The US Supreme Court Has Become a Right-Wing Corporate Conspiracy
JIM HIGHTOWER for Creators.com
Usurping the fundamental rights of women to control their own bodies.
Authorizing
corporate giants to buy our elections.
Nullifying
the right of organizers to talk to workers about unionizing.
Who is rigging America's legal system against workaday people?
The Supreme Court's right-wing extremists, that's who. Just a handful of aloof, unelected judges have been turning what's supposed to be a citadel of justice into an unrestrained political instrument for instituting autocratic, plutocratic, theocratic power over us.
If that sounds like a coup, it is! A slow-motion
power grab has quietly been underway for years, with a core group of corporate
billionaires and far-right political operatives working (with practically no
media exposure) to stack federal and state courts with partisan activists.
There's even a smoking gun revealing the origins of the plot. It's a confidential memo to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, written in 1971 by Lewis Powell—at the time a rich corporate lawyer, consigliere for Big Tobacco and a Phillip Morris board member.
In his memo, Powell lamented that the likes of Ralph Nader were getting media coverage and legislative action by accusing upstanding corporate citizens (like cigarette makers) of profiteering from wrongdoings such as intentionally selling dangerous products.
Powell wailed that poor little corporate America
wasn't getting the respect it deserved from lawmakers, nor did it have its fair
share of power over the nation's political system. You can practically hear
Powell sobbing when he concludes that "with respect to the course of
legislation and government action, the American business executive is truly the
'forgotten man.'"
Never mind that he made this absurd plea for pity at a time the presidency itself was infamously known as Nixon Incorporated, with a cadre of corporate functionaries literally running whole segments of the U.S. government!
But absurdity was no
barrier to Powell's grand ideological determination not only to increase the
influence of those "forgotten" executives, but to return to pre-New
Deal days when their ilk was the supreme, domineering force over America's
government, economy and society. To get there, Powell's memo proposed a novel
point of attack he labelled "Neglected Opportunity in the Courts."
He noted that "with an activist-minded Supreme Court, the judiciary may be the most important instrument for social, economic, and political change"—by which he meant structural changes that empower moneyed interests over workers, consumers, et al.
Powell proceeds to specify judicial maneuvers for the Chamber
and its big funders, conceding that the aggressive offensive "would
require far more generous financial support from American corporations. ... But
the opportunity merits the necessary effort."
Just
two months after Powell sent his memo, Nixon awarded him a seat on the Supreme
Court. Although few Americans have ever heard of him, Powell spent the next 15
years on the bench advancing corporate power over us, including writing a 1978
opinion that Roberts and Co. used 32 years later to justify their Citizens
United decree.
But
there's much more to this plutocratic attempt to capture the courts than one
lawyer's how-to blueprint. After all, a memo is not a coup. Indeed, it has
taken a concerted, surreptitious, two-decade campaign by a consortium of
laissez-faire ideologues, dark-money billionaire funders, secretive front
groups, top GOP politicos and many lies by Supreme Court nominees to
"operationalize" Powell's memo.
Today's tightly knit Republican majority on the court did not come together by happenstance—and certainly not because any one of them was the brightest, most fair-minded choice in the land.
All were hand-picked by the consortium and escorted to third-branch rule specifically because they could be counted on the use their lifetime appointments to make our laws accord with the GOP's right-wing agenda and to return to their imagined ideal of the grand old days of pre-1930s corporate supremacy.
This is a direct special-interest
assault on workaday Americans and on the very idea of America.
Lisa
Graves, a corporate watchdog and advocate of fair courts, reminds us that
"the choice of who interprets the U.S. Constitution and the laws of our
land is every bit as important as electing those who make the laws in the first
place." The moneyed elites figured this out years ago and have captured
the top court. Now, democracy champions must free it from their corporate grip.
The
Alliance for Justice was founded in the wake of the infamous Powell Memo urging
corporate titans and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce "to weaponize the courts
to serve business interests." AFJ is a national association of more than 120
organizations working to secure confirmation of "highly qualified,
fair-minded, and diverse federal judges." afj.org
Jim Hightower is
a national radio commentator, writer, public speaker, and author of the books
"Swim Against The
Current: Even A Dead Fish Can Go With The Flow" (2008)
and "There's Nothing
in the Middle of the Road But Yellow Stripes and Dead Armadillos: A Work of
Political Subversion" (1998). Hightower has spent three
decades battling the Powers That Be on behalf of the Powers That Ought To Be -
consumers, working families, environmentalists, small businesses, and
just-plain-folks.