Starting this one out:
History as farce at the Alabama supreme court
Liberals trying to 'purge godly men' like Roy Moore, Rep. Will Ainsworth says
Alabama drag queen is Roy Moore nemesis
History as farce at the Alabama supreme court
When Alabama Chief Justice Roy Moore ordered his state's probate judges in January to ignore a Supreme Court ruling legalizing gay marriage, he put himself in jeopardy of losing his job - for the second time. Now Alabama's Judicial Inquiry Commission has filed formal charges against him for his defiance.
Moore should lose his job. But as he's shown before, that's a setback he can overcome. Last time he was removed from office, he ran for governor before settling for re-election as chief justice. Who knows? This time he might even win the governorship.
Moore's shenanigans go back to 2003, when, in his first term as elected chief justice, he commissioned a granite statue of the Ten Commandments to be placed in front of the Alabama Judicial Building where the state Supreme Court is housed. The monument violated the establishment clause of the First Amendment, a federal district court held. But when the court ordered Moore to have the statue removed, he refused.
Liberals trying to 'purge godly men' like Roy Moore, Rep. Will Ainsworth says
Alabama drag queen is Roy Moore nemesis