DeLauro urges SCOTUS ethics reforms, cites threats and trust decline at budget hearing
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Summary
The clip shows Rep. Rosa DeLauro's (D-CT) opening statement at a July 14, 2026 House Appropriations subcommittee hearing with Justices Elena Kagan and Amy Coney Barrett on the Supreme Court's FY2027 budget request. She welcomes the justices, notes the rarity of such appearances since 2019, highlights rising threats to federal judges per US Marshals Service data, references bipartisan security funding increases, and calls for stronger ethics rules and transparency to rebuild public confidence amid scandals and Gallup polling showing confidence falling to around 35% in 2024.
Editorial Assessment
DeLauro's factual claims hold up well against primary data from the US Marshals Service and Gallup, though the presentation selectively emphasizes ethics controversies and trust erosion while treating the voluntary 2023 SCOTUS code as insufficient without noting its adoption or enforcement debates. Viewers miss fuller context on threat trends across administrations, the distinction between lower courts and SCOTUS security needs, and Republican perspectives on judicial independence. The Forbes clip accurately relays the remarks without added commentary, presenting a one-sided Democratic critique typical of appropriations hearings.
Key Moments
Last sitting Supreme Court justices appeared before this committee in 2019
Confirmed in contemporaneous C-SPAN and news reports of the July 2026 hearing.
As of July 1, 370 threats to federal judges; 564 last year (31% projected increase)
Matches USMS data cited in DeLauro's statement and multiple 2026 reports.
Public confidence in courts declined from ~60% a decade ago to around 35% in 2024 (Gallup)
Gallup 2024 poll recorded record-low 35% confidence in judicial system.
Various scandals including leaked decisions, financial entanglements, conflicts of interest
Refers to documented issues such as 2022 Dobbs leak and ethics controversies involving Justices Thomas and Alito.
Notable Concerns
- Relies on selected statistics without full year-over-year threat methodology or recent SCOTUS ethics code details