Bipartisan Supreme Court Reform Is Not a Pipe Dream

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Thursday, January 26, 2023

Liberals hoping to stymie an ultra-right, ultra-activist Supreme Court have one option that hasn’t garnered the attention of institutional makeover proposals such as expanding the court or imposing term limits: Supreme Court ethics reform. It may not be as sexy as the idea of a 13-member court, but tightening judicial ethics, conflict of interest, and good practice and procedure standards would be more constructive, more likely to resonate with the public, and carry far more potential to attract broad congressional support. How would this come to be? Reformers would first have to unite around legislation to end Supreme Court justices’ anomalous status as the only federal judges (or federal officials) who are not subject to an ethical code of conduct. There is good news on that front: Large, bipartisan popular majorities, prominent conservative legal luminaries, and even political leaders favor plugging that gaping loophole in the law. It may not be popular with the court’s conservative bloc, but so be it: Their resistance will telegraph their zest for aggrandizing their power without check. Meanwhile, reformers can take the high ground by spotlighting the justices’ zeal for deploying their unchecked power to gut or cancel popular economic, health, safety, environmental, equal opportunity, workplace fairness, fiscal stability, and democratic governance legal safeguards prized by broad constituencies of everyday Americans. Finally, traction for ethics legislation, which the conservative justices plainly fear and loathe, could induce at least some of them to trim their activist sails.Here’s the problem: Supreme Court ethics reform, its appeal notwithstanding, is not going anywhere.Here’s the problem: Supreme Court ethics reform, its appeal notwithstanding, is not going anywhere. And it will not go anywhere as long as Republican leaders—with some just cause—perceive liberals’ ethics flag-waving as simply a partisan excuse for thwacking conservatives, in particular Justice Samuel Alito, Justice Clarence Thomas, and Thomas’s far-right firebrand spouse, Ginni Thomas. To gain traction, backers of Supreme Court ethics reform must convincingly market their ideas as a credibly bipartisan initiative and craft a proposal that is workable as well as politically salable.Happily, we’re off to a good start in the form of a new book by Ninth Circuit federal Judge M. Margaret McKeown, Citizen Justice: The Environmental Legacy of William O. Douglas, Public Advocate and Conservation Champion. As signaled by the title, the book spends most of its 234 pages documenting how Justice Douglas, while performing his day job on the nation’s highest court, simultaneously made himself, as Douglas Brinkley’s back-jacket blurb proclaims, “the gold-standard conservation activist from the 1930s to the 1970s, by promoting wilderness values and public lands preservation from Arctic Alaska to the Allagash of Maine.” But woven within this account, McKeown elaborates a second theme, that Douglas pursued his environmentalist agenda in incessant defiance of ethics constraints—norms embedded in professional canons, entrenched judicial conventions, and federal statutes.McKeown details Douglas’s “full-on lobbying efforts at the highest levels.” His modus operandi, she observes, “was not an occasional letter, visit, or call to the halls of power [but rather] frequent and persistent until he succeeded.” Drily, McKeown notes that “it is hardly a surprise that his lobbying efforts carried weight [with Kennedy-Johnson Interior Secretary Stewart Udall in particular, since Douglas] participated in multiple Supreme Court decisions in which Udall, in his official capacity, was a named party.”As McKeown chronicles, Douglas is hardly the only member of the federal judiciary to have repeatedly engaged in political moonlighting. But Douglas’s “signature style of advocacy”—a “sustained and intensive lobbying before Congress and the federal agencies on a singular cause that implicated cases before the judiciary”—absolutely broke the mold. It is hardly surprising that Douglas’s ethics misconduct would catch McKeown’s critical eye. She once chaired the federal Judicial Conference Codes of Conduct Committee, a post to which she was appointed by Chief Justice Roberts. McKeown’s account could prove helpful to reformers seeking to channel rising public skepticism about the justices’ partisan impartiality into momentum for a robust reform initiative, in two ways.First, the book illuminates the fact that Supreme Court ethics reform is not some off-the-cuff Democrat ploy; rather, it will close a loophole that appointees of both parties have exploited for centuries—multiple justices, eminent liberals no less than conservatives, have broached conflict-of-interest lines between judging and politicking. In particular, the ostentatiously liberal Douglas’s egregious misadventures credibly portray him as the poster child for the kind of ethical breaches that cry out for Supreme Court justices to be subjected to the same code of conduct with which their lower court colleagues have functioned comfortably for decades.Moreover, as McKeown details in her book, as well as a December 2021 Yale Law Journal online article in which she expanded on her ideas, the foundation structure for a new reform effort is already in place. While there may be no comprehensive code of conduct applicable to Supreme Court justices, there are ethics provisions governing lower courts on the books already, which, if complied with, could go a long way toward bringing errant justices’ comportment into line with public expectations. In this way, new ethics legislation may be cast as a measure that fills in gaps and strengthens the architecture of the judiciary instead of burning it to the ground. New ethics legislation may be cast as a measure that fills in gaps and strengthens the architecture of the judiciary instead of burning it to the ground. Second, as McKeown chronicles, the historical record undermines the justices’ insistence that a mandatory code of conduct would either hamper their ability to function or encourage the notion that such rules would be an unconstitutional invasion of the court’s independence. The court has consistently accepted and claimed to comply with ethics requirements that Congress has made applicable to it, as well as with the code of conduct promulgated for lower courts by the Judicial Conference.In 1991 and 1993, responding to heightened public pressure, then-Chief Justice William Rehnquist orchestrated written public statements detailing how the court interprets and will apply to its members ethics code provisions governing salary-supplementary outside compensation in a “resolution” and, on recusal, in a “Statement of Recusal Policy.” The latter went beyond the Judicial Conference code language, by specifying that individual justices must “recuse from all cases in which … firms [appear before the court] in which our relatives are partners, unless we have received from the firm written assurance that income Supreme Court litigation is, on a permanent basis, excluded from our relatives’ partnership shares.”In his 2011 annual Year-End Report on the Federal Judiciary, Chief Justice Roberts asserted that he and his colleagues “follow the same general principles respecting recusal as other federal judges,” even though underscoring that their acceptance is “voluntary.” Roberts marshaled the justices’ voluntary embrace of these standards as evidence that codifying in law their application to the court is unnecessary and/or unconstitutional.But history cuts against Roberts’s defense of his court’s exemption from mandatory controls. While he and his colleagues assert fidelity to legal ethics requirements in principle, they do not always or uniformly comply in practice. Hence his contention that enacting an enforceable code would have no real-world benefit comes up short. More to the point, the fact that Supreme Court justices have long, for the most part, as McKeown notes, adhered to legal requirements prescribed by Congress and the Judicial Conference belies his insinuation that, if made mandatory, such rules would interfere with the court’s work.The long history of judicial ethics laws also undermines the current justices’ contention that new restrictions could unconstitutionally invade the court’s independence. Statutory ethics restrictions for the court were enacted as long ago as 1792, “when,” McKeown relates, Congress mandated recusal for all federal judges and justices, “in cases where a judge has an interest or has previously served as a counsel for a party,” and as recently as April 2022, when President Biden signed into law a Courthouse Ethics and Transparency Act, which requires federal judges and justices to file within 45 days reports on securities trades and to post their financial disclosure reports on a searchable online database. No one, on or off the court, has suggested that its members’ voluntary compliance with enacted ethics measures has thrown a monkey wrench into the court’s functioning. Moreover, deference to long-standing practice has been a staple of constitutional interpretation at least since Chief Justice John Marshall famously rejected, in 1819, a constitutional challenge to the Bank of the United States, partly on the ground that a constitutional claim that would reshape “the respective powers of those [branches] who are equally representatives of the people [should ordinarily] be put at rest by the [established] practice of the Government.”While McKeown’s expert historical survey of the judicial ethics landscape could thus be helpful to current reformers, there are aspects of her analysis that disregard why, as Forbes magazine reported, even before the court’s summer 2022 obliteration of long-standing abortion, environmental, and voting rights precedents, more than 60 percent of Americans “view the Court as politicized [and] partisan.” She casts Douglas’s immersion in politics as a thing of the past, that “today would find little traction.” In her Yale Law Journal article, she downplays the current drive for tightening judicial ethics controls, at one point insisting that “modern incidents of partisan extrajudicial entanglement conduct pale in comparison to the overt political entanglements” common in the first six decades of the twentieth century.  