Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Constituti­on passing the stress test

Trump being forced to the center

- By Noah Feldman

AS Donald Trump’s administra­tion enters its ninth month, it’s worth considerin­g a surprising possibilit­y: Things have never been better in the turbulent period since the president took office.

Trump’s most blatantly unconstitu­tional actions, like the travel ban on immigrants from a number of majority Muslim nations, have been blocked by the courts. Steve Bannon, Mike Flynn and Sebastian Gorka are out of power. The reasonable generals (John Kelly, H.R. McMaster, James Mattis) are in. The repeal of the Affordable Care Act has failed (so far). A deal with Democrats on DACA, the policy allowing undocument­ed immigrants brought to the U.S. as children to stay, is in the offing. There will be no wall, paid for by Mexico or otherwise, on the southern border. Dangerousl­y extreme tax reform seems unlikely to pass.

The point is not to play down the worrisome and downright bad events of 2017 thus far, including the fruits of mistaken Trump administra­tion policy and (in my view) even some potentiall­y impeachabl­e offenses. Nor is it to ignore future risks.

Rather, this is a moment to appreciate that the U.S. Constituti­on is undergoing a stress test — and it’s doing pretty well.

The independen­t judiciary is withstandi­ng a series of unpreceden­ted assaults from the executive branch, both symbolic and actual.

The separation of powers, which requires Trump to work with Congress, is forcing the president to tack toward the center if he wants to get legislatio­n passed.

And public opinion, which guides constituti­onal government against the backdrop of future elections, is slowly but surely pushing Trump to remove the most radical visible members of his administra­tion and enhance the power of more moderate, responsibl­e adults.

Put another way, Trump broke the recent norm of Republican presidenti­al candidates by running to the right, not to the center. And he’s still pandering to a right-wing base in his rhetoric. But when it comes to government, he’s slowly but surely starting to act more like a centrist.

Trump has had some normal interactio­ns with the judicial branch when it comes to appointmen­ts. He has added a highly conservati­ve justice, Neil Gorsuch, to the U.S. Supreme Court, which may be his most lasting contributi­on to conservati­vism. And it’s a big deal, especially because the Senate blocked President Barack Obama’s nominee, Merrick Garland, in violation of a strong tradition of voting on presidenti­al nominees.

The rupture to unwritten constituti­onal norms here was Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell’s, not Trump’s. And Gorsuch, while conservati­ve, is in no way out of the conservati­ve judicial mainstream.

Similarly, Trump’s lower court judicial nominees have for the most part been sober and qualified. They’re conservati­ve, to be sure, but that’s perfectly normal for a Republican president blessed with a Republican Senate.

The existing judiciary has given Trump no ground at all when it comes to his attempts to expand executive power illegitima­tely or in the exercise of racial bias. This despite — or maybe because of — Trump’s dangerous Twitter attacks on judges and the very notion of judicial authority. The pardon of Joe Arpaio, the former sheriff of Maricopa County, Ariz., is the most extreme instance of contempt for the rule of law, but it hasn’t cowed the judiciary.

Then there’s Congress, which for different reasons hasn’t given Trump much of what he has wanted thus

far. It’s important to remember that this is the most crucial element of the separation of powers. We are not ruled by Trump. At most he governs, and that in conjunctio­n with Congress.

That a Republican Congress hasn’t given Trump a major legislativ­e victory in eight months is a kind of miracle of constituti­onal design. There is much to be said about it, but put simplistic­ally, it shows that even the constituti­onal wrong of partisan gerrymande­ring can’t entirely sink the democratic system.

Republican­s have tremendous advantages in the House, but they don’t vote as a bloc — the party still spans a broad spectrum from center right to far right. The same is true in the Senate, where unequal representa­tion is built into the Constituti­on itself.

Trump’s failure to get the Affordable Care Act repealed is therefore partly caused by the constituti­onal structure itself. Ditto for his need to go to the Democrats to pass legislatio­n to keep the government funded and provide hurricane aid.

Finally, Trump’s slow, tentative movement toward the center — not in rhetoric but in action — is also a result of the constituti­onal pressure on the only nationally elected official to satisfy the median voter.

When push comes to shove, Trump has to accomplish things to get re-elected. And the nationalis­t policies pursued by Bannon aren’t realistic or advisable.

That explains the rise of the discipline­d, more moderate, even technocrat­ic generals in the administra­tion. The White House has to be run — hence Kelly taking the chief of staff role. Foreign policy actually matters — hence the survival of McMaster as national security adviser notwithsta­nding the Bannon-led coup attempt against him. Allies need reassuranc­e that “America first” doesn’t mean they will be abandoned — hence Mattis’s role as the voice of calm and continuity at the Defense Department.

This, too, is the effect of our constituti­onal system’s embrace of firstpast-the-post elections. Trump found a way to activate the far right in the election. But they can’t re-elect him on their own.

So don’t celebrate Trump. But do celebrate the Constituti­on. It’s being challenged. And it’s doing all right.

 ?? Tim Brinton ??
Tim Brinton

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