GOP scrutinizing litigation group that ‘educated’ 2,000+ judges on climate change
Republicans on the House Judiciary Committee have launched a probe into the Environmental Law Institute over allegations the group has tried to influence the impartiality of judges hearing climate-related cases.
In a letter requesting ELI to disclose external funding sources and judicial clients, Committee Chairman Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, and two other lawmakers claimed ELI’s Climate Judiciary Project – which provides judges with what it says is climate science and litigation information – “appear[s] to be designed to bias judges in climate-related cases.”
“Public reports have documented concerns around apparent efforts by [ELI] to influence judges who potentially may be presiding over lawsuits related to alleged climate change,” the lawmakers wrote. “These efforts appear to have the underlying goal of predisposing federal and state judges in favor of plaintiffs alleging injuries from the manufacturing, marketing, or sale of fossil-fuel products.”
According to ELI, more than 2,000 state and federal judges have participated in the curriculum, which ELI says on its website is a nonpartisan effort “to aid better understanding of climate science and how it is likely to interact with the law.”
The committee, however, disputes the neutrality claim, given that “ELI-selected experts who instruct the judges on questions of supposed climate ‘science’ are not neutral third parties, but are known associates of organizations (including funding entities) closely allied with the radical decarbonization movement.”
More concerning, the lawmakers added, is the fact that participating judges are kept anonymous, meaning defendants “have no way to meaningfully evaluate whether the judges should recuse from their cases.”
In a Tuesday email to The Center Square, ELI argued that “[a]ny attempt to suggest that the Climate Judiciary Project’s judicial educational activities are improper is entirely without merit.”
“CJP provides evidence-based and factual information to judges about climate science and how it is arising in the law in partnership with leading national and state judicial education institutions through their established programs,” ELI said. “These programs are no different than other judicial education programs providing training on legal and scientific topics that judges voluntarily choose to attend.”
ELI added that CJP “does not participate in litigation, provide support for or coordinate with any parties in litigation, or advise judges on how they should rule on any issue or in any case.”
The committee has given ELI until Sept. 12 to produce all documents since April 2019 that pertain to any external funding sources or improper judicial financing, and the names of every judge who has participated in the CJP curriculum.
Jason Isaac, CEO of the American Energy Institute, called the committee’s action “a long-overdue step to expose the coordinated campaign between climate activists and the judiciary.”
“Our research shows that CJP’s materials, funding sources, and presenters are closely aligned with the plaintiffs’ bar and the radical climate agenda,” Isaac told The Center Square. “Congress is right to investigate. Taxpayers deserve judges, not activists in robes.”
Latest News Stories
Senate Judiciary confronts rise in child trafficking and sextortion
WATCH: Gov. Ferguson signaling income tax bill may be dead for session
Lawmakers consider SNAP, other amendments to 2026 farm bill
Los Angeles school board borrows $250M for settlements
WATCH/EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEWS: California Voter ID measure gets over 1 million signatures
As fighting intensifies overseas, Republicans push harder to get DHS funded
Reported debt deal, credit downgrades may add to Chicago budget woes
State financial officers protect, recover $28B in tax dollars in 2025
Iran war, Saudi outage to boost U.S. propane, butane exports
Pritzker announces $2B in medical debt erased, half in Cook County
WATCH: Trump threatens to end all trade with Spain
Denver City Council votes to ban masks on ICE agents