Ketanji Brown Jackson and ‘Dark Money’

5Mind. The Meme Platform
Kim Strassel - The Wall Street Journal

The Supreme Court nominee’s hearings expose the hypocrisy of Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse’s crusade against it.

In the background of this week’s nomination hearings for Supreme Court nominee Ketanji Brown Jackson, one could hear a welcome noise: Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse’s glass house shattering.

The Rhode Island Democrat has spent a decade hucking boulders at his favorite bogeyman, “dark money.” When not threatening judges, Mr. Whitehouse papers the Capitol with reports that claim to expose the shady links between covert right-wing “front groups” funded with dirty “multimillion-dollar checks” and secretly giving orders to conservative Supreme Court justices. Mr. Whitehouse hasn’t yet accused the Federalist Society of inventing dark money in a Wuhan lab—but give him time.

With great glee, Republicans spent the week highlighting the extent to which Justice Jackson’s nomination was being pushed by covert left front groups funded by much larger checks to sway the Supreme Court. The reason Mr. Whitehouse is such an expert on “dark money” is because his site has been using it longer and making it so much bigger and better. With the Jackson nomination uncovering that truth, perhaps Washington can finally have a more honest debate about what’s really at stake: free speech.

The term “dark money” only emerged 12 years ago when the left-leaning Sunlight Foundation used it in the wake of the Supreme Court ruling Citizens United vs. Federal Electoral Commission. Both sides had long-standing nonprofit organizations, and both had long understood the importance of granting First Amendment protections to donors. But the left resented it citizens united opened the way for a growing conservative non-profit movement to compete more directly in the political arena. President Obama launched a campaign against “shadowy” right-wing groups and donors that inspired the Internal Revenue Service’s scandalous targeting and intimidation of conservative nonprofits.

The insults to conservatives distracted from the left’s own “dark money” operation – which eclipses everything right-wing on the right, including the Supreme Court fights. The left pioneered this activism in 1987, when a “dark money” group called People for the American Way spent $1.5 million in attack advertising against Robert Bork.

The left’s new high-court powerhouse is Demand Justice, whose influence on the Jackson nomination is far from secret. Demand Justice has led campaigns against Donald Trump’s nominee for justice, including vicious attacks on Justice Brett Kavanaugh. It issued “grades” for Senate Democrats, assessed their efforts to halt Trump’s appointments, and is a leading proponent of court hearings. It prompted the pressure campaign for Justice Stephen Breyer to retire, even hiring a promotional truck reading “Breyer retire” to tour the Supreme Court.

Demand Justice submitted a “shortlist” of acceptable liberal decisions to the Supreme Court in 2019 and this month invested $1 million in an ad campaign for Justice Jackson. Not that Demand Justice needed publicity to make an impact. White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki is a former communications adviser for the group. Lead White House Counsel Paige Herwig, charged with shepherding the Biden selection, was an assistant attorney at Demand Justice. And the group’s executive director, Brian Fallon, is a former communications director for Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer.

Demand Justice was a project of the Sixteen Thirty Fund, which Atlantic describes as the “undeniable heavyweight of Democratic black money.” Mr. Whitehouse loves to accuse the Federalist Society of raising $400 million in “dark” donations over four years. The Sixteen Thirty Fund distributed $410 million in “dark” funding in 2020 alone.

The fund itself was seeded by a number of black money outfits; works with a non-profit dark money sister company (New Venture Fund) that awards grants to left-wing dark money causes; and is managed by Arabella Advisers, which oversees a network of liberal dark-money nonprofits. It would take Mr. Whitehouse the rest of his life to unravel this web if he really cared about exposing dark money.

He doesn’t, as was amusingly revealed this week. The senator furiously tried and failed to bring attention back to the “right” dollar, and at one point veered into a defense of liberal black money. The Jackson hearings made it clear that Mr. Whitehouse and his media partisans only want to win. Their aim is to muzzle the right by using “disclosure” to unleash liberal mobs who intimidate conservative donors into submission. Barring new disclosure rules (which liberal nonprofits oppose), he will use the dark money issue to paint opponents as sneaky and corrupt. It’s getting harder now, even though the media spent a week portraying GOP senators as hypocrites.

Republicans would have been wiser this week if they had done more than point out the reality of “dark money.” This was an opportunity to speak out for freedom of expression. Both sides practiced it during the Trump nominations; Both sides are doing it now. It can be ugly, but it’s fundamental to American political debate, and neither side has a monopoly. Or at least not as long as Mr. Whitehouse fails to sell his partisan “dark money” agenda.

By Kimberley A. Strassel

Read Original Article on WSJ.com

Contact Your Elected Officials
The Thinking Conservative
The Thinking Conservativehttps://www.thethinkingconservative.com/
The goal of THE THINKING CONSERVATIVE is to help us educate ourselves on conservative topics of importance to our freedom and our pursuit of happiness. We do this by sharing conservative opinions on all kinds of subjects, from all types of people, and all kinds of media, in a way that will challenge our perceptions and help us to make educated choices.

“Melania” Movie Beats Negative Pre-Hype

My wife and I went to see the “Melania”...

Democrat Wins Show GOP Voters Are Not Motivated

Democrats won a special election in Texas, taking a State Senate seat. Democrat voters are motivated, while Republican voters are not.

The Great Voter Replacement: Understanding the Modern Democratic Party

The greatest threat to democracy is a population conditioned to stop asking questions, by the very people they should question the most.

ChatGPT: Vaccine Pimp Extraordinaire

A ChatGPT discussion on giving children a drug meant to prevent a disease largely spread through IV drug use and unprotected sex exposure risks posed

Mr. Softee’s America

We have more comfort than any generation in human history and somehow, we complain more than ever.

Police Raid Suspected Las Vegas Biolab With Possible Ties to Illegal California Lab

Authorities in Las Vegas raided a home uncovering an alleged illegal biolab possibly linked to one run by Chinese nationals in California two years ago.

Wells Fargo Follows JPMorgan in Cutting Ties With Shareholder Proxy Advisers

Wells Fargo followed JPMorgan in cutting ties with third-party proxy agents, who advise fund managers how to vote at corporate shareholder meetings. 

New SNAP Work Requirement Rules to Start Feb. 1 in Multiple States

The new work requirements to gain or continue eligibility for the federal SNAP will start being implemented in several U.S. states beginning Feb. 1.

Astronauts See Real Connection Between Space Station Work and Moon Missions

If Artemis II succeeds and a lunar lander is ready, NASA plans to land astronauts on the moon with Artemis III, targeting a 2028 launch.

US, India to Slash Tariffs Under New Trade Deal, Trump Says

The US and India have reached a trade agreement and will begin lowering tariffs on each other’s goods immediately, Trump announced

Trump Says US Starting to Talk With Cuba Following Cuts to Oil Deliveries

Trump says the U.S. has begun talks with Cuban leaders as it cuts off oil from Venezuela and threatens tariffs on countries selling fuel to the island.

What to Know About Kevin Warsh, Trump’s Nominee for Fed Chair

President Donald Trump selected former Federal Reserve Governor Kevin Warsh as the next head of the U.S. central bank.

Trump Nominates Colin McDonald as Head of New Fraud Division at Justice Department

President Trump announced Colin McDonald as head for the new national fraud enforcement division of the DOJ in a post on Truth Social.
spot_img

Related Articles