WASHINGTON (AP) β Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito is heard questioning whether compromise between the left and right is possible in a conversation posted on social media. The conservative justice is also heard agreeing with a woman who says the United States should return βto a place of godliness.β
The audio was posted Monday on X by liberal filmmaker Lauren Windsor. She said it was recorded at the Supreme Court Historical Societyβs annual dinner last week.
βOne side or the other is going to win,β Alito said. βThere can be a way of working, a way of living together peacefully, but itβs difficult, you know, because there are differences on fundamental things that really canβt be compromised.β
Windsor then told Alito: βI think that the solution really is like winning the moral argument. Like, people in this country who believe in God have got to keep fighting for that, to return our country to a place of godliness.β
βI agree with you,β Alito responded.
Windsor also spoke with Chief Justice John Roberts, who rejected a similar argument. When Windsor suggested the court should lead the nation on a βChristianβ path, Roberts responded, βI donβt know if thatβs true.β
The court declined to comment on the recordings.
Alito has rejected calls to step aside from Supreme Court cases involving former President Donald Trump and Jan. 6 defendants after stories emerged about controversial flags that flew above his homes.
In letters to members of Congress, Alito said his wife, Martha-Ann, was responsible for flying both an upside-down flag over their home in 2021 and an βAppeal to Heavenβ flag at their New Jersey beach house last year. Both flags were like those carried by rioters who violently stormed the Capitol in January 2021 while echoing Trumpβs false claims of election fraud.
Martha-Ann Alito spoke to Windsor about her flags on another recording made at the dinner, according to an additional edited recording the filmmaker posted online. She said she wanted to fly a religious flag because βI have to look across the lagoon at the Pride flag for the next month,β an apparent reference to celebratory LGBTQ+ displays during Pride month in June.
Her husband asked her not to, she told Windsor. βHeβs like, βOh please donβt put up a flag.ββ
Martha-Ann Alito also imagined making a flag with βyellow and orange flamesβ and the Italian word for shame in the center.
AP correspondent Haya Panjwani reports on a recorded conversation with a conservative Supreme Court justice.
Roberts declined an invitation to meet with Democratic senators to talk about Supreme Court ethics and the flags that flew outside Alitoβs homes.
In an interview with Rolling Stone, Windsor said she recorded the conversations with Alito and Roberts because βthe Supreme Court is shrouded in secrecy, and theyβre refusing to submit to any accountability in the face of overwhelming evidence of serious ethics breaches, I think that itβs justified to take these types of measures.β