Tag Archives: Sheldon Whitehouse

Senator Whitehouse tutors viewers watching at home on the dark money scheme not visible at the hearing

Describing (on day two) what was happening at the Senate Judiciary Committee hearing as comparable to a puppet theater, Senator Sheldon Whitehouse offered a backgrounder on “a $250 million dark money operation” that led to the Amy Coney Barrett nomination.

“You are not going to understand the real dynamic what is going on here, and you are certainly not going to understand forces outside of this room who are pulling strings and pushing sticks and causing the puppet theater to react,” Sheldon said.

He jabs three Republican members of the committee, Senators Chuck Grassley, Ted Cruz,  and Chairman Lindsey Graham, as well as Majority Leader Mitch McConnell for their “hard-to-explain hypocrisy” (though, of course, unprincipled political opportunism and the embrace of raw political power is not all that hard to explain). He also punctures the charade that Republicans have performed each day at the hearing: that Democrats’ attention to Roe v. Wade, Obergefell, and numerous Obamacare cases is inexplicable, since Amy Coney Barrett has pledged to rule fairly, without any bias except a commitment to the letter of the law, in whichever cases she is presented with as a justice.

Senator Whitehouse and his colleagues know that the idea of Barrett as a blank slate is ludicrous, no matter how much Republicans pretend otherwise. These cases have been in the crosshairs of the conservative legal movement, the party’s conservative evangelical base, and Republican elected officials since each of the respective SCOTUS rulings were handed down. The right to abortion, to gay marriage, to affordable healthcare — even when one has preconditions that before the ACA would have precluded having health insurance — are at stake.

In each case, the GOP has fought fiercely to overturn the ‘liberal’ rulings, yet in the hearings this week, Republican senators appeared baffled at the idea that somehow confirming the Notre Dame professor as a justice would lead to any reversals, much less any real world consequences. But of course, Professor Barrett was chosen because there is in her record virtually no wavering from the party line — championed with immense infusions of corporate dollars — on any of these issues (or any others to which the GOP and its donor base are committed).

While illustrating the connections between deep-pocketed right-wing foundations, huge corporations, the National Federation of Independent Businesses, the Judicial Crisis Network, the Federalist Society, and the Trump White House, the senator explained the “scheme with the same funders selecting judges, funding campaigns for the judges, and then showing up in court in these orchestrated amicus flotillas to tell the judges what to do.”

The lesson on a very impressive, highly successful decades-long campaign by corporate interests to capture the federal courts is much more illuminating than 28 minutes of Q & A with the nominee would have been.

The transcript is available from the Center for Media and Democracy, but it’s worthwhile to watch the presentation, which included helpful visual aids.

Republican Senators expressing umbrage “are desperate to find an outrage off-ramp”

I think that Chairman Schiff’s presentation through this very long ordeal has been at the very highest level of legal advocacy. He has marshaled an immense amount of information extremely well and effectively. And I thought that last night’s closing was oratory for the ages. So, I give him nothing but props.

I think that if you are a Republican and you’re looking at a really damning case that you have no counter to, and where you’re sitting on lockers full of evidence and not allowing it into the trial, you are desperate to find an outrage off-ramp.

And they will find something outrageous in parts per billion in order to seize the outrage off-ramp and get away from the damning case that has been made on the substance.

I think there have been a lot of uncomfortable moments for them through these days. And I thought that Adam’s presentation last night had a lot of them very thoughtful and pensive about the position that this president has put them in.

Uhm, we really have a battle here between truth and falsehood, and right and wrong. And this president is demanding that they follow the path of falsehood and wrong, or face peril. – Senator Sheldon Whitehouse, January 24, 2020

Senator Whitehouse was responding to the manufactured outrage (and dissembling) of Republican Senators to Adam Schiff’s reading a quotation from the mainstream media. “CBS News reported last night that a Trump confidant said that key senators were warned, ‘Vote against the president and your head will be on a pike.’”

