Plus, he didn’t deny being a white supremacist. He was elected to city council anyway.
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HUFFPOST Fringe
 
 
 
#
 
Inside The Ritzy Retreats Hosting Right-Wing Judges
 
On Oct. 13, 2022, a handful of the country’s most conservative federal judges gathered inside a wine cellar at a luxury ski resort in Deer Valley, Utah. The surrounding mountains were ablaze with yellow aspens, and the speaker addressing the room joked that the judges were already planning their afternoon hikes.

Before they could roam the slopes, they would spend the morning learning about a tool that could supposedly revolutionize how judges interpret the law. It was called corpus linguistics, and it was simple on its face. A corpus essentially works like a search engine that returns every example of how a word or phrase was used in a select database of historical texts.

But the leading proponents of legal corpus linguistics see it as something more: a powerful new tool to shore up the legitimacy of the conservative legal movement. Now, judges claiming to be interpreting the Constitution as it was originally understood could wield the imprimatur of big data.

“In the beginning, we only had paper, hard copies. Remember those things called books?” the speaker, Josh Blackman, a prolific legal scholars on the right, said to the judges assembled in the wine cellar. “Computer technologies open an entire new world of research.”

The runaway success of conservatives’ decadeslong campaign to dominate the federal courts is not without its challenges. With a 6-3 stranglehold on the Supreme Court and Trump judges dominating federal appeals courts, the right wing has increasingly pushed the legal view that the law must be interpreted based on “history and tradition.” Yet few have failed to notice how perfectly “history,” in these judges’ rendering, aligns with current Republican beliefs on issues like guns and abortion. Corpus linguistics offers one way to dodge these criticisms. A judge who could keyword-search millions of lines of historical text, the thinking goes, is a judge who could ward off accusations that his version of history was invented for a partisan outcome.

As James C. Phillips, a conservative legal scholar, has put it, “Corpus linguistics is the tool that originalists have been waiting for.”

 
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What Else Is Happening
 
 
Donald Trump on Tuesday made his case to the U.S. Supreme Court that his Jan. 6, 2021, coup attempt was part of his official duties as president and is therefore immune from prosecution. The claim has previously been rejected by both a trial court and a federal appellate court. A rejection by the Supreme Court — which many legal observers say is likely — could force him to undergo trial on conspiracy and fraud charges in the Jan. 6 case this autumn, just as many voters are starting to pay attention to a coming election in which Trump hopes to regain the White House.
 
 
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A divided Supreme Court on Tuesday lifted a stay on a Texas law that gives police broad powers to arrest migrants suspected of crossing the U.S.-Mexico border illegally while a legal battle over immigration authority plays out. The Biden administration is suing to strike down the measure, arguing it’s a clear violation of federal authority that would hurt international relations and create chaos in administering immigration law.
 
 
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Earlier this month, Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-Colo.) was among 40 Republicans who voted against a must-pass bill to fund the government that included more than $20 million for the district she currently represents. Boebert made 10 community project funding requests in the bill — but she didn’t vote for the bill that approved them. Instead, she called the bill a “monstrosity” that “maintains COVID spending levels, funds the Green New Deal, and excludes nearly all conservative policy riders we fought for.” Boebert changed her tune Monday when she issued a release where she took credit for the $20 million coming to the district as a result of the bill she voted against.
 
 
Read More
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Before You Go
 
 
 
 
 
 
The stakes have never been higher
 
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