this post was submitted on 16 Jan 2024
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Philip Anschutz has hosted rightwing justice at resort and stands to benefit if court strips power from federal regulatory agencies

Two days before oral arguments in a US supreme court case set to have a major impact on federal health and environmental regulation, a leading government watchdog called on Neil Gorsuch to recuse himself over close links to a billionaire oil baron who has hosted the rightwing justice at a mountain resort called Eagles Nest for weekends of dove shooting and who stands to benefit from the ruling at hand.

“Not only would overturning Chevron deference strip power from federal agencies, harming their ability to serve everyday Americans – but now, we know billionaire oil baron Philip Anschutz would score big from a favourable ruling by his friend on the high court,” said Caroline Ciccone, president of Accountable.US.

“It’s far past time for these justices to stop putting their billionaire pals over Americans. Recusal from cases where they have glaring conflicts of interest is the very least they can do to restore some semblance of credibility and integrity to our supreme court.”

But the case has much wider implications because it is thought likely to remove the Chevron deference, a principle named for a 1984 case involving the eponymous oil giant which established that federal agencies have the discretion to issue regulatory rules without congressional approval.

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[–] [email protected] 2 points 10 months ago

Let’s say the issue before the court is whether the coca-cola company is liable for health issues in some vulnerable group they targeted with advertising for decades. One of the justices on the court is best friends with the CEO of PepsiCo and gets many valuable gifts from them.

Ruling in Coke’s favor wouldn’t put any money in the pockets of the Justice or the Pepsi CEO, but it would still absolutely be a conflict of interest.

Ruling against Coke could also look like it was affected by a conflict of interest because it hurts Pepsi’s main competitor.

There’s no way to win, it looks bad either way. That’s why transparency and recusal are the rule.

Well unless you’re on the Supreme Court. Then I guess the transparency and recusal are just optimistic requests.