Loading...
Senator Dick Durbin, a Democrat from Illinois, criticized the Supreme Court's new ethics code, stating that it lacks a meaningful enforcement mechanism to hold justices accountable for violations. Durbin emphasized that the code falls short and the job is not done. The code has been described as more symbolic than substantive, with acknowledgment of public dissatisfaction with the Court.
Supreme Court Ethics Code Conduct STILL Not Enough for Chairman Dick Durbin https://t.co/BTnddFWA4F
Supreme Court’s new ethics code does little to satisfy Democrats https://t.co/if3TiZKfJw https://t.co/2E2P8tZErP
The Supreme Court’s new ethics code “is an acknowledgment that the public is dissatisfied with the Court, but beyond that, it is more symbolic than anything else,” @loracorkelley writes in The Atlantic Daily: https://t.co/34bb26AyAe
Judiciary Chair Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) said the Supreme Court's new code of conduct "falls short," saying there was no "meaningful mechanism to hold justices accountable" and that “the job is not done.” https://t.co/p6ShmvC0y6
Durbin says Supreme Court ethics code "falls short" https://t.co/vuFTiD1yaL https://t.co/4vENmN9Ogj
Sen. Dick Durbin (D-IL) says SCOTUS' code of ethics “marks a step in the right direction,” but appears to “fall short”: “The court's new code of conduct does not appear to contain any meaningful enforcement mechanism to hold justices accountable for any violations of the code.” https://t.co/di1X9VMF9i