Senate Bill Would Require Cameras in Supreme Court
Tom Ramstack
The Legal Forum, offering legal representation, language translation, media services.
WASHINGTON -- A bill introduced in the Senate last week would require the Supreme Court to televise its hearings.
Senators who introduced the bill said it would help to ensure transparency and better public understanding of how the court operates.
“Rulings made by Justices in our nation’s highest court impact the lives of every American, regardless of zip code,” Sen. Dick Durbin, R-Ill, said in a statement. “We see an ever-apparent interest for the American people to be able to witness the highest court’s proceedings, from seemingly routine sessions to oral arguments in high-profile cases like Dobbs and Bruen, for example.”
The Dobbs case Durbin mentioned eliminated the federal right to abortion. The Bruen case expanded gun rights.
Durbin is chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee. He was joined in introducing the bill by Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa.
The bill, called the Cameras in the Courtroom Act, would allow an exception if the justices vote to exclude cameras in cases where they might interfere with a party’s due process rights.
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In all other cases, the bill would require that the Supreme Court “permit television coverage of all open sessions."
The Senate Judiciary Committee approved the same bill in 2021 but it never made it to a vote in the full Senate chamber. This time, the bill’s supporters say they might have more bipartisan support.
It represents another step toward opening the Supreme Court for more public scrutiny. The court began live streaming audio in 2020 during the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic. The justices have resisted cameras in the courtroom to protect the privacy of the parties.
"The judicial branch has a massive impact on our daily lives and the lives of generations to come, yet few Americans ever get the chance to see inside the legal process," Grassley said.
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