U.S. Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett publicly refuted fellow Justice Clarence Thomas after a unanimous decision in Vidal v. Elster, a trademark case.
The U.S. Supreme Court recently resolved the trademark case Vidal v. Elster. All justices sided with the Patent and Trademark Office (PTO) against Steve Elster, whose application for the phrase "Trump too small" was denied due to the lack of consent from Trump. This case evolved from a trademark issue into a First Amendment debate.
According to Savvy Dime, Justice Thomas wrote the majority opinion, which six justices supported, excluding Elena Kagan, Sonia Sotomayor, and Ketanji Brown Jackson. Thomas asserted that the PTO’s rejection did not infringe upon Elster’s First Amendment rights. He made a distinction between content-based and viewpoint-based restrictions in U.S. trademark law.
Barrett, in her concurring opinion, refuted Thomas’ interpretation of historical evidence. She clarified that she did not consider the federal trademark register analogous to a limited public forum, as Thomas had suggested. Instead, Barrett viewed the content-based nature of the limited public forum as analogous to the trademark registration system.
Justice Sotomayor also concurred with Barrett, expressing skepticism about the adequacy of using historical evidence to resolve the case. She emphasized that even if the historical evidence were robust, it would not justify the approach taken. Both Barrett and Sotomayor critiqued Thomas’s historical analysis.
Thomas, meanwhile, faced broader criticisms from his colleagues, including Kagan and Jackson. These justices questioned his reliance on historical evidence to support his arguments in the case. Despite these critiques, the court unanimously supported the PTO's decision.
Outside the courtroom, Justice Thomas has been vocal about the political climate in Washington. He criticized the environment, calling it "hideous" and expressing frustration over attacks on his reputation. Thomas lamented the toxic atmosphere, suggesting it undermined the integrity of the court.
Thomas’s ethics have come under scrutiny from the Senate Judiciary Committee, led by Chairman Dick Durbin. The committee is investigating Thomas’s undisclosed gifts and trips funded by GOP megadonor Harlan Crow. Durbin has called for stronger ethical guidelines for the Supreme Court to address what he describes as a crisis of ethics within the institution.
Durbin stated:
Nearly $4.2 million in gifts and even that wasn’t enough for Justice Thomas, with at least three additional trips the Committee found that he has failed to disclose to date.
Public confidence in the Supreme Court has plummeted to historic lows amid these controversies. According to Gallup data, the court's disapproval rate reached 58% last September. This decline in approval reflects growing concerns over the court's ethical standards and internal disagreements among justices.
The Senate Judiciary Committee's ongoing investigation into Thomas aims to uncover more information about his undisclosed gifts and trips. This investigation underscores the need for an enforceable code of conduct for the Supreme Court. Durbin has emphasized that voluntary compliance is insufficient to maintain public trust.
Calls for the Supreme Court Ethics, Recusal, and Transparency Act have intensified. Proponents argue that such measures are necessary to improve transparency within the court. The act aims to address ethical lapses and ensure justices adhere to stringent ethical guidelines.
The public dispute between Justices Barrett and Thomas over Vidal v. Elster highlights deeper divisions within the Supreme Court regarding historical interpretation and First Amendment rights. Barrett's and Sotomayor's concurring opinions reveal significant disagreements on the use of historical evidence in legal reasoning. Meanwhile, Thomas faces mounting scrutiny over his ethics, leading to calls for stronger ethical guidelines. As public confidence in the Supreme Court declines, the Senate Judiciary Committee's investigation into Thomas's undisclosed gifts and trips underscores the urgent need for transparency and accountability.