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THU · 2026-05-14 · 18:08 GMTBRIEF NSR-2026-0514-76342
News/Watchdog groups urge Senate to investigate Samuel Alito over…
NSR-2026-0514-76342News Report·EN·Legal & Judicial

Watchdog groups urge Senate to investigate Samuel Alito over oil stock conflicts

Watchdog groups are urging the Senate Judiciary Committee to investigate Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito regarding potential conflicts of interest due to his stock holdings in oil companies. The organizations argue that Alito's participation in cases that could benefit the energy industry may violate court ethics codes.

Dharna NoorThe Guardian - World NewsFiled 2026-05-14 · 18:08 GMTLean · Center-LeftRead · 4 min
Watchdog groups urge Senate to investigate Samuel Alito over oil stock conflicts
The Guardian - World NewsFIG 01
Reading time
4min
Word count
844words
Sources cited
2cited
Entities identified
12entities
Quality score
100%
§ 01

Briefing Summary

AI-generated
NEWSAR · AI

Watchdog groups are urging the Senate Judiciary Committee to investigate Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito regarding potential conflicts of interest due to his stock holdings in oil companies. The organizations argue that Alito's participation in cases that could benefit the energy industry may violate court ethics codes. Specifically, they cite his decision not to recuse himself from a case brought by oil majors Suncor Energy and Exxon, which concerns federal law preventing subnational governments from suing oil companies over climate-warming effects. This comes after Alito recused himself from a similar petition from the same companies in 2023. His financial disclosures reveal significant investments in various oil and energy companies. The watchdog groups contend these holdings necessitate recusal from climate-related lawsuits.

Confidence 0.90Sources 2Claims 5Entities 12
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Article analysis

Model · rule-based
Framing
Legal & Judicial
Environmental
Tone
Mixed Tone
AI-assessed
CalmNeutralAlarmist
Factuality
0.70 / 1.00
Factual
LowHigh
Sources cited
2
Limited
FewMany
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Key claims

5 extracted
01

Samuel Alito owns stock in oil companies, including ConocoPhillips and Phillips66, with holdings valued between $60,007 and $245,000.

factualTrue North Research
Confidence
0.95
02

Alito's "irregular recusal practice in oil and gas industry-related cases is undermining public confidence in the impartiality of the Court."

quoteLeague of Conservation Voters, Center for Biological Diversity, Revolving Door Project, True North Research
Confidence
0.90
03

Alito did not recuse himself from a Supreme Court case brought by Suncor Energy and Exxon, which could benefit big oil.

factualLeague of Conservation Voters, Center for Biological Diversity, Revolving Door Project, True North Research
Confidence
0.90
04

Watchdog groups urge Senate to investigate Samuel Alito over alleged oil stock conflicts and potential ethics violations.

factualwatchdog groups
Confidence
0.90
05

Paul Singer's hedge fund, Elliott Investment Management, owns over $2.3 billion in Suncor shares, creating an apparent conflict of interest for Alito.

factualProPublica, watchdog groups
Confidence
0.85
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Full report

4 min read · 844 words
The Supreme Court justice Samuel Alito, who owns stock in oil companies, may be violating court ethics codes by participating in certain cases that could benefit big oil, government watchdog groups say.In a Thursday letter, a coalition of watchdog organizations called on the Senate judiciary committee to investigate Alito, the sole Supreme Court justice with holdings in energy companies.“His irregular recusal practice in oil and gas industry-related cases is undermining public confidence in the impartiality of the Court,” says the letter, signed by green groups including League of Conservation Voters and Center for Biological Diversity, as well as progressive accountability watchdogs the Revolving Door Project and True North Research.The high court in February agreed to take up a case brought by the oil majors Suncor Energy and Exxon – the first time the court agreed to weigh in on such a challenge. The companies asked the justices to find that federal law prevents subnational governments from filing lawsuits against oil and gas companies for the climate-warming effects of their products.The court did not say which justices supported weighing in on the petition. Alito did not recuse himself, the letter notes.“No judge on any court, including the high court, should be allowed to hear cases where he or she have a financial stake in those cases,” said Lisa Graves, a former senior justice department official who now directs True North Research.In 2023, Alito recused himself from considering a petition brought by the same companies in the same lawsuit. That request, which would have required approval from four judges, was denied.The justice’s most recent financial disclosure, which was filed last August and covers 2024, showed holdings in individual stock worth between $60,007 and $245,000 in ConocoPhillips, Phillips66 and five other oil and energy companies. Alito also has up to $100,000 invested in a Vanguard fund in which Exxon is the third-largest holding, the letter says.“These holdings alone should compel Justice Alito to recuse himself from the Boulder case and the parallel state climate deception cases,” the groups say, referring to lawsuits brought by more than 70 state and local governments accusing oil companies of misleading the public about their role in the climate crisis.It is not clear if Alito has sold his stock in oil and gas companies since filing his last financial disclosure. The Guardian has contacted the Supreme Court and Alito for comment.Justices will be required to report on their 2026 holdings next year; by then, the court may have already ruled on the Suncor case, Graves said.The groups say Alito has another “apparent conflict of interest” – his relationship with the Republican billionaire donor Paul Singer. Singer founded and runs the hedge fund Elliott Investment Management, which owns more than 52m shares of Suncor which are worth more than $2.3bn.ProPublica reported in June 2023 that Alito failed to officially disclose that he took a private jet ride to Alaska for a 2008 fishing trip paid for by Singer. Alito defended the trip in the Wall Street Journal, saying ethics rules didn’t require him to disclose that he took the trip and that he had no duty to recuse himself from any cases involving Singer discussed in the reporting. He wrote: “ProPublica suggests that my failure to recuse in these cases created an appearance of impropriety, but that is incorrect.”Thursday’s letter from the watchdog groups says: “Alito’s decision to reverse course and participate in granting the companies’ most recent petition – when a finding in favor of the companies could directly and indirectly benefit both himself and his billionaire friend – is an indefensible breach of ethical boundaries.”In 2023, the Supreme Court adopted its first-ever formal ethics code – a response to pressure over a slew of scandals focused on some of its senior rightwing justices. It says justices should recuse themselves from cases where their “impartiality might reasonably be questioned”, but allows the justices to make that decision themselves.The code has been widely derided as toothless by experts due to its lack of an enforcement mechanism. Unlike standards for other federal judges, it also allows justices to stay on cases if their vote is necessary to resolve the case.“It’s possible that Alito is using that rationale, [arguing] he’s needed to resolve the matter of the Suncor case,” said Graves. “It’s really outrageous. The highest court in the country … should have the highest standards, not the lowest ones.”This year, the court also rolled out new software to scan challengers’ filings to identify potential conflicts of interest which might require justices to recuse themselves from cases. Parties before the court must list stock-ticker symbols for companies involved in cases to allow the new software to help identify conflicts.But the outcome of each climate accountability lawsuit targeting big oil could affect the entire industry, said Hannah Story Brown, deputy research director at Revolving Door Project. That means holdings in any oil companies should disqualify justices from weighing in on any of the lawsuits, she said.“A blanket refusal is the only consistently ethical option for Alito when faced with any of these parallel cases,” Brown said.
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Entities

12 identified
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Keywords & salience

10 terms
oil stock conflicts
1.00
samuel alito
1.00
ethics codes
0.90
supreme court
0.90
watchdog groups
0.80
recusal practice
0.80
climate crisis
0.70
financial disclosure
0.60
energy companies
0.50
senate judiciary committee
0.40
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