Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito is being pestered by the Big Trans lobby for appearing to exercise his rights to sell between $1,000 and $15,000 worth of Anheuser-Busch stock in the wake of the conservative boycott of Bud Light. The move followed Dylan Mulvaney, a transgender activist fêted by Joe Biden, fronting an advertising campaign for the beer brand. At the same time, Alito is also said to have purchased stock from rival brewers Molson Coors.
Chris Geidner, former editor-in-chief of the Ohio State Law Journal, has demanded Justice Alito provide “an explanation for why he made those transactions on that date, specifically whether it was part of a heavily publicized anti-trans boycott” on his ‘Law Dork’ blog.
Geidner argues Alito “regularly shows signs of how enmeshed he is within the far-right political fights of the day” and strives “to make himself a part of the far-right political grievance factory.” He suggests Alito should recuse himself from any Supreme Court cases related to transgenderism, particularly those pertaining to bans on children being subjected to gender-bending genital mutilation surgeries and drug and hormone treatments.
Gabe Roth of the dark money-fueled and scandal–ridden Fix the Court group concurred, arguing it is “possible the sale was innocuous,” but Alito has “lost the benefit of the doubt in my view.”
Dylan Mulvaney is a dude pic.twitter.com/Qyl2ju8kvn
— Chaya Raichik (@ChayaRaichik10) August 13, 2023
DOUBLE STANDARDS.
Liberal law commentators like Geidner and Roth have appeared less concerned about apparent conflicts of interest involving judges overseeing court cases against Donald Trump.
Arthur Engoron, overseeing New York Attorney General Letitia James’s civil lawsuit against Trump and his business empire, refused to recuse himself despite his “co-judge” law clerk’s ties to James and the Democrats more broadly.
Juan Merchan, overseeing Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg‘s election interference prosecution of Trump, has refused to recuse himself despite his daughter Loren calling for the former president’s imprisonment and being financially entangled with Democratic prosecutors and politicians.
Both judges used gag orders to stop Trump from talking about these conflicts.