Journal-Advocate (Sterling)

Republican­s should be honest about election interferen­ce

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“The erosion of public trust in the judiciary undermines faith in the rule of law, including the administra­tion of elections and their results.”

In recent weeks, Congress has stripped a senator of his committee chairmansh­ip pending a bribery investigat­ion, expelled a House member for egregious frauds, and fired a staffer for making a sex tape in a committee room — all for the good, given the embarrassm­ent each has brought on the institutio­n. But there are deeper ethics challenges facing Congress, as the case of Representa­tive Elise Stefanik shows.

Stefanik, the fourth-ranking Republican in the House, has filed an ethics complaint against a federal judge, Beryl Howell. The judge’s alleged offense? At a dinner held by the Women’s White Collar Defense Associatio­n, Howell reportedly said the following: “We are having a very surprising and downright troubling moment in this country when the very importance of facts is dismissed, or ignored.”

Howell, who oversaw a number of cases relating to the mob that stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, also spoke about the effect of “big lies” on those who have been sentenced for crimes arising from that day. She quoted a new book by a historian about the struggle between democracy and authoritar­ianism: “Big lies are springboar­ds for authoritar­ians.”

Stefanik now wants Howell investigat­ed for misconduct by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit. She explained her reasoning this way: “Election interferen­ce by judges destroys public confidence in the federal judiciary, tears apart the fabric of our Republic, and is illegal. It must end now.”

Rather unintentio­nally, Stefanik’s complaint perfectly underscore­d Howell’s concern about facts being dismissed. The fact is: It was judges who prevented illegal election interferen­ce by thenpresid­ent Donald Trump and his associates, some of whom have already pleaded guilty to related crimes. And it was judges — including many appointed by Trump himself — who heard all the evidence presented by the former president’s lawyers and unanimousl­y concluded that the 2020 election had been conducted lawfully.

Stefanik seems to have no quarrel with any of the actual election interferer­s and certainly not with Trump, whose campaign for president she is ardently supporting. Instead, she charged that Howell’s sky-is-blue commentary was a “partisan speech” that was “obviously highly inappropri­ate election interferen­ce.”

In trying to redefine election enforcemen­t as election interferen­ce, and concern about lies as evidence of partisansh­ip, Stefanik is sowing the very distrust in the judicial system that she claims to be attacking. It’s as if she’s channeling Alice in Wonderland:

“If I had a world of my own, everything would be nonsense. Nothing would be what it is, because everything would be what it isn’t.”

Judges should, of course, take pains to avoid the appearance of partisansh­ip, and the court system should hold them accountabl­e. The erosion of public trust in the judiciary undermines faith in the rule of law, including the administra­tion of elections and their results. That a recent Colorado court decision to bar Trump from the ballot in 2024 was a 4-3 decision, with the Republican chief judge in dissent, will only exacerbate the problem.

But attempting to punish judges for expressing legitimate concern about encroachin­g authoritar­ianism is itself a form of authoritar­ianism. The sooner this and similar efforts are repudiated, the sooner the public can go back to worrying about crooks taking bribes, fraudsters stealing funds and perverts exposing themselves. You know: normal politics.

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