So I did a quick look at the FBI vault and noticed that there was a recent addition about Scalia. Interesting read. Investigated and found to be clean as a whistle it seems. On the other hand, the liberals did not like him because they felt he was inflexible. Some notable names popped up in the records. Biden and Podesta were two of them.
I also noticed that the liberals seemed to be using the same kind of playbook with him and his nomination as they did with Kavanah.
Some other information I gleaned from it was the names of some organizations that I was unaware of.
Here is one of them that apparently Scalia was involved with.
Federalist Society
The Federalist Society for Law and Public Policy Studies, most frequently called the Federalist Society, is an organization of conservatives and libertarians that advocates for a textualist and originalist interpretation of the United States Constitution. Founded in 1982, it is one of the nation's most influential legal organizations.[5][6]
In January 2019, The Washington Post Magazine wrote that the Federalist Society had reached an "unprecedented peak of power and influence." Of the nine members of the Supreme Court of the United States, five (Brett Kavanaugh, Neil Gorsuch, Clarence Thomas, John Roberts, and Samuel Alito) are current or former members of the organization.[2] Politico Magazine wrote that the Federalist Society "has become one of the most influential legal organizations in history—not only shaping law students' thinking but changing American society itself by deliberately, diligently shifting the country's judiciary to the right."[7]
The organization, whose ideals include "checking federal power, protecting individual liberty and interpreting the Constitution according to its original meaning",[2] plays a central role in networking and mentoring young conservative lawyers.[8] According to Amanda Hollis-Brusky, the author of Ideas with Consequences: The Federalist Society and the Conservative Counterrevolution, the Federalist Society "has evolved into the de facto gatekeeper for right-of-center lawyers aspiring to government jobs and federal judgeships under Republican presidents."[5] According to William & Mary Law School professor Neil Devins and Ohio State University professor Lawrence Baum, the administrations of Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush "aimed to nominate conservative judges, and membership in the Federalist Society was a proxy for adherence to conservative ideology."[9] The Federalist Society has played a key role in suggesting judicial nominees to President Donald Trump; it vetted President Trump's list of potential U.S. Supreme Court nominees and, as of January 2019, 25 out of 30 of President Trump's appellate court nominees were current or former members of the society.[2]
The society's initial 1982 conference was funded, at a cost of $25,000, by the Institute for Educational Affairs.[7] Later funding of $5.5 million came from the Olin Foundation. Other early donors included the Scaife Foundation and the Koch family foundations. Donors to the Federalist Society have included Google, Chevron, Charles G. and David H. Koch; the family foundation of Richard Mellon Scaife; and the Mercer family.[13] By 2017, the Federalist Society had $20 million in annual revenue.[2]
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Federalist_Society