There were reports of gasps from the Republican side of the aisle. Senator Susan Collins of Maine was seen shaking her head and could be heard from gallery repeating, “That’s not true,” several times. Later she said, “I know of no Republican Senator who has been threatened in any way by anyone in the Administration.”

“None of us have been told that. That’s insulting and demeaning to everyone to say that we somehow live in fear and that the president has threatened all of us.” – Senator James Lankford of Oaklahoma

The fear of Washington Republicans – in both the House and the Senate – at the possibility of Trump turning on them when they seek re-nomination in a Republican primary is one of the most unshakable facts of today’s GOP. Not giving Trump a reason to turn on them is a guiding principle.

Mark Sanford, Jeff Flake, and Bob Corker all felt Donald Trump’s ire. None remain in office. Trump owns the Republican Party. And – for every Republican who wishes to continue serving in the U.S. Senate after his or her next Republican primary election – Trump owns them regarding any issue he cares about.

The “head on a pike” quote, while pithy (and even demeaning), expresses a fundamental, inescapable truth – all disingenuous protests notwithstanding.

(Image: screengrab from Lincoln Project ad.)

Senator Sheldon Whitehouse lobs a warning to SCOTUS’s Republican men

Earlier this month Senator Sheldon Whitehouse and four of his Democratic colleagues filed a remarkable amicus curiae brief in a gun control case before the Supreme Court. The message to the five men appointed by Republican presidents to the high court was direct and unflattering.

The conclusion – after an amply documented, well focused critique of the court and of the deep-pocketed interests whose dark money has shaped the court: “The Supreme Court is not well. And the people know it. Perhaps the Court can heal itself before the public demands it be ‘restructured in order to reduce the influence of politics.’ Particularly on the urgent issue of gun control, a nation desperately needs it to heal.”

A May 2019 Quinnipiac poll cited in the brief documents these public attitudes. The poll reported that 55 percent of Americans believe the Supreme Court is motivated mainly by politics and a majority believes that “Supreme Court should be restructured in order to reduce the influence of politics.” The reference to restructuring, of course, evokes Franklin Roosevelt’s proposal to pack the court.

Whatever the GOP stalwarts on the Court make of this, Republican commentators have reacted predictably. David French wrote in National Review, “It is easily the most malicious Supreme Court brief I’ve ever seen.” The Wall St. Journal described it as “an enemy of the court brief.” Ted Cruz tweeted, “Extremely concerning to see Senate Democrats threaten federal judges like this. If this isn’t an improper attempt to influence – read: OBSTRUCT – the highest court in the land, then I don’t know what is.”  

And let’s not leave out Lindsay Graham: “Packing the Supreme Court… Bad idea. Liberal dream. Trump’s 3rd term is looking better and better!”

On the other side of the aisle, Ian Milhiser (whose book, Injustices: The Supreme Court’s History of Comforting the Comfortable and Afflicting the Afflicted, reflects his view of the court’s malign influence throughout most of U.S. history) agreed that the brief was hardly typical (though he didn’t get bent out of shape about it):

A tone of ritualized obsequiousness pervades most briefs filed in the Supreme Court of the United States. Judges are powerful and at the Supreme Court level, unaccountable. They wield enormous, arbitrary power not just over litigants but over the lawyers who appear in their courtrooms. So when most lawyers speak to a court, they speak with a painful awareness of the arbitrary control separating the bar from the bench.

Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI), however, is not most lawyers.

Senator Whitehouse with Senators Mazie Hirono, Richard Blumenthal, Dick Durbin, and Kirsten Gillibrand are unsparing in their brief, which opposes standing for the plaintiffs in the case (New York State Rifle and Pistol Association Inc v. City of New York, New York). Straightforwardly, since the gun group objected to a New York City ban on transporting guns, and the city has repealed the law, the case would appear to be moot. But the court rejected a petition from NYC to declare the case moot.

The brief portrays the petitioners as deep-pocketed special interests openly promoting a political project:

Confident that a Court majority assures their success, petitioners laid their cards on the table: “The project this Court began in Heller and McDonald cannot end with those precedents,” petitioners submit.