She acknowledges that “the question of the Supreme Court as a political institution certainly [has] heated up, [and] “even the Justices themselves are joining the debate.” But she concludes, “While such current debates are important, … they clearly appear relatively minor in the shadow of the ethics dilemmas of centuries past.… It is not pollyannaish to suggest that sensitivity about political involvement and the nature of extrajudicial activities in light of historical realities indicates an optimistic trend line.”McKeown’s rosy-colored view of our current moment runs counter to the trend line of public take on the court’s impartiality and freedom from political and partisan taint.McKeown’s rosy-colored view of our current moment runs counter to the trend line of public take on the court’s impartiality and freedom from political and partisan taint. It may be that this discrepancy can be written down to the fact that McKeown is examining a different problem. “Extrajudicial activities,” such as the penchant of Douglas and his contemporaries and predecessors to moonlight as advocates are not why a September 2022 Pew survey found that 53 percent of Americans—an unsurprising 70 percent of Democrats and a surprising 37 percent of Republicans—believe that the justices “are doing a poor or only fair job of keeping their political views out of how they decide major cases.”And errant off-the-court meandering of the sort that defined Douglas’s is not what Justice Elena Kagan had in mind when, just prior to the court’s current term, she leveled an unprecedented public fusillade at her conservative colleagues—confirming that “people have a right” to harbor skepticism about justices who “don’t act like courts” and admonishing that “the court shouldn’t be wandering around just inserting itself into every hot button issue in America, and it especially, you know, shouldn’t be doing that in a way that reflects one ideology or one … set of political views over another.” Nor are extrajudicial misdeeds what drove 72 percent of respondents in a March 2022 C-SPAN poll to favor adoption of a code of ethics for the Supreme Court, like that in place for lower federal courts. In short, the current spike in skepticism about the court’s impartiality and support for ethics reform arises from what the conservative justices are doing when they have their robes on—how they are doing their day job. The most plausible vehicle for a credibly bipartisan initiative would build on a one-page “Supreme Court Ethics Act,” introduced in the last Congress by Senator Chris Murphy and by Representative Hank Johnson. This bill would simply direct the Judicial Conference to issue a code of conduct applicable to Supreme Court justices as well as lower court federal judges. If such a bill were to pass, it would address at least one of the flash points in the current furor. The existing Judicial Conference Code requires lower court judges to recuse from “any proceeding in which his impartiality might reasonably be questioned,” requiring recusal if “the judge or the judge’s spouse … is known by the judge to have an interest that could be substantially affected by the outcome of the proceeding. A law subjecting Supreme Court justices to a code of conduct, substantially mirroring the existing Judicial Conference code, could precipitate reversal of Justice Thomas’s refusal to recuse from cases involving his spouse’s efforts to overturn the 2020 election. Enactment of such a bill would also give the Judicial Conference’s prescriptions the force of law and the blessing of Congress, which would surely encourage all judges and justices to take them seriously.The Murphy-Johnson bill contained a proviso that the Judicial Conference code could have different provisions for “different categories” of judges or justices. That proviso was designed to deflect one of Chief Justice Roberts’s main arguments against ethics legislation covering the Supreme Court, namely, that the justices have unique concerns, different from those of lower court judges. A better way of mooting that contention, and muting constitutional separation of powers vulnerability, would be to assign the Supreme Court itself the job of promulgating the conduct standards for its members. Taking that route could also likely reduce enforceability concerns; it seems probable that justices would be especially disinclined to evade rules they had crafted for themselves.But regardless of changes in the substance of existing judicial ethics standards, the primary benefit of a simple code of conduct initiative would be political—its prospects for gaining legislative traction and stimulating wide public support would get the attention of the justices.  There is good reason to believe that such a bill could attract Republican support. In February 2021, Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina co-signed, with Rhode Island Democrat Sheldon Whitehouse, a joint letter to the chief justice, asking, among other pointed questions, “What plans, if any, does the Court have to adopt a code of ethics,” and “If it has no such plans, what justifies the Court in having a lower disclosure standard than the other branches of government?” Five months later, Louisiana Republican John Kennedy co-authored, with Whitehouse, a similarly worded letter to Attorney General Merrick Garland noting that federal judicial disclosure requirements are “significantly less stringent” than those adopted by the legislative and executive branches and that “even those requirements do not formally apply to the justices of the Supreme Court.” Congress’s April 2022 enactment of the above-noted Courthouse and Transparency Act, by overwhelming majorities in both houses, suggests that Republican sentiment favoring some measure of Supreme Court ethics reform could extend much further. Another good omen could be the successful negotiation of legislation substantially strengthening the Electoral Count Act, led by Senators Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Susan Collins of Maine. This bipartisan success story, strongly opposed by election-denier Republicans, demonstrates that a critical mass of Republicans in Congress can buy into good government, pro-democracy legislation, a frame that could credibly fit a Supreme Court code of conduct proposal.Outside of Congress, prominent Republicans and conservatives have voiced support for such a measure. In May 2022, Federal District Judge Reggie Walton, a George W. Bush appointee, told a conference attended by other federal judges that it is “unimaginable that we have a segment of our federal judiciary that’s not subject to an ethics code.” Judicial ethics expert Gabe Roth recently testified to the Senate Judiciary Committee that, “when I speak to lower court federal judges, almost always off the record, I hear their frustration that the Supreme Court is neglecting its responsibility” to adopt a code of conduct. In November 2021, Nicholas Rostow, former senior official in the Reagan and Bush administrations, wrote in Roll Call that “the Supreme Court needs an ethics code,” noting that such codes “have already proved to be effective guardrails” for Congress and the executive branch, and would be “likely to attract bipartisan support—including at least 60 votes in the Senate to avoid a filibuster.” Rostow wrote on behalf of an organization of prominent conservative and libertarian lawyers, which includes senior legal officials from the Reagan and both Bush administrations. The bottom line: Republican politicians could find it difficult to oppose a commonsensical notion enjoying broad public support, including from their own constituents. It would change the court-reform dynamic in significant ways by pushing it ahead of less publicly popular ideas like court-packing. Perhaps the biggest reason for any lawmaker to pursue this path is that it aligns with the interests of their branch of government and the constituents who elected them to Congress: The enactment of a Supreme Court code of conduct, or even a serious effort to enact such a code—including, say, Senate passage and respectable House Republican support—would, in and of itself, shift the balance of political power between Congress and a Supreme Court that now fancies itself to be the superlegislature supreme.

