The nature of the text messages was enough to require recusal, legal experts said. But the Supreme Court has traditionally left such decisions to the ...
“Indeed, if the Supreme Court reviewed those decisions, it would create an undesirable situation in which the court could affect the outcome of a case by selecting who among its members may participate.” “A justice accordingly cannot withdraw from a case as a matter of convenience or simply to avoid controversy,” he added. “This is a consequence of the Constitution’s command that there be only ‘one Supreme Court.’ ” “If an appeals court or district court judge withdraws from a case, there is another federal judge who can serve in that recused judge’s place,” he wrote. “I have complete confidence in the capability of my colleagues to determine when recusal is warranted,” Chief Justice Roberts wrote. In his 2011 annual report on the state of the federal judiciary, Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. wrote that “the limits of Congress’s power to require recusal have never been tested.” “By writing to Meadows, who was chief of staff and active in the ‘Stop the Steal’ movement, she joined the team resisting the results of the election,” Professor Gillers said. In an interview this month with The Washington Free Beacon, a conservative publication, Ms. Thomas said that she and her husband kept their professional lives separate. Republicans, even those who have distanced themselves from Mr. Trump and the more extreme wing of their party, showed no interest in pressuring him to recuse himself. The court rejected the request, with Justices Thomas and Samuel A. Alito Jr. issuing a brief statement suggesting the majority had acted too soon in shutting the case down. Democrats immediately seized on the disclosure to draw attention to the conflicts they said were presented by Ms. Thomas’s political activities and to press Justice Thomas to recuse himself from cases concerning the election and its aftermath. The nature of the text messages was enough to require recusal, legal experts said.
Ginni Thomas' text messages with Mark Meadows about overturning the 2020 election have intensified scrutiny on whether Clarence Thomas has a conflict of ...
While Ginni Thomas’ conservative activism has long been known, recent pieces in the New Yorker and New York Times have intensified scrutiny on her, particularly as the 6–3 conservative Supreme Court takes up an increasing number of partisan issues like abortion and guns. There’s unlikely to be enough support in the Senate for him to be convicted—two thirds of senators would have to vote for it—and only one Supreme Court justice has been impeached in U.S. history, Justice Samuel Chase in 1804. It takes time for the army who is gathering for his back,” Thomas texted on November 4, before telling Meadows on November 19 to “release the Kraken and save us from the left taking America down,” referencing far-right attorney Sidney Powell’s nickname for her failed postelection legal strategy. Lawmakers’ concerns about Clarence Thomas’ conduct have been echoed by legal experts, who told the New Yorker Friday the text messages present a clear conflict of interest for the 73-year-old justice. The text messages were discovered after Meadows turned them over to the House January 6 Committee, which could still get more information on Ginni Thomas’ postelection activities. The impeachment process is the same for justices as it is for presidents—he would first face impeachment hearings in the House, and then the Senate would consider whether or not to convict him—but his removal remains a long shot.
Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas was discharged from the hospital, a week after being admitted with an infection.
The court had not responded to requests for additional information between Sunday night and Friday morning. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas was discharged from the hospital Friday, a week after he was admitted with an infection, a court spokeswoman said. - Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas was discharged from the hospital, a week after he was admitted with an infection, a court spokeswoman said.
Thomas, 73, is the court's longest-serving member and fell ill with an infection last week.
Justice Thomas was the only member of the high court to publicly indicate disagreement with the court’s decision. The Sunday statement said Thomas was being treated with “intravenous antibiotics” and that his symptoms were “abating,” but Friday morning’s one-sentence statement provided no further details on his illness. Thomas, the court’s longest-serving justice, missed three days of oral arguments at the high court this week.
Thomas, 73, was treated for an infection with intravenous antibiotics, the court said, and did not have COVID-19.
The court gave no further information. Thomas, 73, was treated for an infection with intravenous antibiotics. BREAKING: Clarence Thomas was discharged from the hospital today, the Supreme Court said.