The brief notes that, at this stage, there is no live legal question before the court, no grounds for standing, but that gun rights advocates believe that, with Trump’s appointees on the bench, they are headed toward a victory.

Noting that this “effort did not emerge in a vacuum,” the brief documents the NRA’s $1.2 million television campaign in support of Brett Kavanaugh’s nomination to the court (because he would “break the tie” in Second Amendment cases) and the campaign against a Democratic Senator who opposed the nomination.

Further, a Federalist Society publication suggested that “the logjam has been cleared” with Justice Kavanaugh replacing Kennedy on the court. The brief continued, “This commentary is of particular note because it was published by an organization that has such a prominent role in the Republican Party’s efforts to shape the federal judiciary in favor of donor interests,” and references the Executive Vice President of the Federalist Society, Leonard Leo (whom Politico describes as “the quiet architect of a pivotal shift to the right throughout the federal judiciary”), linking him to “a million-dollar contribution to the NRA’s lobbying arm, and to a $250 million network largely funded by anonymous donors to promote right-wing causes and judicial nominees.”

The brief observes, “The Society counts over eighty-six percent of Trump administration nominees to circuit courts of appeal and to this Court as active members,” and comments on the “massive political spending,” largely from dark money, that funded this effort. In a footnote, the brief quotes former White House counsel Donald McGahn (of Mueller report fame):

Our opponents of judicial nominees frequently claim the president has outsourced his selection of judges. That is completely false. I’ve been a member of the Federalist Society since law school—still am. So, frankly, it seems like it’s been insourced.

“The influence effort directed at this Court has been industrialized. In this particular ‘project’ to rewrite and expand the Second Amendment, petitioners are flanked by an army of nearly sixty amici.” But, the brief argues, since the donors are hidden from view, it is impossible to know how widespread the support is. “Were there … transparency, this amicus army would likely be revealed as more akin to marionettes controlled by a puppetmaster than to a groundswell of support rallying to a cause.”

In contrast:

Out in the real world, Americans are murdered each day with firearms in classrooms or movie theaters or churches or city streets, and a generation of preschoolers is being trained in active-shooter survival drills. In the cloistered confines of this Court, and notwithstanding the public imperatives of these massacres, the NRA and its allies brashly presume, in word and deed, that they have a friendly audience for their “project.”

Conservatives reject principles, embrace activism

Since the law the plaintiffs objected to has been struck down, the case – by all appearances – is moot.  The brief quotes both John Jay, the court’s first chief justice, and John Roberts, the current chief justice, to the same effect: the judiciary was not established to settle hypothetical disagreements. Benjamin Cardozo (former SCOTUS justice nominated by Herbert Hoover) is invoked, rejecting the notion that a judge is “a knight-errant, roaming at will in pursuit of his own ideal of beauty or of goodness,” and, again, Roberts, cautioning that the Supreme Court “is not a legislature,” though “It can be tempting for judges to confuse [their] own preferences with the requirements of the law.”

Be that as it may, recently – as the Federalist Society project has found greater success – Republicans on the bench have begun to abandon conservative judicial principles: principles that they have embraced in the past. When Clarence Thomas sought confirmation before the Senate Judiciary Committee in 1991, he said that “you cannot simply, because you have the votes, begin to change the rules, to change precedent.” That was then. This is now (Thomas in 2019): “When faced with a demonstrably erroneous precedent, my rule is simple: We should not follow it.”

The pattern of outcomes is striking; and so is the frequency with which these 5-4 majorities disregarded “conservative” judicial principles like judicial restraint, originalism, stare decisis, and even federalism.

The brief cites this record: From the term beginning October 2005 through the term beginning October 2017, the Supreme Court issued 78 5-4 (or 5-3) opinions in which the majority consisted solely of Republican-appointed justices. “In 73 of these 5-4 decisions, the cases concerned interests important to the big funders, corporate influencers, and political base of the Republican Party.” In every case, the justices ruled in favor of the Republican Party’s interests.

