Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas’s wife Virginia “Ginni” Thomas has a new job in conservative journalism that keeps her involved with the recent focus of her political activism and business dealings – the tea party movement. As a part-time special correspondent for the Daily Caller, Thomas plans to tap into the movement, according to emails sent this month to top tea party organizers around the country, to build a list of “leaders from the grassroots in each state … who have their ear to the ground” and are willing to be surveyed weekly by two “prominent pollsters.” The results will be published on the Daily Caller website.
Thomas’s involvement with the tea party and the conservative movement in general has been a continuing source of controversy both for her and her husband. Ginni Thomas’s 2009 creation of a tea party non-profit group for which she raised hundreds of thousands of dollars in undisclosed contributions, as well as her subsequent creation of a tea party consulting firm last year, has become the basis for allegations by some liberals that her husband’s impartiality has been compromised.
And her attendance at an annual summit of major conservative donors organized by the billionaire industrialists Charles and David Koch – revealed in a recent speech by a federal judge and Thomas family ally – can be expected to draw even more scrutiny. In remarks prepared for delivery last month to the San Francisco branch of the conservative Federalist Society, Laurence Silberman, a senior judge on the federal appeals court in Washington, blasted critics of the Thomases as “hypocrites” pushing “phony concerns” about judicial ethics, while ignoring real ones and getting their facts wrong.
Silberman disputed the characterizations of Common Cause and media that Thomas and fellow conservative Justice Antonin Scalia had attended the Koch brothers’ Palm Springs, Calif., donor conferences in 2008 and 2007, respectively. The justices, Silberman asserted, were in Palm Springs on the tab of the Federalist Society to attend a society dinner, which he said was “at a different location, presumably to emphasize its separation from the (Koch) conference,” according to prepared text of his speech obtained by POLITICO.
http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0411/53059.html