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Common Cause appelle à un vote sur le projet de loi sur l'éthique de la Cour suprême alors que les juges déposent leurs états financiers

Aujourd'hui, alors que les juges de la Cour suprême des États-Unis doivent déposer leurs rapports financiers, Common Cause exhorte le Sénat américain dans son ensemble à débattre et à voter sur la loi sur l'éthique, la récusation et la transparence de la Cour suprême (S. 359). Dans une lettre adressée aujourd'hui aux dirigeants du Sénat, Common Cause a souligné que l'absence d'un code d'éthique contraignant a conduit à une série de scandales impliquant des cadeaux non déclarés et des vacances coûteuses qui ont miné la confiance du public dans la plus haute cour du pays.

Today, as Justices of the U.S. Supreme Court are expected to file their financial disclosure reports, Common Cause is urging the full U.S. Senate to debate and vote on the Supreme Court Ethics, Recusal, and Transparency Act (S. 359). In a lettre today to Senate leadership, Common Cause emphasized that the lack of a binding code of ethics has led to a string of scandals involving unreported gifts and expensive vacations that have undermined public faith in the nation’s highest court.

The letter calls out numerous recent scandals involving Justices, including recent reportage de ProPublica revealing that for more than 20 years, Justice Clarence Thomas accepted luxury trips and extravagant gifts from a billionaire donor without reporting any of them on his personal financial disclosure forms.

“Americans expect and deserve an ethical and unbiased Supreme Court, but the conduct of a number of Justices has done very serious damage to the reputation of the Court in the eyes of the public,” said Virginie Kase Solomon, Président et chef de la direction de Common Cause. “The U.S. Supreme Court has proven time and time again that it is simply not capable of policing itself. The Supreme Court Ethics, Recusal, and Transparency Act would create a long-overdue code of ethics for the Supreme Court that is permanent and binding, and we urge the Senate to advance this legislation with haste.”

The letter notes that the Supreme Court voluntarily announced a non-binding and unenforceable code of conduct for itself last fall. But the letter points out that that code of conduct was announced as the Court found itself under increasing public and congressional scrutiny after the most recent ethics scandals were unearthed by the media.

“It is hard to get around the fact that the voluntary code of ethics was announced just days before the Senate Judiciary Committee was expected to vote to issue subpoenas to some of the wealthy donors who paid for the trips and gifts at the center of some of the recent Supreme Court scandals,” said Aaron Scherb, directeur principal des affaires législatives de Common Cause. “It is long past time for half-measures, and Supreme Court Justices need to be held to binding and permanent ethical standards just like every other judge in the nation. Otherwise the scandals will continue, and public faith in the institution will be eroded still further.”

La cause commune d'abord pointed out glaring ethical violations by the Supreme Court more than a decade ago when it exposed unreported travel by then-Justice Antonin Scalia and Justice Clarence Thomas. The research that led to those revelations also found that Justice Thomas for years had annually failed to report les revenus de sa femme, dont une grande partie provient d’organisations hautement politiques et conservatrices.

The letter stresses that Supreme Court ethics should not be a partisan issue. It goes on to praise the Senate Judiciary Committee for passing the Supreme Court Ethics, Recusal, and Transparency Act out of committee last year but emphasizes that much more must be done – beginning with a full Senate debate followed by a vote.

Pour lire la lettre complète, Cliquez ici.

 

 

 

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