Liberals hoping to stymie an ultra-right, ultra-activist Supreme Court have one option that hasn’t garnered the attention of institutional makeover proposals such as expanding the court or imposing term limits: Supreme Court ethics reform. It may not be as sexy as the idea of a 13-member court, but tightening judicial ethics, conflict of interest, and good practice and procedure standards would be more constructive, more likely to resonate with the public, and carry far more potential to attract broad congressional support. How would this come to be? Reformers would first have to unite around legislation to end Supreme Court justices’ anomalous status as the only federal judges (or federal officials) who are not subject to an ethical code of conduct. There is good news on that front: Large, bipartisan popular majorities, prominent conservative legal luminaries, and even political leaders favor plugging that gaping loophole in the law. It may not be popular with the court’s conservative bloc, but so be it: Their resistance will telegraph their zest for aggrandizing their power without check. Meanwhile, reformers can take the high ground by spotlighting the justices’ zeal for deploying their unchecked power to gut or cancel popular economic, health, safety, environmental, equal opportunity, workplace fairness, fiscal stability, and democratic governance legal safeguards prized by broad constituencies of everyday Americans. Finally, traction for ethics legislation, which the conservative justices plainly fear and loathe, could induce at least some of them to trim their activist sails.Here’s the problem: Supreme Court ethics reform, its appeal notwithstanding, is not going anywhere.Here’s the problem: Supreme Court ethics reform, its appeal notwithstanding, is not going anywhere. And it will not go anywhere as long as Republican leaders—with some just cause—perceive liberals’ ethics flag-waving as simply a partisan excuse for thwacking conservatives, in particular Justice Samuel Alito, Justice Clarence Thomas, and Thomas’s far-right firebrand spouse, Ginni Thomas. To gain traction, backers of Supreme Court ethics reform must convincingly market their ideas as a credibly bipartisan initiative and craft a proposal that is workable as well as politically salable.Happily, we’re off to a good start in the form of a new book by Ninth Circuit federal Judge M. Margaret McKeown, Citizen Justice: The Environmental Legacy of William O. Douglas, Public Advocate and Conservation Champion. As signaled by the title, the book spends most of its 234 pages documenting how Justice Douglas, while performing his day job on the nation’s highest court, simultaneously made himself, as Douglas Brinkley’s back-jacket blurb proclaims, “the gold-standard conservation activist from the 1930s to the 1970s, by promoting wilderness values and public lands preservation from Arctic Alaska to the Allagash of Maine.” But woven within this account, McKeown elaborates a second theme, that Douglas pursued his environmentalist agenda in incessant defiance of ethics constraints—norms embedded in professional canons, entrenched judicial conventions, and federal statutes.McKeown details Douglas’s “full-on lobbying efforts at the highest levels.” His modus operandi, she observes, “was not an occasional letter, visit, or call to the halls of power [but rather] frequent and persistent until he succeeded.” Drily, McKeown notes that “it is hardly a surprise that his lobbying efforts carried weight [with Kennedy-Johnson Interior Secretary Stewart Udall in particular, since Douglas] participated in multiple Supreme Court decisions in which Udall, in his official capacity, was a named party.”As McKeown chronicles, Douglas is hardly the only member of the federal judiciary to have repeatedly engaged in political moonlighting. But Douglas’s “signature style of advocacy”—a “sustained and intensive lobbying before Congress and the federal agencies on a singular cause that implicated cases before the judiciary”—absolutely broke the mold. It is hardly surprising that Douglas’s ethics misconduct would catch McKeown’s critical eye. She once chaired the federal Judicial Conference Codes of Conduct Committee, a post to which she was appointed by Chief Justice Roberts. McKeown’s account could prove helpful to reformers seeking to channel rising public skepticism about the justices’ partisan impartiality into momentum for a robust reform initiative, in two ways.First, the book illuminates the fact that Supreme Court ethics reform is not some off-the-cuff Democrat ploy; rather, it will close a loophole that appointees of both parties have exploited for centuries—multiple justices, eminent liberals no less than conservatives, have broached conflict-of-interest lines between judging and politicking. In particular, the ostentatiously liberal Douglas’s egregious misadventures credibly portray him as the poster child for the kind of ethical breaches that cry out for Supreme Court justices to be subjected to the same code of conduct with which their lower court colleagues have functioned comfortably for decades.Moreover, as McKeown details in her book, as well as a December 2021 Yale Law Journal online article in which she expanded on her ideas, the foundation structure for a new reform effort is already in place. While there may be no comprehensive code of conduct applicable to Supreme Court justices, there are ethics provisions governing lower courts on the books already, which, if complied with, could go a long way toward bringing errant justices’ comportment into line with public expectations. In this way, new ethics legislation may be cast as a measure that fills in gaps and strengthens the architecture of the judiciary instead of burning it to the ground. New ethics legislation may be cast as a measure that fills in gaps and strengthens the architecture of the judiciary instead of burning it to the ground. Second, as McKeown chronicles, the historical record undermines the justices’ insistence that a mandatory code of conduct would either hamper their ability to function or encourage the notion that such rules would be an unconstitutional invasion of the court’s independence. The court has consistently accepted and claimed to comply with ethics requirements that Congress has made applicable to it, as well as with the code of conduct promulgated for lower courts by the Judicial Conference.In 1991 and 1993, responding to heightened public pressure, then-Chief Justice William Rehnquist orchestrated written public statements detailing how the court interprets and will apply to its members ethics code provisions governing salary-supplementary outside compensation in a “resolution” and, on recusal, in a “Statement of Recusal Policy.” The latter went beyond the Judicial Conference code language, by specifying that individual justices must “recuse from all cases in which … firms [appear before the court] in which our relatives are partners, unless we have received from the firm written assurance that income Supreme Court litigation is, on a permanent basis, excluded from our relatives’ partnership shares.”In his 2011 annual Year-End Report on the Federal Judiciary, Chief Justice Roberts asserted that he and his colleagues “follow the same general principles respecting recusal as other federal judges,” even though underscoring that their acceptance is “voluntary.” Roberts marshaled the justices’ voluntary embrace of these standards as evidence that codifying in law their application to the court is unnecessary and/or unconstitutional.But history cuts against Roberts’s defense of his court’s exemption from mandatory controls. While he and his colleagues assert fidelity to legal ethics requirements in principle, they do not always or uniformly comply in practice. Hence his contention that enacting an enforceable code would have no real-world benefit comes up short. More to the point, the fact that Supreme Court justices have long, for the most part, as McKeown notes, adhered to legal requirements prescribed by Congress and the Judicial Conference belies his insinuation that, if made mandatory, such rules would interfere with the court’s work.The long history of judicial ethics laws also undermines the current justices’ contention that new restrictions could unconstitutionally invade the court’s independence. Statutory ethics restrictions for the court were enacted as long ago as 1792, “when,” McKeown relates, Congress mandated recusal for all federal judges and justices, “in cases where a judge has an interest or has previously served as a counsel for a party,” and as recently as April 2022, when President Biden signed into law a Courthouse Ethics and Transparency Act, which requires federal judges and justices to file within 45 days reports on securities trades and to post their financial disclosure reports on a searchable online database. No one, on or off the court, has suggested that its members’ voluntary compliance with enacted ethics measures has thrown a monkey wrench into the court’s functioning. Moreover, deference to long-standing practice has been a staple of constitutional interpretation at least since Chief Justice John Marshall famously rejected, in 1819, a constitutional challenge to the Bank of the United States, partly on the ground that a constitutional claim that would reshape “the respective powers of those [branches] who are equally representatives of the people [should ordinarily] be put at rest by the [established] practice of the Government.”While McKeown’s expert historical survey of the judicial ethics landscape could thus be helpful to current reformers, there are aspects of her analysis that disregard why, as Forbes magazine reported, even before the court’s summer 2022 obliteration of long-standing abortion, environmental, and voting rights precedents, more than 60 percent of Americans “view the Court as politicized [and] partisan.” She casts Douglas’s immersion in politics as a thing of the past, that “today would find little traction.” In her Yale Law Journal article, she downplays the current drive for tightening judicial ethics controls, at one point insisting that “modern incidents of partisan extrajudicial entanglement conduct pale in comparison to the overt political entanglements” common in the first six decades of the twentieth century.  She acknowledges that “the question of the Supreme Court as a political institution certainly [has] heated up, [and] “even the Justices themselves are joining the debate.” But she concludes, “While such current debates are important, … they clearly appear relatively minor in the shadow of the ethics dilemmas of centuries past.… It is not pollyannaish to suggest that sensitivity about political involvement and the nature of extrajudicial activities in light of historical realities indicates an optimistic trend line.”McKeown’s rosy-colored view of our current moment runs counter to the trend line of public take on the court’s impartiality and freedom from political and partisan taint.McKeown’s rosy-colored view of our current moment runs counter to the trend line of public take on the court’s impartiality and freedom from political and partisan taint. It may be that this discrepancy can be written down to the fact that McKeown is examining a different problem. “Extrajudicial activities,” such as the penchant of Douglas and his contemporaries and predecessors to moonlight as advocates are not why a September 2022 Pew survey found that 53 percent of Americans—an unsurprising 70 percent of Democrats and a surprising 37 percent of Republicans—believe that the justices “are doing a poor or only fair job of keeping their political views out of how they decide major cases.”And errant off-the-court meandering of the sort that defined Douglas’s is not what Justice Elena Kagan had in mind when, just prior to the court’s current term, she leveled an unprecedented public fusillade at her conservative colleagues—confirming that “people have a right” to harbor skepticism about justices who “don’t act like courts” and admonishing that “the court shouldn’t be wandering around just inserting itself into every hot button issue in America, and it especially, you know, shouldn’t be doing that in a way that reflects one ideology or one … set of political views over another.” Nor are extrajudicial misdeeds what drove 72 percent of respondents in a March 2022 C-SPAN poll to favor adoption of a code of ethics for the Supreme Court, like that in place for lower federal courts. In short, the current spike in skepticism about the court’s impartiality and support for ethics reform arises from what the conservative justices are doing when they have their robes on—how they are doing their day job. The most plausible vehicle for a credibly bipartisan initiative would build on a one-page “Supreme Court Ethics Act,” introduced in the last Congress by Senator Chris Murphy and by Representative Hank Johnson. This bill would simply direct the Judicial Conference to issue a code of conduct applicable to Supreme Court justices as well as lower court federal judges. If such a bill were to pass, it would address at least one of the flash points in the current furor. The existing Judicial Conference Code requires lower court judges to recuse from “any proceeding in which his impartiality might reasonably be questioned,” requiring recusal if “the judge or the judge’s spouse … is known by the judge to have an interest that could be substantially affected by the outcome of the proceeding. A law subjecting Supreme Court justices to a code of conduct, substantially mirroring the existing Judicial Conference code, could precipitate reversal of Justice Thomas’s refusal to recuse from cases involving his spouse’s efforts to overturn the 2020 election. Enactment of such a bill would also give the Judicial Conference’s prescriptions the force of law and the blessing of Congress, which would surely encourage all judges and justices to take them seriously.The Murphy-Johnson bill contained a proviso that the Judicial Conference code could have different provisions for “different categories” of judges or justices. That proviso was designed to deflect one of Chief Justice Roberts’s main arguments against ethics legislation covering the Supreme Court, namely, that the justices have unique concerns, different from those of lower court judges. A better way of mooting that contention, and muting constitutional separation of powers vulnerability, would be to assign the Supreme Court itself the job of promulgating the conduct standards for its members. Taking that route could also likely reduce enforceability concerns; it seems probable that justices would be especially disinclined to evade rules they had crafted for themselves.But regardless of changes in the substance of existing judicial ethics standards, the primary benefit of a simple code of conduct initiative would be political—its prospects for gaining legislative traction and stimulating wide public support would get the attention of the justices.  There is good reason to believe that such a bill could attract Republican support. In February 2021, Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina co-signed, with Rhode Island Democrat Sheldon Whitehouse, a joint letter to the chief justice, asking, among other pointed questions, “What plans, if any, does the Court have to adopt a code of ethics,” and “If it has no such plans, what justifies the Court in having a lower disclosure standard than the other branches of government?” Five months later, Louisiana Republican John Kennedy co-authored, with Whitehouse, a similarly worded letter to Attorney General Merrick Garland noting that federal judicial disclosure requirements are “significantly less stringent” than those adopted by the legislative and executive branches and that “even those requirements do not formally apply to the justices of the Supreme Court.” Congress’s April 2022 enactment of the above-noted Courthouse and Transparency Act, by overwhelming majorities in both houses, suggests that Republican sentiment favoring some measure of Supreme Court ethics reform could extend much further. Another good omen could be the successful negotiation of legislation substantially strengthening the Electoral Count Act, led by Senators Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Susan Collins of Maine. This bipartisan success story, strongly opposed by election-denier Republicans, demonstrates that a critical mass of Republicans in Congress can buy into good government, pro-democracy legislation, a frame that could credibly fit a Supreme Court code of conduct proposal.Outside of Congress, prominent Republicans and conservatives have voiced support for such a measure. In May 2022, Federal District Judge Reggie Walton, a George W. Bush appointee, told a conference attended by other federal judges that it is “unimaginable that we have a segment of our federal judiciary that’s not subject to an ethics code.” Judicial ethics expert Gabe Roth recently testified to the Senate Judiciary Committee that, “when I speak to lower court federal judges, almost always off the record, I hear their frustration that the Supreme Court is neglecting its responsibility” to adopt a code of conduct. In November 2021, Nicholas Rostow, former senior official in the Reagan and Bush administrations, wrote in Roll Call that “the Supreme Court needs an ethics code,” noting that such codes “have already proved to be effective guardrails” for Congress and the executive branch, and would be “likely to attract bipartisan support—including at least 60 votes in the Senate to avoid a filibuster.” Rostow wrote on behalf of an organization of prominent conservative and libertarian lawyers, which includes senior legal officials from the Reagan and both Bush administrations. The bottom line: Republican politicians could find it difficult to oppose a commonsensical notion enjoying broad public support, including from their own constituents. It would change the court-reform dynamic in significant ways by pushing it ahead of less publicly popular ideas like court-packing. Perhaps the biggest reason for any lawmaker to pursue this path is that it aligns with the interests of their branch of government and the constituents who elected them to Congress: The enactment of a Supreme Court code of conduct, or even a serious effort to enact such a code—including, say, Senate passage and respectable House Republican support—would, in and of itself, shift the balance of political power between Congress and a Supreme Court that now fancies itself to be the superlegislature supreme.

