Cape Times

Michael Donen’s Beautiful Truths

- MICHAEL DONEN

IN DEFENDING the rule of law Aristotle argued that allowing a man to rule introduces an element of the beast. The introducti­on of Brett Kavanaugh to the US Supreme Court via the Senate Justice Committee proved just that. Millions of viewers throughout the world watched Kavanaugh sniff, snarl, and demonstrat­e conclusive­ly that he is consumed with hatred for the Democrats and what they stand for.

He met allegation­s against him of sexual assault, made by an evidently frightened and credible victim, by portraying himself as the real victim; that is, of “a political hit” by the Democrats.

He dismissed the accusation made by Christine Blasey Ford as being simply the fruit of “millions of dollars in money from outside leftwing opposition groups”.

He left no doubt that although he had been a judge for a number of years, he was still driven by the attitude of a man who had worked in the White House after assisting George W Bush to avoid a recount of votes in Florida and win the 2000 presidenti­al election. Now he was Donald Trump’s man, and about to become his tweet.

Kavanaugh was not the first official in an administra­tion to be appointed to the Supreme Court, or to be appointed to exploit the Supreme Court for a political end.

Franklin D Roosevelt packed the court in order to push through his New Deal after a national economic upheaval precipitat­ed by the Depression devastated the American dream that a natural order of things could bring comfort and security to the American people.

The difference with Kavanaugh’s confirmati­on is that his appointmen­t is intended, among other things, to strip or compromise the freedom of American women over their own bodies after the Supreme Court had liberated them in 1973 in the case of Roe v Wade.

Republican­s cynically formulated the issue before the committee on the basis that Kavanaugh should be presumed innocent until he was proven guilty of sexual assault. However, he was not a defendant at a criminal trial. The real issue was not whether he was receiving criminal justice.

It was – and remains – whether it would be proper for him to be allowed to dispense justice at all; and whether he is fit to do so in relation to the female half of America’s population.

Kavanaugh’s demeanour disqualifi­ed him on both grounds. Regardless of the merits of the charge, he displayed an utter lack of judicial gravitas. His behaviour disqualifi­ed him from ever being taken seriously as a judge. He was demonstrab­ly evasive and disingenuo­us under oath. This threw doubt on his integrity.

The legitimacy of a court depends on its integrity, trustworth­iness, its independen­ce and capacity to dispense justice. The framers of the US Constituti­on held a conviction that tyranny could only be prevented and human rights preserved if no single man or group of men were allowed to accumulate power.

To this end freedom was to be preserved by separating the power of the legislativ­e, executive and independen­t judicial authoritie­s, and by employing a system of checks and balances by each authority over the other.

Kavanaugh was not confirmed in order to act independen­tly or to bury any executive agenda that may deprive women of their freedom. He was confirmed to praise such an agenda.

A Supreme Court composed of two alleged sex pests (Clarence Thomas and Brett Kavanaugh) cannot be trusted to protect the rights and freedom of women in the US. When his nation was divided over the issue of fundamenta­l liberty of slaves, Abraham Lincoln warned that the Union could not endure while only half of its people were allowed to be free.

A court constitute­d with Thomas and Kavanaugh cannot endure as the protector of the freedom of the female half of America’s population.

Donen SC is an advocate at the Cape Bar and a listed counsel of the Internatio­nal Criminal Court.

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