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The Scheme

How the Right Wing Used Dark Money to Capture the Supreme Court

Audiobook
1 of 3 copies available
1 of 3 copies available
Following his book Captured on corporate capture of regulatory and government agencies, and his years of experience as a prosecutor, Senator Sheldon Whitehouse here turns his attention to the right-wing scheme to capture the courts, and how it influenced the Trump administration's appointment of over 230 "business-friendly" judges, including the last three justices of the United States Supreme Court. Whitehouse traces the motive to control the court system back to Lewis Powell's notorious memo, which gave a road map for corporate influence to target the judiciary, and chronicles a hidden-money campaign using an armada of front groups and helped by the infamous Citizens United Supreme Court decision. The scheme utilized the Federalist Society as an appointments turnstile, spent secret millions to support the nominees, orchestrated an "amicus brief" signaling apparatus, and propped up front-group litigants to "fast-lane" strategic test cases to the friendly justices. Whitehouse finds the same small handful of right-wing billionaires and corporations running operations that he likens to "covert ops," ultimately enticing the Senate to break rules, norms, and precedents to confirm wildly inappropriate nominees who would advance the anti-government agenda of a small number of corporate oligarchs.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 29, 2022
      Rhode Island senator Whitehouse (Captured) delivers an alarming if familiar account of efforts to install conservative judges on the Supreme Court and the federal judiciary. Behind this scheme, Whitehouse alleges, are “a handful of corporate oligarchs” who paved the way for the Supreme Court to advance a “far-right agenda” that includes “unleashing massive amounts of dark money, impeding citizens from voting, allowing corporations to dodge lawsuits and liability, undermining civil rights, and denying individuals access to juries.” Whitehouse details how the Court’s 2010 Citizens United decision kicked the conservative judicial movement into high gear by allowing anonymous groups to spend “unlimited money” to promote judicial nominees who would be willing to gut federal regulatory standards. The Federalist Society, a conservative law group created in the 1980s as a “counterweight to what viewed as liberal orthodoxy at law schools,” became a launching pad for “proven conservatives” to reach the federal bench; Whitehouse suggests that the Koch brothers only dropped their objections to Donald Trump’s presidential candidacy when he put Federalist Society “fixer” Leonard Leo in charge of identifying Supreme Court candidates. Though Whitehouse gathers copious evidence and strikes a fiery tone, he doesn’t break new ground. This polemic works best at establishing its author’s partisan bona fides.

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  • English

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