Liberals hoping to stymie an ultra-right, ultra-activist Supreme Court have one option that hasn’t garnered the attention of institutional makeover proposals such as expanding the court or imposing term limits: Supreme Court ethics reform. It may not be as sexy as the idea of a 13-member court, but tightening judicial ethics, conflict of interest, and good practice and procedure standards would be more constructive, more likely to resonate with the public, and carry far more potential to attract broad congressional support.

How would this come to be? Reformers would first have to unite around legislation to end Supreme Court justices’ anomalous status as the only federal judges (or federal officials) who are not subject to an ethical code of conduct. There is good news on that front: Large, bipartisan popular majorities, prominent conservative legal luminaries, and even political leaders favor plugging that gaping loophole in the law. It may not be popular with the court’s conservative bloc, but so be it: Their resistance will telegraph their zest for aggrandizing their power without check. Meanwhile, reformers can take the high ground by spotlighting the justices’ zeal for deploying their unchecked power to gut or cancel popular economic, health, safety, environmental, equal opportunity, workplace fairness, fiscal stability, and democratic governance legal safeguards prized by broad constituencies of everyday Americans. Finally, traction for ethics legislation, which the conservative justices plainly fear and loathe, could induce at least some of them to trim their activist sails.

Here’s the problem: Supreme Court ethics reform, its appeal notwithstanding, is not going anywhere. And it will not go anywhere as long as Republican leaders—with some just causeperceive liberals’ ethics flag-waving as simply a partisan excuse for thwacking conservatives, in particular Justice Samuel Alito, Justice Clarence Thomas, and Thomas’s far-right firebrand spouse, Ginni Thomas. To gain traction, backers of Supreme Court ethics reform must convincingly market their ideas as a credibly bipartisan initiative and craft a proposal that is workable as well as politically salable.

