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What role have Justices Scalia and Thomas played in the Koch money machine?
This week, ThinkProgress' Lee Fang revealed several documents outlining the details of one of right-wing billionaire Charles Koch's secret convenings of corporate political donors. As Koch revealed to the Wall Street Journal in 2006, the purpose of these meetings is to recruit "captains of industry" to fund the conservative infrastructure of front groups, political campaigns, think tanks and media outlets. Buried in this document, however, is a surprising revelation about the role two supposedly impartial jurists have played in these extended fundraising solicitations: "Past meetings have featured such notable leaders as Supreme Court Justices Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas."
It might be worth remembering that Steve Moore, who's now at the Wall Street Journal as a journalist, started out at the Club for Growth when that outfit did a hit job on Howard Dean. And Pat Toomey, who's now aiming for a Senate seat in Pennsylvania, was a Moore successor at CfG.
Point is that these people have been around for a long time. No doubt, the thinking was that having to disclose where money comes from and how much was being spent was a detriment. So, the Citizens United ruling, which was unusual in that it addressed issues that hadn't actually been raised by the case, was a god-send.
Charles Koch sitting down in Witchita, Kansas pulling strings like some latter day wizard of Oz had nothing to do with it.