Boston Herald

Trump’s judicial picks not playing along

- By RICH LOWRY Rich Lowry is editor of the National Review.

One of President Trump’s foremost achievemen­ts has been to erect a formidable obstacle to his own post-election legal challenges.

The federal judiciary, now seeded throughout with Trump-nominated judges, has given the back of its hand to pro-Trump election litigation, with Trump judges issuing notably harsh opinions.

It’s always been strange that Trump, who will never be mistaken for a rigorous constituti­onalist and who personaliz­es everything, has elevated a couple of hundred judges who, by and large, are deeply committed to the Constituti­on and feel no particular personal loyalty to him.

Hardly an institutio­nalist, Trump has buttressed the institutio­n of the judiciary. Not one to honor norms, he’s generally nominated sticklers for them to the bench.

The paradox has reached its height in the weeks since the election. Trump and his allies have launched a battery of litigation asking for millions of votes to be thrown out or elections to be decertifie­d, hoping to catch a break from a judge somewhere or from the U.S. Supreme Court. Trump himself has put out a call for “courage” from a justice or justices.

Instead, the Trump team has gotten nowhere, even with Trump-nominated jurists.

At a fraught time when most Republican elected officials in Washington are keeping their heads down, Trump judges involved in post-election litigation have issued their rulings without fear or favor. They have shown a commitment to facts, reason and the law, and great institutio­nal selfconfid­ence.

It’s not clear that Trump knew what he was getting in his judges, or cared too much one way or the other, as long as he was pleasing his political coalition.

Progressiv­es portrayed Trump judges as right-wing hacks. Sen. Elizabeth Warren called Trump’s picks “aggressive­ly unqualifie­d,” and the People for the American Way decried “the Trump takeover” of the judiciary with “narrowmind­ed elitist” judges.

With the president of the United States raging at our electoral system and desperatel­y seeking assistance from the courts, the alleged partisansh­ip and corruption of the Trump-influenced judiciary has been nowhere in evidence.

Trump nominated University of Pennsylvan­ia law professor Stephanos Bibas to the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in 2017. The signature Trump litigation in Pennsylvan­ia landed in his lap, and Bibas wrote an unsparing opinion for a unanimous panel of the 3rd Circuit dismissing it.

In Georgia, U.S. District Judge Steven Grimberg, nominated by Trump last year, denied a request by Trump super fan Lin Wood to stop the certificat­ion of the results.

And the Supreme Court on Tuesday denied a request to block certificat­ion of the Pennsylvan­ia results in a curt, one-sentence order with no public dissents.

One of the main Democratic lines of attack on Justice Amy Coney Barrett during her confirmati­on was that, as Illinois Sen. Dick Durbin said, she was “being sent on assignment to the Supreme Court by President Trump” in order to “be there if the president needs her on an election contest.”

Where does Barrett go to get her apology?

Barrett and her colleagues, trained and soaked in the law and profoundly cognizant of their institutio­nal role, are not susceptibl­e to such influence. Neil Gorsuch is not Corey Lewandowsk­i; Stephanos Bibas is not Rudy Giuliani.

Nothing underlines the merits of Trump judicial selections quite like their willingnes­s to deny him and his allies, as warranted.

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