Justice Clarence Thomas is known to have sworn vengeance on liberals in the wake of his contentious, yet successful, SCOTUS confirmation hearings, and in those decisions of the last 32 years – he assumed his seat in 1991, or thirty two years ago, making him the senior member – those that were split decisions usually have been irritating and outrageous to liberals – or, in the case of the Dobbs decision overturning Roe vs. Wade, so infuriating to the general electorate that independents and even moderate conservatives ended up voting against proposals and candidates who supported Dobbs, and in such numbers as to disappoint those who were anti-Roe.
But whether or not Thomas has been successful by his own gauge, it appears that he’s beginning to become a leading example, as unwilling as he may be, of the corrupt side of a political party that has an implicit worship of money. Yet another facet of his controversial relationship with real estate tycoon Harlan Crow has come to light, as reported by CNN/Politics:
Justice Clarence Thomas failed to disclose a 2014 real estate deal he made with a GOP megadonor, according to a ProPublica report published Thursday.
The deal involved the sale of three properties in Savannah, Georgia, that were owned by Thomas and his relatives to the megadonor, Harlan Crow, according to ProPublica, which said that tax and property records showed that Crow made the purchases through one of his companies for a total of $133,363.
That’s not the worst of it:
But Thomas “never disclosed his sale of the Savannah properties,” the report said, noting that ethics law experts told the outlet that his failure to report it “appears to be a violation of the law.”
I wonder if there’s a penalty involved, or if this is another toothless ethics rule. But CNN’s source might be a bit too literal:
“The transaction marks the first known instance of money flowing from the Republican megadonor to the Supreme Court justice,” ProPublica said in its report.
If you’re not familiar with the previous revelations, you should click through to see all the other unfortunate details – the ultra-expensive vacations paid for by Crow, the great friends they’ve become, the cases in which a Crow company came before the Court, etc. This is all beginning to acquire the flavor of a story told in a history book, fifty years from now, in which Justice Thomas becomes not only an example of corruption, but an embodiment of the foundational flaw of a pious, yet arrogant, political party that happens to worship money and power, and confuses that lust with morality.
That’s not to suggest I expect Thomas to resign. No, to do so would be to lose face to the liberals, and that’s the last thing he’ll do. And within the hermitage we call the SCOTUS conservative wing, he’ll retain his influence and prestige, because they share the same political philosophy.
But this continuing scandal will alienate yet more independent voters. The GOP may make big noises about 2024, but between intransigence when it comes to gun laws, the continuing inflammation known as the Dobbs decision, and now this scandal, GOP candidates in swing districts will have to consider disavowing at least one of these GOP positions, if not two or even all three, if they hope to persuade the power-holding independents to vote for them.