Happily, we’re off to a good start in the form of a new book by Ninth Circuit federal Judge M. Margaret McKeown, Citizen Justice: The Environmental Legacy of William O. Douglas, Public Advocate and Conservation Champion. As signaled by the title, the book spends most of its 234 pages documenting how Justice Douglas, while performing his day job on the nation’s highest court, simultaneously made himself, as Douglas Brinkley’s back-jacket blurb proclaims, “the gold-standard conservation activist from the 1930s to the 1970s, by promoting wilderness values and public lands preservation from Arctic Alaska to the Allagash of Maine.” But woven within this account, McKeown elaborates a second theme, that Douglas pursued his environmentalist agenda in incessant defiance of ethics constraintsnorms embedded in professional canons, entrenched judicial conventions, and federal statutes.

McKeown details Douglas’s “full-on lobbying efforts at the highest levels.” His modus operandi, she observes, “was not an occasional letter, visit, or call to the halls of power [but rather] frequent and persistent until he succeeded.” Drily, McKeown notes that “it is hardly a surprise that his lobbying efforts carried weight [with Kennedy-Johnson Interior Secretary Stewart Udall in particular, since Douglas] participated in multiple Supreme Court decisions in which Udall, in his official capacity, was a named party.”

As McKeown chronicles, Douglas is hardly the only member of the federal judiciary to have repeatedly engaged in political moonlighting. But Douglas’s “signature style of advocacy”—a “sustained and intensive lobbying before Congress and the federal agencies on a singular cause that implicated cases before the judiciary”—absolutely broke the mold. 


It is hardly surprising that Douglas’s ethics misconduct would catch McKeown’s critical eye. She once chaired the federal Judicial Conference Codes of Conduct Committee, a post to which she was appointed by Chief Justice Roberts. McKeown’s account could prove helpful to reformers seeking to channel rising public skepticism about the justices’ partisan impartiality into momentum for a robust reform initiative, in two ways.

First, the book illuminates the fact that Supreme Court ethics reform is not some off-the-cuff Democrat ploy; rather, it will close a loophole that appointees of both parties have exploited for centuries—multiple justices, eminent liberals no less than conservatives, have broached conflict-of-interest lines between judging and politicking. In particular, the ostentatiously liberal Douglas’s egregious misadventures credibly portray him as the poster child for the kind of ethical breaches that cry out for Supreme Court justices to be subjected to the same code of conduct with which their lower court colleagues have functioned comfortably for decades.

Moreover, as McKeown details in her book, as well as a December 2021 Yale Law Journal online article in which she expanded on her ideas, the foundation structure for a new reform effort is already in place. While there may be no comprehensive code of conduct applicable to Supreme Court justices, there are ethics provisions governing lower courts on the books already, which, if complied with, could go a long way toward bringing errant justices’ comportment into line with public expectations. In this way, new ethics legislation may be cast as a measure that fills in gaps and strengthens the architecture of the judiciary instead of burning it to the ground. 

Second, as McKeown chronicles, the historical record undermines the justices’ insistence that a mandatory code of conduct would either hamper their ability to function or encourage the notion that such rules would be an unconstitutional invasion of the court’s independence. The court has consistently accepted and claimed to comply with ethics requirements that Congress has made applicable to it, as well as with the code of conduct promulgated for lower courts by the Judicial Conference.

In 1991 and 1993, responding to heightened public pressure, then-Chief Justice William Rehnquist orchestrated written public statements detailing how the court interprets and will apply to its members ethics code provisions governing salary-supplementary outside compensation in a “resolution” and, on recusal, in a “Statement of Recusal Policy.” The latter went beyond the Judicial Conference code language, by specifying that individual justices must “recuse from all cases in which … firms [appear before the court] in which our relatives are partners, unless we have received from the firm written assurance that income Supreme Court litigation is, on a permanent basis, excluded from our relatives’ partnership shares.”

In his 2011 annual Year-End Report on the Federal Judiciary, Chief Justice Roberts asserted that he and his colleagues “follow the same general principles respecting recusal as other federal judges,” even though underscoring that their acceptance is “voluntary.” Roberts marshaled the justices’ voluntary embrace of these standards as evidence that codifying in law their application to the court is unnecessary and/or unconstitutional.

But history cuts against Roberts’s defense of his court’s exemption from mandatory controls. While he and his colleagues assert fidelity to legal ethics requirements in principle, they do not always or uniformly comply in practice. Hence his contention that enacting an enforceable code would have no real-world benefit comes up short. More to the point, the fact that Supreme Court justices have long, for the most part, as McKeown notes, adhered to legal requirements prescribed by Congress and the Judicial Conference belies his insinuation that, if made mandatory, such rules would interfere with the court’s work.

The long history of judicial ethics laws also undermines the current justices’ contention that new restrictions could unconstitutionally invade the court’s independence. Statutory ethics restrictions for the court were enacted as long ago as 1792, “when,” McKeown relates, Congress mandated recusal for all federal judges and justices, “in cases where a judge has an interest or has previously served as a counsel for a party,” and as recently as April 2022, when President Biden signed into law a Courthouse Ethics and Transparency Act, which requires federal judges and justices to file within 45 days reports on securities trades and to post their financial disclosure reports on a searchable online database.

No one, on or off the court, has suggested that its members’ voluntary compliance with enacted ethics measures has thrown a monkey wrench into the court’s functioning. Moreover, deference to long-standing practice has been a staple of constitutional interpretation at least since Chief Justice John Marshall famously rejected, in 1819, a constitutional challenge to the Bank of the United States, partly on the ground that a constitutional claim that would reshape “the respective powers of those [branches] who are equally representatives of the people [should ordinarily] be put at rest by the [established] practice of the Government.”


While McKeown’s expert historical survey of the judicial ethics landscape could thus be helpful to current reformers, there are aspects of her analysis that disregard why, as Forbes magazine reported, even before the court’s summer 2022 obliteration of long-standing abortion, environmental, and voting rights precedents, more than 60 percent of Americans “view the Court as politicized [and] partisan.” She casts Douglas’s immersion in politics as a thing of the past, that “today would find little traction.” In her Yale Law Journal article, she downplays the current drive for tightening judicial ethics controls, at one point insisting that “modern incidents of partisan extrajudicial entanglement conduct pale in comparison to the overt political entanglements” common in the first six decades of the twentieth century. 

She acknowledges that “the question of the Supreme Court as a political institution certainly [has] heated up, [and] “even the Justices themselves are joining the debate.” But she concludes, “While such current debates are important, … they clearly appear relatively minor in the shadow of the ethics dilemmas of centuries past.… It is not pollyannaish to suggest that sensitivity about political involvement and the nature of extrajudicial activities in light of historical realities indicates an optimistic trend line.”

McKeown’s rosy-colored view of our current moment runs counter to the trend line of public take on the court’s impartiality and freedom from political and partisan taint. It may be that this discrepancy can be written down to the fact that McKeown is examining a different problem. “Extrajudicial activities,” such as the penchant of Douglas and his contemporaries and predecessors to moonlight as advocates are not why a September 2022 Pew survey found that 53 percent of Americans—an unsurprising 70 percent of Democrats and a surprising 37 percent of Republicans—believe that the justices “are doing a poor or only fair job of keeping their political views out of how they decide major cases.”

And errant off-the-court meandering of the sort that defined Douglas’s is not what Justice Elena Kagan had in mind when, just prior to the court’s current term, she leveled an unprecedented public fusillade at her conservative colleagues—confirming that “people have a right” to harbor skepticism about justices who “don’t act like courts” and admonishing that “the court shouldn’t be wandering around just inserting itself into every hot button issue in America, and it especially, you know, shouldn’t be doing that in a way that reflects one ideology or one … set of political views over another.” Nor are extrajudicial misdeeds what drove 72 percent of respondents in a March 2022 C-SPAN poll to favor adoption of a code of ethics for the Supreme Court, like that in place for lower federal courts. In short, the current spike in skepticism about the court’s impartiality and support for ethics reform arises from what the conservative justices are doing when they have their robes on—how they are doing their day job.