With bare partisan majorities, the Court has influenced sensitive areas like voting rights, partisan gerrymandering, dark money, union power, regulation of pollution, corporate liability, and access to federal court, particularly regarding civil rights and discrimination in the workplace. Every single time, the corporate and Republican political interests prevailed.

The pattern, and the abandonment of conservative legal principles in favor of partisan activism (which I’ve documented in previous posts), is clear. Add the Federalist Society’s decades-long campaign and the unprecedented refusal of the U.S. Senate – once Republicans gained control of the chamber – to confirm Barack Obama’s appellate court nominees, to hold hearings on Merrick Garland’s nomination, to adhere to the ‘blue slip’ rule, and so on. And then add Brett Kavanaugh’s unhinged, aggrieved, conspiratorial hate-fest directed at the Clintons and the Democratic Party during his confirmation hearings, and we begin to hear talk of restructuring the court.

Fair enough. So, why did Whitehouse and company file this brief? The Senator rejects the accusation that he was threatening the court.

“In the same way that you might warn somebody walking out on thin ice — ‘Hey, the ice is thin out there, you want to be careful, maybe you want to come in’ — I think that was the motivation for filing this brief.”

But what a warning. “This filing is a badass move by these Senate Democrats. The Republican justices on the Supreme Court should be on notice that the public is quickly losing faith in the court as a legitimate institution.” — Brian Fallon, Executive Director of Demand Justice

Lawrence Tribe wasn’t as enthusiastic about putting the Republican men on notice: “I agree the Court should drop this case as moot and am usually a fan of @SenWhitehouse but I think this brief was inappropriately — and stupidly— threatening. If anything is calculated to get the Court’s back up, it’s a brief like this. Really bad move.”

Professor Tribe made a career out of shaping arguments to appeal to one or another of a series of Republican-appointed swing justices, so – okay – he wouldn’t have written this. Presumably he would have been aiming to influence the current swing justice, John Roberts, though he is much further to the right than swing justices in previous decades.

So, should Whitehouse have focused narrowly on standing, rather than unleashing his grand critique? Should he, if he insisted on raising the broad issues in the brief, have tread more gently? Well, I suppose so, if his intent were to influence John Roberts — that is, unless Whitehouse concluded that bluntness, or (contra his denial) a threat, or perhaps authenticity conveyed through a more direct message, would be more effective at influencing the chief justice.

Or this may be a case of senators being senators, of Whitehouse, Hirono, Blumenthal, Durbin, and Gillibrand just sounding off because they’ve had enough of SCOTUS’s Republican men, and of McConnell and Graham and Cruz and Trump … They might be justified in thinking: Why should Democratic Senators feel constrained about offending the shameless partisans in Donald Trump’s corner? (It’s a different era, Professor Tribe. Those old tricks have seen their day.)

Jonathan Chait writes today about the book American Carnage:

The most interesting revelation in Alberta’s book may be the degree to which Republicans convinced themselves of their own lofty rhetoric. When he predicted that he and his allies would resist Trump’s authoritarianism, thereby proving that their opposition to Obama was genuine, Mulvaney clearly believed it. And when Ted Cruz told his aides during the primaries, “History isn’t kind to the man who holds Mussolini’s jacket,” he surely had no idea what lay in store for him. If Trump has accomplished anything, it is to force Republicans to see their party and themselves a little more clearly.

Well, maybe. If so, then perhaps that’s what’s behind the Whitehouse brief. The five Republican men, if they read the brief, may be ‘forced’ to see themselves a little more clearly. Could that be the point?

Here’s another possibility. Dissenting justices don’t write their opinions to change the minds of sitting justices in the majority, so much as they write to influence future justices. Their hope is that their views will capture majorities at a time that has yet to come.

This amicus brief may be speaking to future justices, to law professors and students, to Democratic officeholders and activists, and perhaps to the four women and men on the court appointed by Democratic presidents.

This may be a shout out to allies. It may serve to lay the groundwork for future decisions and future campaigns.

It cheered me. I’m sure it cheered others. That may be reason enough to have filed it.

(Image: wikipedia.)