Stench The making of the Thomas Court and the unmaking of America

David Brock, 1962-

Book - 2024

"A blistering expose of Clarence Thomas and the conservative regime of corruption that has usurped the Supreme Court - by a Democratic activist and former Republican political operative. Public confidence in the Supreme Court has plummeted to new lows in the last few years - and for good reason. In the past three decades, six conservative justices have gained a supermajority through questionable means: a dubious intervention in a presidential election, perjury during Senate testimony, and a GOP Senate Leader's unethical blockade of a Supreme Court nomination. Behind this strategic dismantling of our Supreme Court is a vast, well-funded political machine-backed by the extreme right-wing Federalist Society, the notoriously secretive... Catholic organization Opus Dei, and GOP megadonors operating from behind closed doors. Armed with an insider's perspective from his time within the conservative movement, David Brock reveals how the efforts to stack the court in service of extreme right-wing interests stem from a decades-long strategy to weaponize our judicial system into an extension of the Republican party itself. Stench investigates the ethics scandals that surround Clarence Thomas and his wife, the rightwing activist Ginni Thomas, culling new material from Thomas' accusers, along with original reporting and Brock's first-hand knowledge of the inner workings of the GOP. Stench is a staggering expose, one that only Brock could write-exhaustive in its research and revelatory in its access to the world of what has effectively become the Thomas Court"--

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Subjects
Genres
Informational works
Published
New York : Alfred A. Knopf 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
David Brock, 1962- (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xxvii, 347 pages ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9780593802144
  • Prologue: April 1993 The Clarence Thomas Inner Circle and Me
  • Part 1. The Genesis of the Thomas Court
  • Chapter 1. October 1973: Nixon's Revenge
  • Chapter 2. October 1960: Radical Catholics
  • Chapter 3. April 1982: The Federalist Society's Revolution
  • Chapter 4. April 1986: When Clarence Met Ginni
  • Chapter 5. October 1987: The Deeper Meaning of "Borking"
  • Chapter 6. July 1991: Clarence Thomas, Revealed
  • Part 2. A Reactionary Movement Builds
  • Chapter 7. January 1993: The Right Sets Out to Get Bill Clinton
  • Chapter 8. August 1991: The Citizens United Filth Factory
  • Chapter 9. September 1994: Ken Starr's Sidekick
  • Chapter 10. June 1997: John Eastman and the Growing Thomas Network
  • Chapter 11. December 2000: The Supreme Court Steals an Election
  • Chapter 12. October 2005: The Federalists Shoot Down Bush's Choice
  • Chapter 13. January 2006: Scalito
  • Chapter 14. The Three Amigas: Ginni, Cleta, and Connie
  • Chapter 15. January 2010: Dark Money Unleashed
  • Part 3. Leo's Time
  • Chapter 16. March 2016: The Art of the Deal
  • Chapter 17. April 2017: Gorsuch Gets Garland's Seat
  • Chapter 18. October 2018: Kavanaugh Channels Thomas
  • Chapter 19. October 2020: The Handmaid
  • Part 4. A Crooked Court Cannot Escape True Reform
  • Chapter 20. June 2022: The Dobbs Earthquake and Beyond
  • Chapter 21. Real Reform Starts with Expanding the Supreme Court
  • Chapter 22. The Continuing Danger of Ginni Thomas
  • Chapter 23. Time to Impeach Clarence Thomas
  • Acknowledgments
  • Appendix
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Democratic political consultant Brock (Killing the Messenger) delivers a full-throated indictment of the conservative bloc on the Supreme Court, taking aim at politicians who enabled it, the Federalist Society that helped birth it, and the justices themselves. He offers trenchant criticism of each of the justices and--in the case of Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh, Samuel Alito, and Clarence Thomas--criticism that extends beyond their jurisprudence to their character and ethics. Brock begins with an infamous memo written in 1971 at the behest of President Richard Nixon by future Supreme Court Justice Lewis Powell that outlined a plan to bolster American business and the political right, in part by reshaping the country's courts. In Brock's telling, Federalist Party leader Leonard Leo succeeded in implementing Powell's plan, transforming the American judiciary and the Supreme Court into tools of the extremist right; Powell's triumph culminated with the presidency of Donald Trump, who appointed three Federalist Society--supported jurists to the Court. Brock provocatively argues the current Court is illegitimate because it was enabled by perjury committed by conservative justices in their confirmation hearings, an election stolen by the Supreme Court with its 2000 Bush v. Gore decision, and Sen. Mitch McConnell's refusal to hold hearings on the nomination of President Barack Obama's Supreme Court candidate Merrick Garland. While stridently partisan, Brock's argument is coherent and well evidenced. It's a thorough skewering. (Sept.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

A full-throated denunciation of a corrupt, thoroughly politicized Supreme Court in which the true chief justice is Clarence Thomas. It was Brock, then a writer for right-wing publications, who coined the infamous slur on Clarence Thomas accuser Anita Hill, "a bit nutty and a bit slutty." He's been atoning ever since. Thomas, as recent news accounts have made clear, has no qualms about accepting gifts from wealthy supporters of extreme right-wing causes; nor will he recuse himself from cases that by all ethical standards he should not hear, including recent rulings on executive power and on the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol attack. The Court, writes Brock, became Thomas's the minute Amy Coney Barrett took Ruth Bader Ginsberg's seat on the bench in 2020: "[John] Roberts could no longer preside over a conservative court that respected precedent. This was no longer the Roberts Court." The Court was really owned, Brock holds, by right-wing fixer and ultra-Catholic Leonard Leo, the source of so many of those gifts to Thomas: it was Leo, Brock chronicles, who essentially brokered the morally compromised Donald Trump's acceptance by the Christian right with the understanding that Trump would appoint an Opus Dei--leaning, hard-Catholic justice, and so he did.Citizens United was an early test case, and with its victory, which allows Leo to make his contributions in secret, "the power of Thomas and Leo was only just ramping up---and it would take years for anyone to survey the extent of the damage to the viability of the U.S. experiment in democracy," Brock writes. The other conservative justices, notably Brett Kavanaugh--whom Brock accuses of multiple counts of perjury--are nearly as bad, but Brock is clearly focused on Thomas; he closes by laying out a convincing case for impeachment. Critics of the current Supreme Court will find plenty of support in Brock's aggrieved, well-documented exposé. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.