Party like Kavanaugh!

5 mins read

Party like Kavanaugh!

Party like Supreme Court Justice who has a tax payer funded job for life and no code of ethics to worry about.

A tax payer funded job that pays $268,300. You can’t get fired. No code of ethics. Party on!

US Supreme Court justices don’t often seem too concerned about appearances. Politico reported that Justice Brett Kavanaugh attended a private holiday party on Friday night at the home of Matt Schlapp, who is chairman of the Conservative Political Action Coalition (CPAC), and that attendees included Stephen Miller, whose group America First Legal Foundation has interests in cases now pending before the court. – Bloomberg Law

Justice Brett Kavanaugh‘s attendance at a Christmas party hosted by Matt Schlapp, chair of the American Conservative Union, was a “clear and obvious…conflict of interest,” according to MSNBC legal analyst Jill Wine-Banks. – MSN

Follow along with this infographic which features some of the guests, which right wing groups they belong to and some of the law suits they’re involved with.

Party like Kavanaugh infographic

Party like Kavanaugh with no code of ethics for Supreme Court Justices
Share this infographic freely with this link

Who was Kavanaugh partying with?

SPOTTED at Matt and Mercy Schlapp’s annual Christmas party at their Alexandria home on Friday night: Justice Brett Kavanaugh, Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) and Ginger Gaetz, Sean Spicer, Alex Acosta, Sebastian Gorka, Stephen and Katie Miller, Chad Wolf, Greta Van Susteren and John Coale, Laura Schlapp and Bryan Wells, Brendan Carr, Rep.-elect George Santos (R-N.Y.), Erin and Nick Perrine, Erik Prince, Ziad Ojakli, Peter Davidson, Steve Holland and Ben Terris.” – Politico

Why does this matter?

Brett Kavanaugh attended a private holiday party on Friday night at the home of CPAC chairman Matt Schlapp, and that attendees included Stephen Miller, whose group America First Legal Foundation has interests in cases now pending before the Supreme Court. CREW

Kavanaugh’s party-going raises questions about when a justice’s personal relationships cross a line and become problematic. Democrats have recently renewed calls for sitting Supreme Court justices to follow a formal judicial code of ethics.

“Supreme Court justices should be extraordinarily careful in not only having no actual ethical difficulties but having no appearance of an ethical conundrum as well,” said Tonja Jacobi, a professor at Emory University School of Law. Especially now, given “the legitimacy of the court at the moment is taking a severe beating,” she said. – Bloomberg Law

Party like Kavanaugh who likes beer

How this infographic was designed

A GIF was created using the free ezGIF app and adapting a GIF from #YOUNGERTV. See the original GIF here.

The infographic was designed with the free Infogram app with cartoons licensed from Political Cartoons

A JPEG version of the infographic was downloaded and is attached below.

Resources

Hold people whose salaries your tax dollars pay accountable for their behavior. Demand a Code of Ethics for the Supreme Court.

Take Away: Hold people whose salaries your tax dollars pay accountable for their actions. Demand a Code of Ethics for the Supreme Court.

Deepak
DemLabs

DISCLAIMER: ALTHOUGH THE DATA FOUND IN THIS BLOG AND INFOGRAPHIC HAS BEEN PRODUCED AND PROCESSED FROM SOURCES BELIEVED TO BE RELIABLE, NO WARRANTY EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED CAN BE MADE REGARDING THE ACCURACY, COMPLETENESS, LEGALITY OR RELIABILITY OF ANY SUCH INFORMATION. THIS DISCLAIMER APPLIES TO ANY USES OF THE INFORMATION WHETHER ISOLATED OR AGGREGATE USES THEREOF.

Hold people whose salaries your tax dollars pay accountable for their behavior. Demand a Code of Ethics for the Supreme Court.

The infographic can be freely embedded in a website with this code: < div class=”infogram-embed” data-id=”ddc44fda-5de9-4043-b2e6-c38ef13a0ab6″ data-type=”interactive” data-title=”Party like a Supreme Court Justice”></div><script>!function(e,i,n,s){var t=”InfogramEmbeds”,d=e.getElementsByTagName(“script”)[0];if(window[t]&&window[t].initialized)window[t].process&&window[t].process();else if(!e.getElementById(n)){var o=e.createElement(“script”);o.async=1,o.id=n,o.src=”https://e.infogram.com/js/dist/embed-loader-min.js”,d.parentNode.insertBefore(o,d)}}(document,0,”infogram-async”);</script>

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Reposted from Democracy Labs with permission.


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