is probably some light nausea. What has her worried for the future of the nation, today? President Obama’s shameful, horrific, vicious attacks on those nice people in the Supreme Court.
Obama said that the court overturning Congress’ healthcare reform law would be a textbook example of “judicial activism” as “conservative commentators” define it: “that an unelected group of people would somehow overturn a duly constituted and passed law.” And hey, that seems like an eminently defensible and not particularly unsettling point! Conservatives made “judicial activism” into a talking point and rallying cry and defined it vaguely enough to encompass judges striking down basically any law or statute.
Continue Reading Close
Alex Pareene writes about politics for Salon and is the author of "The Rude Guide to Mitt." Email him at apareene@salon.com and follow him on Twitter @pareene More Alex Pareene.
Justices run amok: Fixing the Supreme Court
Judges on the right and left legislate from the bench. So why don't we just elect them?
Antonin Scalia, John Roberts and Clarence Thomas On Monday, we had another example of the Supreme Court’s ideological division: a 5-4 ruling, along partisan lines, giving police the right to conduct strip searches for any offense. This came on the heels of last week’s oral arguments before the Supreme Court about the constitutionality of the individual mandate provision of the Affordable Care Act, which led many observers to predict that the nation’s highest judicial body will strike down part or all of the controversial healthcare reform package. But the hearings were instructive in other ways. They showed once again that political partisanship is closely correlated to a justice’s view of the law. And they proved that the Supreme Court once again is functioning, not as a court, but as a third house of the federal legislature.
Continue Reading CloseMichael Lind’s new book, "Land of Promise: An Economic History of the United States", will be published in April and can be pre-ordered at Amazon.com. More Michael Lind.
Why I need Obamacare
I'm sick, and I will be for the rest of my life. Knowing I won't be denied the insurance I need matters
Supporters of health care reform stand in front of the Supreme Court in Washington, Wednesday, March 28, 2012, on the final day of arguments regarding the health care law signed by President Barack Obama. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)(Credit: AP) Dear healthy people,
It’s great that you’re deriving intellectual pleasure from debating Obamacare. I love that this theoretical dance you’re engaged in has no repercussions to you, a healthy individual. I would love to join you some evening for a spirited discussion on the pros and cons of healthcare reform. Maybe over a glass of wine? Heck — over two or three glasses of wine. I’d love to lean forward, my arched brows furrowed, my full lips purple with the stain of a good Zinfandel, and throw out statistics and well-crafted one-liners about the plight of the uninsured, the underinsured, the sick. Those poor, poor sick.
Continue Reading CloseCedar Burnett is a freelance writer and toddler wrangler living in Seattle. She is currently working on a book about living with ulcerative colitis. More Cedar Burnett.
The conservative grip on power
A ruthless GOP power grab, centered around the Supreme Court, has cemented conservative control in Washington
Clarence Thomas, George W. Bush and Antonin Scalia (Credit: AP) Writing in Salon, Natasha Lennard proposes that with the warm weather we can again expect the Occupy movement to shoot up. Arab Spring, American Spring. She’s right about one thing: Like in the decades before the Arab Spring, it has been a long, cold, American winter. In the 30 years since coming to power here, Republicans have used their initial ascent to power to seal themselves into office as tightly as the pharaohs. Smart commentators have noted how lawless the conservatives are in making substantive decisions, but that’s not the worst of it. The worst of it is how they use their tenure to make it increasingly impossible to oust them.
Continue Reading CloseLinda Hirshman is the author of “Victory: The Triumphant Gay Revolution,” forthcoming in June 2012. Follow her on Twitter @LindaHirshman1 More Linda Hirshman.
Page 1 of 102 in Supreme Court
