The biggest problem with Tuesday’s Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on Supreme Court ethics was evident from the start: The most important witness wasn’t there.
By turning down the committee’s invitation, Chief Justice John Roberts robbed the public of a detailed, on-the-record explanation — in response to questions from the people’s elected representatives — of why his court doesn’t need a binding ethics code.
Of course, Justice Clarence Thomas, whose undisclosed financial ties to a GOP billionaire prompted the latest wave of ethical scrutiny, should have been there, too. Both he and Roberts should have been subpoenaed.
Instead, we heard from what amounted to conservative intermediaries who defended the status quo — former Attorney General Michael Mukasey and a Washington lawyer named Thomas Dupree, who claimed that the “separation of powers” prevents a binding ethics code for the justices. The witnesses’ testimony echoed Roberts’ pathetic letter declining the invitation to testify, in which the chief implied that the separation of powers would have made his very presence inappropriate, given what he deemed the “exceedingly rare” appearances of chief justices before the committee throughout history.
Chief Justice's letter declining to testify before Congress: https://t.co/vrJUR5Wnmi pic.twitter.com/NlDuAd3Rst








