Wednesday, November 15, 2017
Baby Judges
It’s a pretty simple
plan: nominate and confirm as many recently-post-pubescent federal court and
administrative trial judges as you can – each accorded a lifetime guarantee in
that appointed office – and make sure that those baby judges thus control
lawmaking over a much-longer period into the distant future than you would
otherwise have if those appointments were instead based on competence and
experience. The only criteria would be (a) the nominee has a law degree, (b) he
or she passes a socially and fiscally conservative litmus test, and (c) they
are young… very, very young. Experience? Respect of their peers? Achievement?
Competence? Forgetaboutit! No, it’s just the new GOP way of doing business!!!!
Unless they clerked for an ultra-right wing justice. Then they can be older,
but are more likely appointed to appellate benches.
For example, “Brett J.
Talley, President Trump’s nominee to be a federal [trial] judge in Alabama, has
never tried a case, was unanimously rated ‘not qualified’ by the American Bar
Assn.’s judicial rating committee, has practiced law for only three years and,
as a blogger last year, displayed a degree of partisanship unusual for a
judicial nominee, denouncing ‘Hillary Rotten Clinton’ and pledging support for
the National Rifle Assn. (He also happens to be married to the chief of staff for White House Counsel Donald McGahn, a detail he neglected to disclose when asked about possible conflicts of interest.)
“On [November 9th], the
Senate Judiciary Committee, on a party-line vote, approved him for a lifetime
appointment to the federal bench… Talley, 36, is part of what Trump has called
the ‘untold story’ of his success in filling the courts with young
conservatives… ‘The judge story is an untold story. Nobody wants to talk about
it,’ Trump said last month, standing alongside Senate Majority Leader Mitch
McConnell (R-Ky.) in the White House Rose Garden. ‘But when you think of it,
Mitch and I were saying, that has consequences 40 years out, depending on the
age of the judge — but 40 years out.’” Los Angeles Times, November 10th.
The GOP’s job one:
Control forever, even if the entire political spectrum of the United States
changes. Pretty much guarantees that the United States will remain severely
polarized for decades no matter if the complexion of our electorate changes
dramatically. The handwriting is on the wall suggests this is both inevitable
and in the near-term.
Indeed, it seems as if
shifting demographics, which will be reflected in the 2020 Census, will confirm
what most of us already know: The white-Christian-conservative movement – most
clearly associated with Donald Trump’s base – will be a rather distinct
minority, overwhelmed by a culturally, ethnically and religiously diverse
majority. To preserve that white-rural-values powerbase as the “deciders and
protectors” of American values at the expense of the diverse-urban majority,
requires that exclusionary voter ID laws, gerrymandering and judicial support
to minimize the power of that diverse majority and maximize that traditionalist
white control over our future.
As a poll released on
November 8th by South Carolina’s Winthrop University supports, too many white
voters, particularly in the South, feel that they and their values are
threatened: “When asked if white people were under attack, 46% of [southern]
whites agreed or strongly agreed. And more than three-fourths of black
respondents said racial minorities are currently under attack in the United
States.”
Those white voters
champion conservative districting and the appointment of conservative judges to
hold government in check and to preserve their “majority” control of most of
the state legislatures, governorships, the presidency and both Houses of
Congress. Clearly, as the three million popular vote margin of Clinton over Trump
voters illustrates, these white traditional voters could never win such federal
elections or dominate as they do politically if a “one person, one vote” system
were ever implemented. Instead, we have a system of government that accords
rural-value voters in federal elections approximately 1.8 votes for every one
vote cast by a diverse urban voter.
So to defend the
indefensible – skewing elections to favor traditional white voters with much
more voting power than the non-white traditionalist movement – they need a
judicial system that continues that bias no matter how much their position may
be in the minority in the future. They need baby judges to block their
opponents long after their numbers have dwindled into a political minority with
“litmus test right wing” appellate judges to uphold the rulings of these baby
federal trial court justices. They hope that recent Supreme Court appointee,
Neil Gorsuch, will insure that gerrymandering remain intact for the foreseeable
future and that voter ID laws finally find support in that high court.
Remember when, in the
last two years of his term, Obama could not get his judicial appointments
confirmed. With all those unfilled judicial vacancies, it’s just a field day
for the conservative America to get that many more right wing judges into those
lifetime appointments. “‘It’s such a depressing idea, that we don’t get
appointments unless we have unified government, and that the appointments we
ultimately get are as polarized as the rest of the country,’ said Lee Epstein,
a law professor and political scientist at Washington University in St. Louis.
‘What does that mean for the legitimacy of the courts in the United States?
It’s not a pretty world.’
“For now, conservatives
are reveling in their success. During the campaign, Mr. Trump shored up the
support of skeptical right-wing voters by promising to select Supreme Court
justices from a list [White House Counsel Donald McGahn, II] put together with
help from the Federalist Society and the conservative Heritage Foundation. Exit
polls showed that court-focused voters helped deliver the president’s narrow
victory. Now, he is rewarding them.
“‘We will set records in
terms of the number of judges,’ Mr. Trump said at the White House recently,
adding that many more nominees were in the pipeline. Standing beside the Senate
majority leader, Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, he continued, ‘There has never
been anything like what we’ve been able to do together with judges.’” New York
Times, November 13th.
By politicizing the
courts like never before, insurance that current values will determine the
future no matter how America may change, perhaps the Trump administration is
undermining our system of government such that it cannot work in the future.
Perhaps, he is planting the very seeds to destroy the nation he thinks he is
supporting.
I’m
Peter Dekom, and this pattern of judicial appointments is just one more
existential threat that Mr. Trump is pushing onto the United States of America.
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