The Democratic-led Senate Judiciary Committee has not taken an overly aggressive approach to dealing with the Supreme Court’s ethical failings. Ahead of last week’s hearing on the matter, the committee chair, Sen. Dick Durbin, D.-Ill., invited Chief Justice John Roberts to testify, he declined, and that was that. Justice Clarence Thomas, whose undisclosed financial ties to GOP billionaire Harlan Crow set off the latest wave of court criticism, wasn’t even asked to appear.
But as more Thomas revelations continue to trickle out, Durbin tweeted Sunday that “everything is on the table when it comes to Supreme Court ethics reform” and since the court “won’t act,” his committee will.
Let me tell you this: everything is on the table when it comes to Supreme Court ethics reform.
— Senator Dick Durbin (@SenatorDurbin) May 8, 2023
Since the Court won't act, @JudiciaryDems will.
But act how?
At least when it comes to conducting oversight through fact-finding, it’s difficult to square Durbin’s pledge with his stated inability to issue subpoenas for Roberts, Thomas or any other reluctant witness in light of the health-related absence of his committee colleague, Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif.