The most plausible vehicle for a credibly bipartisan initiative would build on a one-page “Supreme Court Ethics Act,” introduced in the last Congress by Senator Chris Murphy and by Representative Hank Johnson. This bill would simply direct the Judicial Conference to issue a code of conduct applicable to Supreme Court justices as well as lower court federal judges. If such a bill were to pass, it would address at least one of the flash points in the current furor. The existing Judicial Conference Code requires lower court judges to recuse from “any proceeding in which his impartiality might reasonably be questioned,” requiring recusal if “the judge or the judge’s spouse … is known by the judge to have an interest that could be substantially affected by the outcome of the proceeding. A law subjecting Supreme Court justices to a code of conduct, substantially mirroring the existing Judicial Conference code, could precipitate reversal of Justice Thomas’s refusal to recuse from cases involving his spouse’s efforts to overturn the 2020 election. Enactment of such a bill would also give the Judicial Conference’s prescriptions the force of law and the blessing of Congress, which would surely encourage all judges and justices to take them seriously.

The Murphy-Johnson bill contained a proviso that the Judicial Conference code could have different provisions for “different categories” of judges or justices. That proviso was designed to deflect one of Chief Justice Roberts’s main arguments against ethics legislation covering the Supreme Court, namely, that the justices have unique concerns, different from those of lower court judges. A better way of mooting that contention, and muting constitutional separation of powers vulnerability, would be to assign the Supreme Court itself the job of promulgating the conduct standards for its members. Taking that route could also likely reduce enforceability concerns; it seems probable that justices would be especially disinclined to evade rules they had crafted for themselves.

But regardless of changes in the substance of existing judicial ethics standards, the primary benefit of a simple code of conduct initiative would be political—its prospects for gaining legislative traction and stimulating wide public support would get the attention of the justices. 

There is good reason to believe that such a bill could attract Republican support. In February 2021, Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina co-signed, with Rhode Island Democrat Sheldon Whitehouse, a joint letter to the chief justice, asking, among other pointed questions, “What plans, if any, does the Court have to adopt a code of ethics,” and “If it has no such plans, what justifies the Court in having a lower disclosure standard than the other branches of government?” Five months later, Louisiana Republican John Kennedy co-authored, with Whitehouse, a similarly worded letter to Attorney General Merrick Garland noting that federal judicial disclosure requirements are “significantly less stringent” than those adopted by the legislative and executive branches and that “even those requirements do not formally apply to the justices of the Supreme Court.”

Congress’s April 2022 enactment of the above-noted Courthouse and Transparency Act, by overwhelming majorities in both houses, suggests that Republican sentiment favoring some measure of Supreme Court ethics reform could extend much further. Another good omen could be the successful negotiation of legislation substantially strengthening the Electoral Count Act, led by Senators Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Susan Collins of Maine. This bipartisan success story, strongly opposed by election-denier Republicans, demonstrates that a critical mass of Republicans in Congress can buy into good government, pro-democracy legislation, a frame that could credibly fit a Supreme Court code of conduct proposal.

Outside of Congress, prominent Republicans and conservatives have voiced support for such a measure. In May 2022, Federal District Judge Reggie Walton, a George W. Bush appointee, told a conference attended by other federal judges that it is “unimaginable that we have a segment of our federal judiciary that’s not subject to an ethics code.” Judicial ethics expert Gabe Roth recently testified to the Senate Judiciary Committee that, “when I speak to lower court federal judges, almost always off the record, I hear their frustration that the Supreme Court is neglecting its responsibility” to adopt a code of conduct. In November 2021, Nicholas Rostow, former senior official in the Reagan and Bush administrations, wrote in Roll Call that “the Supreme Court needs an ethics code,” noting that such codes “have already proved to be effective guardrails” for Congress and the executive branch, and would be “likely to attract bipartisan support—including at least 60 votes in the Senate to avoid a filibuster.” Rostow wrote on behalf of an organization of prominent conservative and libertarian lawyers, which includes senior legal officials from the Reagan and both Bush administrations.

The bottom line: Republican politicians could find it difficult to oppose a commonsensical notion enjoying broad public support, including from their own constituents. It would change the court-reform dynamic in significant ways by pushing it ahead of less publicly popular ideas like court-packing. Perhaps the biggest reason for any lawmaker to pursue this path is that it aligns with the interests of their branch of government and the constituents who elected them to Congress: The enactment of a Supreme Court code of conduct, or even a serious effort to enact such a code—including, say, Senate passage and respectable House Republican support—would, in and of itself, shift the balance of political power between Congress and a Supreme Court that now fancies itself to be the superlegislature supreme.

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Climate Activists Are Turning Their Attention to Hollywood

If TV can change Americans’ views on gay marriage, why not the environment?

