Botswana Guardian

Trump’s prosecutio­n is a triumph

- The Guardian) Dikarabo Ramadubu BG Reporter

Trump’s prosecutio­n is a triumph. Not a shame. Not a tragedy. A triumph one of the great events in American presidenti­al history. The public and the pundits might disagree by the end of Trump’s trial in Manhattan perhaps the first of a few but the significan­ce of what district attorney Alvin Bragg has managed to do will be wholly unsullied, in substance, by the outcome of his case.

One of the major questions in American political and legal thought has been whether presidents may be allowed to commit crimes. As it stands, the position of the Justice Department is that they may for half a century, it has held that a president cannot face criminal prosecutio­n while in office. And while there’s not even a theoretica­l bar to prosecutin­g a president once they leave office, no one had ever tried it, leaving the question of whether criminal laws functional­ly apply to presidents at all, as a practical matter, a matter of speculatio­n.

Here Alvin Bragg has bravely taken a stand: a person may, in fact, be indicted for a crime even if they were once president just as though they were an ordinary person to whom laws applied. This is tremendous news. No rifts have opened in the time- space continuum. Frogs, locusts, and lice have yet to descend upon Manhattan. For the time being, it appears that a prosecutor really may attempt to hold a president or at least a former president accountabl­e for a suspected crime without reality collapsing in on itself. What’s more, Bragg’s indictment amounts to an insistence that a former president may be indicted even for a relatively low- level crime like falsifying documents just like any other white collar criminal.

Prosecutin­g Donald Trump is right. But is it politicall­y wise?

To be sure, as many observers have already written, Bragg may have his work cut out for him. His case against Trump is a multi- part argument that hinges on the idea that Trump concealed hush money payments to abet violations of election law. It has troubled many that Bragg may lose this case. And this is true. Sometimes prosecutor­s lose cases.

But it would be wrong to suppose on that basis, as some have, that prosecutor­s who believe presidents have committed crimes have a responsibi­lity to behave like political strategist­s: to bear public opinion and the expectatio­ns of the press in mind by only bringing forth the simplest, most straightfo­rward cases and pursuing only the largest, most eye- popping crimes while letting other offenses slide.

They’ve no obligation to calibrate the content and timing of their cases to maximize the possibilit­y of success in other wholly unrelated cases in other jurisdicti­ons; the feelings of a defendant’s fans and supporters should be of no account whatsoever. This is what it means, to use a phrase Trump himself has long been fond of, to be a nation of laws. It is especially ridiculous, on the latter point, to suppose that there’s a prosecutor­ial approach Bragg or anyone else might have taken that would have quelled the rage of a political constituen­cy that is now fully beyond reason and respect for the law. Predictabl­y, Bragg has drawn both explicit threats and implicit comparison­s to Pontius Pilate this holy week; Trump, per Marjorie Taylor Greene, now sits next to Christ himself among historical figures “persecuted by radical, corrupt government­s.”

On Thursday, Trump’s chief rival for the Republican presidenti­al nomination, Florida governor Ron DeSantis St Peter? reiterated that he would refuse to cooperate with an extraditio­n request from New York in the event that Trump refused to surrender on his own. Things didn’t come to that, but the pundits aren’t wrong to predict that a lot of chaos and drama will come our way in the coming months. And that’s especially frightful to all those who’ve come to believe political polarizati­on and the heightenin­g of partisan tensions are the central problems of our time a notion that’s spurred commentary suggesting America might be too divided to bear Trump’s prosecutio­n. To wit, a report from The New York Times Thursday speculated that this and Trump’s other potential indictment­s might “shake the timbers of the republic” or “tear the country apart.”

But what would it mean, actually, to “tear the country apart?” We’ve seen and survived civil war. We’ve seen cities razed and presidents killed. Social unrest, economic collapse these are cornerston­es of the American experience. A public health crisis has taken the lives of more than one million people in this country over the last three years. The reactions to Trump’s prosecutio­n will remain loud and ludicrous. They may well turn violent we can put nothing safely beyond a party that rallies easily to the defense of a man who attempted a coup and roused a mob into an attack on the Capitol.

But there is something rather pathetic about the idea that a president’s trial might be among the greatest trials our nation has faced. Nothing that’s coming will break us. Our republic, for all its many faults, is made of stronger stuff than that. We will be tested, yes. But let’s take a moment, too, to recognize that Bragg has already passed a critical test on our behalf.(

Most clinics are without sufficient nurses and support staff, a situation compounded by limited positions for recruitmen­t of staff, Junior Health and Wellness Minister Setlhomo Lelatisits­we told parliament.

Furthermor­e, part of the services offered by support staff including security, cleaning and catering is gradually outsourced to the private sector, Lelatisits­we admitted. He was responding to a question by Member of Parliament for Takatokwan­e, Friction Leuwe whether his ministry is aware that all clinics and health posts in the Takatokwan­e Constituen­cy do not have security services during the weekends and holidays as they are only covered by night- watchmen at night from 1800 to 0600 hours daily. Lelatisits­we said in order to mitigate against the lack of security in clinics and health posts during the day, the ministry is intending to rollout outsourced security services to all clinics in Kweneng West including Takatokwan­e Constituen­cy during the next financial year. He said that in the interim, temporary gate- keepers will be employed beginning of financial year 2023/ 24 for all clinics and health posts, while waiting for conclusion of preparatio­ns for outsourced services.

Lelatisits­we said all facilities which are not operating on a 24- hour basis open from 0730 to1230 hours during weekends and holidays.

As such, patients are attended to during the time and after hours between 1230 hours and 1800hours emergency. “Patients seek assistance from the nurses’ homes for the services of the Nurse – On call as the staff houses are usually located closer to the facilities”. He admitted that this is not an ideal set up as security of staff may be compromise­d during the interactio­ns thus the need for either Gate- Keepers or Security Guards to be the ones calling the Nurse On call between the time the clinic closes and arrival of the Night Watchmen.

In the past, some clinics and staff were subjected to criminal activities including female nurses being raped while on duty. In 2018 the ministry confirmed an incident in which a nurse was raped at Extension 2 Clinic in Gaborone, which was offering a 24hour service.

 ?? ?? Trump’s prosecutio­n is a triumph
Trump’s prosecutio­n is a triumph

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Botswana