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Supreme Court adopts ethics code. Will it restore public trust?

For the first time, the United States Supreme Court has adopted a formal code of conduct.

The 14-page document, released on Tuesday and signed by all nine judges, comes after months of public pressure over alleged ethical lapses. It codifies what has until now been an informal ethical standard that governed the Supreme Court. It also comes after favorable views of the Supreme Court hit an all-time low this summer.

Why we wrote this

Until now, the justices of the US Supreme Court had no code of ethics. The new document contains no penalties, and most of the rules will be enforced… by the judges themselves. But with public confidence in the court at an all-time low, doing anything is a positive step, experts say.

Whether the existence of the code itself will be enough to restore that trust remains to be seen. The code contains the word “must” 53 times, but is silent on what will happen if a justice deviates from the ethical standards outlined. And that, according to legal observers, is a surprising omission.

The lack of a code is “something that has been a glaring mistake for so many years. … But when it came time to put pen to paper, I think they fell short,” said Gabe Roth, executive director of Fix the Court, a nonprofit that advocates for more transparency in the federal judiciary.

But it is positive that the court has responded to that public pressure, he adds. “They represent all of us in one way or another – not in the way they decide cases, but as an institution. And public pressure must be exerted on institutional practices.”

For the first time, the United States Supreme Court has adopted a formal code of conduct.

The 14-page document, released on Tuesday and signed by all nine judges, comes after months of public pressure over alleged ethical lapses. It codifies what has until now been an informal ethical standard that governed the Supreme Court. It also comes after favorable views of the Supreme Court hit an all-time low this summer, according to Pew Research Center.

Whether the existence of the code itself will be enough to restore that trust remains to be seen. The code contains the word “must” 53 times, but is silent on what will happen if a justice deviates from the ethical standards outlined. And that, according to legal observers, is a surprising omission.

Why we wrote this

Until now, the justices of the US Supreme Court had no code of ethics. The new document contains no penalties, and most of the rules will be enforced… by the judges themselves. But with public confidence in the court at an all-time low, doing anything is a positive step, experts say.

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The lack of a code is “something that has been a glaring mistake for so many years. … But when it came time to put pen to paper, I think they fell short,” said Gabe Roth, executive director of Fix the Court, a nonpartisan nonprofit that advocates for more transparency in the federal judiciary.

But it is positive that the court has responded to that public pressure, he adds. “They represent all of us in one way or another – not in the way they decide cases, but as an institution. And public pressure must be exerted on institutional practices.”

For much of the year, the judges were faced with questions about alleged ethical irregularities. The public investigation began with ProPublica reports detailing secret gifts Judge Clarence Thomas received over decades from billionaire Republican donors, ranging from vacations and private jet trips to forgiven loans and college tuition for a relative. According to reports, Judge Samuel Alito also failed to disclose subsidized vacations. Justices Sonia Sotomayor and Justice Neil Gorsuch faced questions about the sale of publications and questions about denials.

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