On a warm, windy fall night in Los Angeles, I stood in a conference room at the Warner Bros. Discovery television-production offices, straightened my spine, and stared down my showrunner, preparing to defend my idea for a minor character in our near-future science-fiction series.“This character needs a backstory, and switching jobs because she wants to work in renewable energy and not for an oil company fits perfectly,” I told the unsmiling head honcho.His face twisted, as if his assistant had delivered the wrong lunch. “Too complicated. That just feels like a lot of information to cram into a backstory. What if her story is that she wants this job because it’s near where her brother was killed in a terrorist attack? We’d just need to invent a terrorist attack.”As I tried to come up with a response, I looked at the writers, lawyers, agents, and camera operators surrounding us. I was taking part in a workshop organized by the Climate Ambassadors Network (CAN), a group of young climate activists working in Hollywood. Along with three other workshop participants, I had received a yellow index card with a mission: to convince this pretend showrunner—a documentary filmmaker in real life—that a character in the series needed a climate-related backstory.Ali Weinstein, a 28-year-old wearing a flowered jumpsuit and a dimpled grin, leaned in to hear my answer. She was all too familiar with this situation: When working as a showrunner’s assistant, she had often suggested climate story lines to her bosses, only to be rebuffed. Now, Weinstein is using that experience to help others make a stronger case for climate stories. The goal of CAN is to “infiltrate every part of the industry with climate knowledge,” Weinstein, who is now a television writer, told the group. “Hollywood is a huge cultural influence, and so if we are starting change within Hollywood, we can change a lot of other industries as well.”While Weinstein’s “infiltration” is hardly sinister, her mission is still a provocative one. The world urgently needs to slow the destructive march of climate change, but using entertainment to send social messages can be a fraught endeavor (as well as the source of a lot of cringe television). And the industry has little experience with climate stories: A collaboration between USC’s Media Impact Project and a nonprofit story consultancy called Good Energy found that 2.8 percent of the 37,453 film and television scripts that aired in the United States and were written between 2016 and 2020 used any climate change key words. Ten percent of stories that depicted “extreme weather events” such as hurricanes and wildfires tied them to any form of climate change.Weinstein and her allies argue that it’s time for the industry to tell more—and more varied—climate stories, not only to nudge societal attitudes but to create better, more believable entertainment. Television, with its ability to tell stories on a human scale, might have an especially important role to play: Recent research by the Yale Program on Climate Change Communication found that while 65 percent of American adults said they were worried about the climate crisis, only 35 percent reported discussing the topic even occasionally. Could the stories we see on-screen, in the intimacy of our homes, get us talking about the realities of life in an altered climate?Anna Jane Joyner, who founded the Good Energy story agency, says climate stories are infinitely more varied than writers and audiences might assume. When researchers from her agency and USC asked 2,000 people for examples of climate-themed movies or television shows, the most frequent answers were The Day After Tomorrow, which is almost 20 years old, and 2012, which is about the end of the world, not climate change.In an effort to expand Hollywood’s definition of a climate story, Joyner’s group created the Good Energy Playbook, a guide for writers who want to integrate climate change into their scripts. The playbook encourages writers to think beyond apocalypse, and instead approach climate change, in all its awful manifestations, as an opportunity for more inventive scriptwriting. What would a climate story look like as a Hallmark holiday movie? Could a rom-com be set at a ski resort that can no longer depend on snow and has to pivot to another business model? How might a hotter summer impact the Mafia’s waste-disposal work—and would Tony Soprano talk about it in his therapy sessions?In October 2021, the medical drama Grey’s Anatomy aired an episode called “Hotter than Hell” that depicted a heat wave in Seattle. It was a story proverbially ripped from the headlines: The previous summer, a record-shattering heat dome had enveloped the Pacific Northwest, causing ecological turmoil and human misery. Zoanne Clack, a former ER physician who is an executive producer of Grey’s Anatomy and Station Eleven, wanted to feature a disease caused by climate change, but none of the possibilities were acute enough to work within the show. She opted for a failing HVAC system that created dangerously high temperatures in the hospital’s operating rooms.Clack says climate change is now so familiar to viewers that it can serve as a convenient cheat code for scriptwriters. While Grey’s Anatomy strained viewers’ credulity in its fifth season, in 2008, with an episode about a freak ice storm—an unusual occurrence in Seattle, where the show is set—Clack says now she can attribute all kinds of wild, injury-inducing weather to climate change. “You don’t have to explain anything or go into big discussions about it, how weird it is. If you say those two words, people get it.”Dorothy Fortenberry, a writer and producer on The Handmaid’s Tale and the upcoming climate-themed anthology Extrapolations, says writers are only beginning to explore the creative possibilities. “If all the climate stories are the same, and the same type of view, it will be boring and bad,” she says. “My hope is every creative person takes this in the direction that is fruitful for the narrative and we end up with a real panoply of narratives.”Faced with the realities of climate change, some people switch abruptly from complacency to doomerism—perhaps because certainty of any kind feels safer than the muddle of a looming crisis. Joyner says climate-themed stories can help audiences navigate between these extremes, by either offering examples of courage and creativity or providing opportunities to process grief. There’s nothing wrong with apocalypse narratives, she says, but other approaches offer more hope: “Stories help create a world that isn’t the apocalypse, but shows us something more positive or somewhere in between—a vision for something we’re working towards.”Screenwriters have reason to believe that even passing mentions of climate change can transform public attitudes. Americans watch an average of three hours of television every day, meaning that they spend almost a fifth of their waking lives in the worlds it creates. History shows that issues raised on television can lead to real-world change—for better, and for worse.Producers of the show Cheers, which aired from 1982 to 1993, helped to popularize the concept of a “designated driver” by showing the patrons of the show’s eponymous bar calling cabs or getting a ride home after drinking. The term, which Harvard’s Center for Health Communication began promoting in 1988 in an effort to prevent alcohol-related deaths, became so common after appearing in the show’s dialogue that in 1991, it was listed in the Random House Webster’s College Dictionary. Seven years later, a poll showed that a majority of adults who drank had either been a designated driver or been driven home by one—and the uptake of the practice was strongest among the youngest drinkers. Between 1988 and 1992, alcohol-related traffic fatalities dropped by 25 percent, a decrease researchers attributed in part to the messages of shows like Cheers.Will & Grace, which first appeared on NBC in 1998, was the first popular sitcom with two gay lead characters. At the height of the show’s popularity, 17.3 million people tuned in each week to watch two successful men living openly as a couple. In 2006, the final year of the show’s original run, a study analyzed attitudes around homosexuality. “For those viewers with the fewest direct gay contacts, exposure to Will & Grace appears to have the strongest potential influence on reducing sexual prejudice,” the authors wrote, “while for those with many gay friends, there is no significant relationship between levels of prejudice and their exposure to the show.” In 2012, then Vice President Joe Biden cited the show as one reason for Americans’ support of marriage equality—cementing the show’s legacy as a landmark influence.The power of television isn’t always harnessed for health and equity. A recent study that compared tobacco use in cities that had access to TV in the 1940s, when it first appeared, with those that didn’t concluded that television increased the share of smokers in the population by 5 to 15 percent, creating 11 million additional smokers in the U.S. In 2023, the industry-funded Propane Education and Research Council plans to spend $13 million on its anti-electrification campaign, including $600,000 in fees to “influencers” such as cable-TV home-makeover stars who extol the virtues of propane as they remodel houses. Meanwhile, shows ranging from Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous to The Kardashians glamorize private planes, huge homes, and ways of living that are far from sustainable.When I asked Weinstein about the frequent characterization of climate content as a form of propaganda, she shrugged. Every detail in a TV show is a choice, and in her view, show creators can use those details, and the stories that surround them, to address climate change and its potential solutions—or they can choose not to. Those who choose not to, Weinstein and her allies argue, risk being left behind by their audiences. Most viewers surveyed by the USC and Good Energy researchers believed that they care more about climate change than the characters they see on television and in film. Half of the respondents wanted to see more climate-related stories in scripted entertainment, and another quarter were open to them.Joyner acknowledges that major studios are still wary of being perceived as environmental activists, and that writers, and their bosses, have long avoided touchy political and cultural issues out of fear of alienating audiences: “Historically, there were two things you couldn’t talk about in a writer’s room: abortion and climate.” But resistance from the top might be softening. At COP 26, the international climate meeting held in Glasgow, Scotland, in late 2021, 12 of the U.K. and Ireland’s biggest entertainment CEOs signed a Climate Content Pledge, and representatives of major U.S. studios now meet regularly to discuss how to better represent sustainability on-screen.  This winter, as rain flooded the streets of Los Angeles and hillsides started to liquefy in Northern California, I logged on to a restricted website to watch a few episodes of a new experiment in climate storytelling: the drama series Extrapolations, which begins streaming tomorrow on Apple+. The show begins in the near future, in 2037, and follows a mix of characters into the 2040s and beyond.In the world of the show, the science is familiar: Oceans are so acidified that biodiversity has dropped precipitously, wildfires rage everywhere, and companies race to bank species’ genomes before they go extinct for a future zoo. Yet the dramatic tension in Extrapolations is less about whether the characters will die from climate change than about how they can live through it, and with it: A rabbi in Miami tries to convince the city that his temple is worth saving from rising seas; a mother struggles to help her young son, who suffers from a genetic heat-related health condition, imagine his future in a warming world.Scott Z. Burns, a writer and director of Extrapolations, also produced Al Gore’s 2006 documentary An Inconvenient Truth. When the film opened, he was confident that its evidence would persuade people to drastically change their ways. “It was like, well, that’ll solve the problem—certainly the world can’t be the same again after this,” Burns told me over Zoom, with a dry laugh. “But I think what we learned is that the problem is so large and so systemic, that obviously a documentary wasn’t going to change the way people saw life on Earth or their own behavior.”Burns started to think about storytelling that, instead of threatening disaster, simply brought the event horizon closer, transforming climate change from an unimaginable eventuality into an immediate and pervasive problem. “I wanted to tell human stories set against a world that had a very different climate,” he said. He found inspiration in World War II–era novels, movies, and shows, and points out that the war, while obviously a historic tragedy, was also a source of great creative energy for people in the middle of the last century. “Climate is sort of our World War II,” he said. “This is the existential moment that this generation faces—and where are the great works of art that help us come to terms with this? I think we’re beginning to see them.”As he finished pitching the show in 2020, the coronavirus pandemic began to lock down the world. Burns had also written Contagion, a movie that turned out to be an eerily accurate portrayal of a pandemic’s spread. He wanted the scientific underpinnings of Extrapolations to be just as solid. But while past pandemics informed his work on Contagion, the human-caused climate change we’re experiencing today has no precedent. “It’s a very reckless gamble,” he told me. “But as a screenwriter, a reckless gamble is also a suspense movie. And that’s what I tried to do, was look at the science and what it suggests may happen, and then look at human beings and think about how they behave.”Burns found the serialized nature of a television show more compelling than a two-hour movie—it allowed for the narrative to unfold as chapters, with overlapping characters and story lines that extended over decades. It allowed a viewer to follow the slow-moving climate crisis as it intensified.When Apple+ bought Burns’s show, he called up Adam McKay, who at the time was working on Don’t Look Up, a satire about climate-change denial that was released in 2021. McKay’s generous response was instructive, Burns said. “It was like, great—there’s more than one cop show. There’s more than one hospital show. There needs to be more than one show about this.”Some people will see climate change as a social-justice story, he said, while others will see it as a parenting story. “Everybody has a different way in which this constellation of issues is going to encroach on your life,” Burns told me. “My first hope is that we maybe crack open the door a little bit to get executives at streamers and platforms to think, Oh, there’s cool work to be done in this area, and artists to think, What stories can we tell in this space that might make a difference?”Burns has heard the old adage that audiences don’t want to watch something that’s not hopeful, but he disagrees. He likes to replace the word hope with courage: “What sort of courageous act can my characters do?” he asked. “What I’m interested in telling is the story that says, right up until the moment we’re going to die, we get to live. What do we do with that life?”This story is part of the Atlantic Planet series supported by the HHMI Department of Science Education.

