Poll of judges, lawyers sees grave Trump threat to rule of law
Sometimes it seems as though the only thing that stands between a functioning democracy and a full-on Trump autocracy is a thin, black-robed line.
Although the Supreme Court, in general, and conservative appellate courts, in particular, have bowed and granted President Trump permission to do pretty much anything he wants, they havenβt thoroughly capitulated to his endless grasping for ever more power. (The way invertebrate congressional Republicans have.)
At the lower-court level, judges have repeatedly ruled in ways intended to check Trump, most notably when it comes to violating civil and constitutional rights in pursuit of his indiscriminate immigration dragnet.
The tendency to slow-walk his administrationβs response to those rulings β and ignore others that Trump thinks he can safely snub β only contribute to the perception of presidential lawlessness and a sense that our judicial system is being strained to something approaching a breaking point.
Go ahead, if youβd like, and dismiss those concerns as just so much overwrought hand-wringing, or the mindless anti-Trump blathering of your friendly political columnist. A new survey of legal experts β including federal judges, top-tier lawyers and scores of professors from some of the countryβs leading law schools β finds widespread concern about the brittle state of our legal system.
And itβs not just the fears of a lot of shaggy-thinking liberals.
βThe nation is strong as is its commitment to the rule of law,β said one appellate judge, a Republican appointee. βThe current president presents the greatest threat in decades.β
The survey was conducted by Bright Line Watch, a nonpartisan academic group that monitors the health and resilience of American democracy, in conjunction with the Safeguarding Democracy Project at UCLAβs School of Law.
Conducted between mid-February and early March, the poll anonymously surveyed 21 federal judges, 113 lawyers, 193 law professors, 652 political scientists and a nationally representative sample of 2,750 Americans.
What leapt out to UCLAβs Rick Hasen, director of the Safeguarding Democracy Project, was that βacross the ideological spectrum and across judges, lawyers and law professors, there was considerable agreement that the rule of law in the U.S. is under tremendous stress.β That consensus, he said, suggests βa real risk to democracy.β
Most legal experts agreed that Trump is using executive power excessively, with a majority doubting the conservative-leaning Supreme Court would handle cases involving the Trump administration impartially. The experts also expressed concern about politicized law enforcement β Trump seeking to persecute his perceived enemies β executive branch overreach, and the failure of Congress or the Supreme Court to do more to rein in the rogue president.
Eight in 10 of those surveyed said federal officials fail to comply with court orders somewhat or very often, and nearly 9 in 10 said political appointees in Trumpβs Justice Department mislead federal judges somewhat or very often.
Talk about contempt of court β not to mention our vital system of checks and balances.
There was, unsurprisingly, a split among conservatives and liberals who took part in the survey. (The study defined legal conservatives as those saying the Supreme Court should base rulings on its understanding of what the Constitution meant as originally written. Liberals, who made up most of the respondents, were defined as those saying the court should base its rulings on what the Constitution means in current times.)
Conservatives, for instance, were more likely than liberals to see former President Biden as a greater threat to the rule of law than Trump. Liberals were more likely than conservatives to see evidence of Trump politicizing the Justice Department.
There were also differences between legal experts β those most intimately involved in the judicial system β and the public at large. The experts were more concerned about Trumpβs excesses and threats to the rule of law, which, Hasen said, stands to reason.
The legal system is not something most people encounter daily in the same way they do, say, gasoline prices or the cost of groceries. βYet,β Hasen said, βitβs one of these background things that really matters.β
Why?
Hasen put it this way: βImagine that a person had a dispute with their neighbor and it ended up in small claims court before a judge and the judge made the decision not based on the merits of the case but based on whether he was friends with one of the parties, or didnβt like people who were similar to one of the parties.β
Now imagine that kind of corrupted, perverted system of justice writ large.
If, for instance, βpeople know that the government can successfully seek retribution from people who criticize it, people will be less likely to criticize the government,β Hasen said, leaving the country worse off by muzzling those who would hold their elected leaders to account.
Or if, say, rioters overran the U.S. Capitol and tried to steal an election and, instead of being punished, received cash payouts from the federal government, what incentive would there be to follow the law?
Happily β and who couldnβt use a bit of good cheer right about now β all is not lost.
People βcan demand that their elected representatives take steps to assure that the rule of law will be followed,β Hasen said, and can insist βthat the government [not] play favorites or seek retribution against perceived enemies.β
Thatβs the power people have, come election time. Thatβs why voting matters.
There are lots of things riding on the outcome in November, not least the sanctity and integrity of our legal system.
Bear that in mind when you cast your ballot.