From Glamour:
“Why People
Are Calling for Congress to Impeach Clarence Thomas”
Could Supreme
Court Justice Clarence Thomas be impeached? That's a question many are revisiting in the
wake of the Supreme Court's decision to overturn Roe v. Wade. Thomas was a part
of the majority in the Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization decision,
which was handed down on Friday, June 24, and which ended the constitutional
protection of abortion rights by overturning Roe.
Thomas's vote,
however, is not central to why lawmakers and advocates alike are discussing
impeachment (or, at the very least, demanding a few explanations). Talk of
removing him from the court has been simmering for a while now, and was
reignited in March (at least a full month before the court's vote regarding Roe
was leaked), after Thomas failed to recuse himself when hearing a case
regarding the January 6 committee's access to former president Donald Trump's
documents, despite an apparent conflict of interest: His wife, Virginia “Ginni”
Thomas, was allegedly in communication with Trump administration officials in
the weeks leading up to the insurrection.
On March 29,
Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez said that Thomas should resign,
suggesting that if he didn't, his failure to “recuse himself from matters
involving his wife and his vote to block the Jan 6th commission from key
information” should be investigated and “could serve as grounds for
impeachment.” And just earlier this week, a MoveOn petition
calling for members of Congress to impeach Thomas surpassed 700,000 signatures.
Here's why people like AOC and Senator
Elizabeth Warren, among others, are demanding an investigation into Clarence
Thomas—and his possible impeachment.
Who is
Justice Clarence Thomas? Clarence Thomas was nominated to the Supreme Court
by President George H.W. Bush in 1991, when he was just 43, after Justice
Thurgood Marshall announced his retirement. At the time Thomas had just a
year's experience as a federal appeals judge.
His confirmation
hearing before Congress was initially uncontested, until the existence of an
FBI interview with Anita Hill, who claimed Thomas had sexually harassed her
while she worked under him at the U.S. Department of Education and the Equal
Employment Opportunity Commission, was leaked to the press. Hill, a law
professor, was required to take the stand before the Senate Judiciary
Committee. (There's a whole movie about it.) Despite Hill's credible testimony,
including a successful polygraph test (and four witnesses who were not called
to the stand by then Senator Joe Biden, chairman of the Senate Judiciary
Committee), Thomas was confirmed in October 1991.
Why do
people want to impeach him? Despite
the concerning rhetoric Thomas used in his concurring opinion in the Dobbs
case, in which he suggested that the Court ought to “reconsider” the cases
which legalized gay relationships, gay marriage, as well as contraception, his
beliefs are not at the core of the current discussion of his
impeachment—however inflammatory they may be.
The main
arguments against Thomas center around his relationship with his wife,
conservative activist and attorney Ginni Thomas. To be clear: It's not Ginni's
politics that are an issue (at least not where Clarence's impeachment is concerned);
it's Clarence's failure to recuse himself in situations in which there appears
to be a conflict of interest, and to disclose allegedly pertinent information.
January 6
case: A year after the insurrection at the Capitol, the Supreme Court
granted the January 6 committee access to documents belonging to former
President Donald Trump, which they reviewed as part of their investigation. The
decision was contested by a lone justice—Clarence Thomas—who said that the
president should be able to keep his documents on hold.
It was later
reported that not only was Ginni at the “Stop the Steal” rally in D.C. on Jan.
6, but she also exchanged text messages with then chief of staff Mark Meadows
in which she urged him to “help This Great President to stand firm" after
the election was called in favor of Joe Biden, per per CNN. Many, including
Senator Warren and 23 other members of Congress, are demanding to know why
Thomas did not recuse himself despite his wife's “efforts to overturn the 2020
election.” "I believe that not recusing from cases that one clearly has
family members involved in with very deep violations of conflict of interest
are also impeachable offenses,” AOC said in June 2022, reiterating her stance
following the Roe decision on Meet the Press.
Undisclosed
income: In a profile published in January of this year, The New Yorker's
Jane Mayer revealed Ginni was an “undisclosed paid consultant” for the Center
for Security Policy, a conservative pressure group. CNBC reported she was paid
$200,000 in 2017, but that the sum was not disclosed in Clarence's annual
financial report, which requires judges to report the sources of spousal
income, per The New Yorker. “I believe that violating federal law in not
disclosing income from political organizations, as Clarence Thomas did years
ago, is also potentially an impeachable offense,” added Ocasio-Cortez in the
same Meet the Press interview.
But that's
not all. The same year the Center for Security Policy's founder, Frank
Gaffney, submitted an amicus brief to the court in favor of the Trump
administration's 2017 Muslim ban. Thomas did not recuse himself, despite
Ginni's ties to Gaffney, and the ban was later upheld in a 5-4 majority
decision. Per MSNBC, Thomas has never
recused himself in relation to or because of Ginni's work.
What’s all
this talk about Loving v. Virginia? In his concurring opinion regarding
Dobbs, Thomas said that the court should “reconsider” three other landmark
cases: Obergefell, Lawrence, and Griswold. All four decisions relied on the
same legal logic that was used to decide Roe; in its rulings, the court decided
that gay marriage, gay relationships, and contraception, respectively, were
liberties protected under the due process clause of the 14th Amendment (that's
the amendment that protects the right to life, liberty, and property). A
few days after Roe fell, Samuel L. Jackson asked on Twitter why Thomas had not
also mentioned Loving v. Virginia—the 1967 decision which found bans on
interracial marriage to be an infringement on citizens' 14th Amendment
rights—in his concurring opinion. Thomas, a Black man, is married to a
white woman, Ginni. Many, like Jackson, saw his omission of such a landmark
case that utilizes the same logic to be telling of his clear bias and further
evidence that he is unfit for a role on the highest court in the land.
What about
the other justices? Clarence Thomas
isn't the only justice whose actions have been called into question. During her
appearance on Meet the Press, AOC suggested that Justices Neil Gorsuch and
Brett Kavanaugh lied under oath to Congress—an impeachable offense, she
says—during their confirmation hearings in 2017 and 2018, respectively,
regarding whether or not they would overturn Roe v. Wade.
Both justices
danced around the question without necessarily declaring outright that they
wouldn't overturn Roe, though they did both say it was settled legal precedent
and that the court should respect it as such. Senators Joe Manchin and Susan
Collins both declared the justices' actions to be a breach of trust given their
testimony under oath. “This decision is inconsistent with what Justices Gorsuch
and Kavanaugh said in their testimony and their meetings with me,” Senator
Collins wrote in a statement about the fall of Roe. “They both were insistent
on the importance of supporting long-standing precedents that the country has
relied upon.” Back in 2019,
Representative Ayanna Pressley also called for the impeachment of Kavanaugh
because of his alleged sexual assaults, discussed at length in his own
confirmation hearing. “Sexual predators do not deserve a seat on the nation’s
highest court and Brett Kavanaugh’s confirmation process set a dangerous
precedent,” Pressley said to WBUR at the time, referring to Christine Blasey
Ford's accusations. “We must demand justice for survivors and hold Kavanaugh
accountable for his actions.”
^ Clearly
Thomas and his Wife need to be looked into a lot more by Congress and possibly
the Police. There is a lot more going on there than meets the eye. I would like
to see Thomas Impeached and removed from the Supreme Court for his actions and words.
^
https://www.yahoo.com/lifestyle/why-people-calling-congress-impeach-163000797.html
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