House judiciary committee probes climate group's judicial influence

The U.S. House Judiciary Committee has initiated an investigation into the Climate Judiciary Project, a program run by the Environmental Law Institute, over concerns it is improperly influencing judges in climate-related cases. Critics, including former Representative Jason Chaffetz, describe the efforts as a coordinated manipulation of the judicial system. The probe focuses on potential violations of judicial ethics and lack of transparency in funding and participant details.

The Climate Judiciary Project (CJP), established by the Environmental Law Institute (ELI), positions itself as offering objective training on climate science to federal and state judges. However, in August, the House Judiciary Committee raised alarms about its activities, stating that public reports indicate efforts to sway judges handling lawsuits against fossil fuel companies. These initiatives, the committee argues, aim to predispose judges toward plaintiffs claiming harm from the production and sale of such products.

The investigation examines whether CJP's programs breach the Judicial Code of Conduct by engaging in ex parte advocacy on contentious issues like the social cost of carbon and the political-question doctrine, both central to ongoing litigation. "The scope of ELI’s and CJP’s attempt to influence judges is not trivial," the committee noted, highlighting that the project has reached over 2,000 judges while withholding details on attendees and funding sources.

Recent scrutiny intensified after media revelations of a private online forum where judges and CJP staff shared climate law updates. In response, the organization anonymized judge names, restricted access to its forums, and deleted testimonials from its website. Financial records add to the concerns: in 2023, about 13% of ELI's revenue stemmed from Environmental Protection Agency grants. Consequently, 23 state attorneys general have urged probes into whether these public funds are subsidizing attempts to bias courts against the energy sector.

Despite these alleged influences, climate litigation has encountered setbacks in 2025. Judges in New York, New Jersey, Maryland, and South Carolina rejected cases, affirming that global emissions regulation falls under Congress and the EPA, not state courts.

Former Utah Representative Jason Chaffetz, who served from 2009 to 2017, has labeled the CJP's approach a direct threat to judicial independence.

相关文章

South Korean judges convene in a conference room to discuss the Democratic Party's judicial reform push amid efforts to restore public trust.
AI 生成的图像

Judges nationwide discuss ruling party's judicial reform push

由 AI 报道 AI 生成的图像

Representative judges from courts nationwide met on Monday to discuss the Democratic Party of Korea's push for judicial reform, following concerns voiced by top judicial officials over proposed bills. The gathering aims to address ways to restore public trust in the judiciary amid legislative debates.

A new report from the American Energy Institute alerts lawmakers to a coordinated activist network aiming to restrict American energy development. The document, sent to Republican leaders this week, details efforts by environmental groups to influence policy and challenge projects. It highlights potential risks to national energy independence amid ongoing political debates.

由 AI 报道

The year 2025 witnessed a major constitutional crisis in Kenya's legal sector, with Chief Justice Martha Koome and other High Court judges facing disciplinary complaints from lawyers Nelson Havi, Ahmednasir Abdullahi, and Raphael Tuju. These complaints have triggered investigations and potential removal proceedings. The dispute highlights tensions between judicial independence and accountability.

The Senate chamber unanimously approved, with 31 votes in favor, the constitutional reform creating the Judicial Appointments Council and modifying judicial governance. The bill, pushed by the government in October 2024 after the Audio case scandal, aims to introduce radical changes in judge selection and judicial administration. Senators from various parties backed the initiative, though they requested indications for its refinement.

由 AI 报道 事实核查

Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley on Wednesday released records from an FBI-DOJ investigation code-named Arctic Frost, including 197 subpoenas. The Biden-era probe, which Grassley says later fed Special Counsel Jack Smith’s election case, sought information related to more than 400 Republican-aligned people and entities. Republican critics, including Sens. Ted Cruz and Lindsey Graham, likened the effort to a political enemies list and compared it to Watergate.

The Wisconsin Supreme Court has appointed two three-judge circuit court panels to hear lawsuits challenging the state’s Republican-favoring congressional map. A conservative justice’s dissent defending the existing districts relied on a mischaracterization of a recent U.S. Supreme Court decision on the Elections Clause.

由 AI 报道

香港律政司司长保罗·林廷辉在法律年度开幕仪式上,反驳针对国家安全案件中法官的“毫无根据”指控,强调法官履行职责且司法独立性坚强。他还谴责对本地和海外法官的制裁威胁及不当压力。首席法官张举能表示,地缘政治紧张局势阻碍了从海外招募终审法院非永久法官。

 

 

 

此网站使用 cookie

我们使用 cookie 进行分析以改进我们的网站。阅读我们的 隐私政策 以获取更多信息。
拒绝