Climate activists must target power structures, not the public | Letters

Dr Laura Thomas-Walters, Tim Williamson and Paul Chandler respond to Jack Shenker’s article that asked if the disruptive tactics of groups such as Extinction Rebellion and Just Stop Oil are workingI am an environmental social scientist and climate activist. As Jack Shenker describes in his article (The existential question for climate activists: have disruption tactics stopped working?, 6 March), Extinction Rebellion’s recent decision to stop disrupting the public caused quite a fuss. Some people applauded the move as they thought it would favourably shift public opinion, while others insisted public disruption needs to remain a primary tactic to garner wider attention.Unfortunately, both camps are missing the point – once you have enough dedicated activists, the public is largely irrelevant to achieving political change. It is not the opinion, or even attention, of the public that matters, it is whether or not you are disrupting structures of power. Historical social movements have shown this repeatedly. Continue reading...

Dr Laura Thomas-Walters, Tim Williamson and Paul Chandler respond to Jack Shenker’s article that asked if the disruptive tactics of groups such as Extinction Rebellion and Just Stop Oil are workingI am an environmental social scientist and climate activist. As Jack Shenker describes in his article (The existential question for climate activists: have disruption tactics stopped working?, 6 March), Extinction Rebellion’s recent decision to stop disrupting the public caused quite a fuss. Some people applauded the move as they thought it would favourably shift public opinion, while others insisted public disruption needs to remain a primary tactic to garner wider attention.Unfortunately, both camps are missing the point – once you have enough dedicated activists, the public is largely irrelevant to achieving political change. It is not the opinion, or even attention, of the public that matters, it is whether or not you are disrupting structures of power. Historical social movements have shown this repeatedly. Continue reading...

Biden EPA launches landmark push to curb ‘forever chemicals’ in drinking water

It’s an aggressive move that represents what health experts and community activists say is a long-overdue effort.

The Biden administration is proposing the first-ever federal drinking water limits for toxic chemicals used to make nonstick materials like Teflon, stain-resistant carpeting and military firefighting foam, which are estimated to be contaminating 200 million Americans’ drinking water. It’s an aggressive move that represents what health experts and community activists say is a long-overdue effort to begin reining in the widespread contamination from PFAS “forever” chemicals, which are linked with cancer, reproductive problems and a wide array of other health ailments. If finalized, the regulation would spark the first major upgrade to the safety of the nation’s drinking water in three decades. The class of some 12,000 different PFAS substances are characterized by a strong chemical bond that makes them invaluable as nonstick agents, but also causes them to persist and accumulate in the environment — and people’s bodies. Studies have found the substances in virtually every American’s blood, and EPA estimates that its proposal to limit six of them in drinking water would save tens of thousands of lives and significantly reduce serious illnesses.  But, the agency acknowledges that the $772 million annual cost would, at least initially, be borne by American households through higher water charges. “It's time,” Radhika Fox, EPA’s top water official, said in an interview. “The American people want this. They want their drinking water to be safe.” The regulatory proposal unveiled by EPA Tuesday would require utilities to cleanse their drinking water supplies of any detectable levels of the two most notorious chemicals in the class, known as PFOS and PFOA, which were used for decades in water repellent Scotchguard and Teflon, as well as firefighting foam, before being phased out of production in 2002 and 2015, respectively. EPA’s new proposal also includes a surprise provision aimed at limiting the chemicals that the industry shifted to using after the PFOA and PFOS phase-out, which chemical companies argued were safer, but that federal scientists have concluded pose severe dangers of their own. EPA had previously only singled out PFOA and PFOS as warranting federal regulation. But in the three years since the Trump administration first made that determination, evidence has mounted of those other chemicals’ prevalence and harms, and several states have enacted their own limits. Because of structural differences in their chemistry, ridding water supplies of these newer substances can require different treatment approaches. Drinking water experts feared that if EPA didn’t address them under this proposal, water utilities could invest in upgrades that failed to deal with the whole PFAS problem. But the administration’s choice to regulate the chemicals in an accelerated and novel fashion could risk putting the regulation on legally shaky ground. The proposed regulation would require communities to monitor water supplies for four of these chemicals – known as GenX, PFBS, PFHxS and PFNA – and then plug those results into a “hazard index” calculation. That calculation is aimed at dealing with the fact that different types of PFAS are often present in water at the same time, and scientists have found that those mixtures can be even more dangerous than just the sum of their parts. Using that hazard index, utilities would see whether dangerous combined levels of the chemicals are present, which would require them to treat their water to reduce levels of those chemicals or switch to alternate sources. None of this will come cheaply to drinking water utilities or their customers. EPA estimates that it would cost $772 million per year to upgrade water treatment plants and cover the ongoing monitoring and treatment costs to comply with the rule. That’s less than the $1.2 billion the agency estimates will be saved by removing the chemicals, primarily in the form of reduced healthcare costs and premature deaths. But it represents real pocketbook pain, particularly for customers already struggling to pay their water bills. The drinking water utility serving the city of Wilmington, N.C., where Regan is due to unveil the proposal Tuesday, spent $43 million on upgrades to its water treatment facilities to filter out PFAS that a chemical manufacturing plant had poured into the Cape Fear River. The plant’s managers estimate it will cost up to $5 million more annually to operate the system, adding an average of $5 per month to customers’ bills. In the near term, some new federal funds available through the 2021 bipartisan infrastructure law could help offset this cost, including $5 billion for small and disadvantaged communities. Ultimately, the Biden administration is working to hold polluters accountable. EPA last summer proposed designating PFOA and PFOS as hazardous under the Superfund law, and the agency is exploring doing the same for other types of PFAS. That would allow EPA and other entities to force those responsible for the pollution to pay to clean it up. But even if the regulations are put in place as proposed, that money likely wouldn’t flow until years — or decades — after utilities and their customers have footed the bill for upgrades. And whether the drinking water regulation itself will even be finalized is far from guaranteed. The Defense Department, which faces potentially massive cleanup costs for its decades of contamination at more than 700 sites across the country, has stalled and weakened previous EPA efforts on PFAS. The new drinking water proposal was stuck in interagency review at the White House for five months, and was only released after pressure from environmental groups, activists and a bipartisan group of lawmakers. That included a publicity blitz by actor Mark Ruffalo — who starred in the 2019 film “Dark Waters” about PFOA — as well as a private pressure campaign on the White House led by Sen. Tom Carper (D-Del.), chair of the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee and a friend of President Joe Biden, and Republican Sen. Shelley Moore Capito of West Virginia. Environmental groups are already defending the new regulation from anticipated attacks. “Today’s proposal is a necessary and long overdue step towards addressing the nation’s PFAS crisis, but what comes next is equally important,” Jonathan Kalmuss-Katz, an attorney with the nonprofit group Earthjustice, said in a statement “EPA must resist efforts to weaken this proposal, move quickly to finalize health-protective limits on these six chemicals, and address the remaining PFAS that continue to poison drinking water supplies and harm communities across the country.”

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