Miami Herald

Trump’s legacy grows after Roe v. Wade overturned

The Supreme Court’s decision to topple the landmark ruling on abortion reinforces the ongoing impact of Donald Trump, the former president, in Washington.

- BY JILL COLVIN

President Joe Biden rarely mentions his predecesso­r by name. But as he spoke to a nation processing a seismic shift in the rights of women, he couldn’t ignore Donald Trump’s legacy.

“It was three justices named by one president — Donald Trump — who were the core of today’s decision to upend the scales of justice and eliminate a fundamenta­l right for women in this country,” Biden said Friday after the Supreme Court’s conservati­ve majority voted to overturn Roe v. Wade, the landmark ruling from 1973 that provided constituti­onal protection­s for women seeking abortions. The abortion decision marked the apex in a week that reinforced the former president’s ongoing impact in Washington more than a year and a half after he exited the White House.

A court that includes three Trumpappoi­nted conservati­ves also decided to weaken restrictio­ns on gun ownership. And across the street at the Capitol, which was ravaged by a mob of Trump supporters in the final days of his presidency in 2021, new details surfaced of his gross violations of democratic norms. The House’s Jan. 6 committee used a public hearing last week to spotlight the intense pressure that Trump put on top Justice Department officials to overturn the 2020 election, along with discussion­s of blanket pardons for cooperativ­e members of Congress.

The developmen­ts were a reminder of the awkward political bargain social conservati­ves embraced to achieve their grandest ambitions. In refusing to consider Barack Obama’s Supreme Court nominee during the final year of his presidency, then-Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., ensured that the next president would be able to make his mark on the court. As Trump pledged to trans

form the Supreme Court’s ideologica­l leanings — even providing a list of the judges he would choose from — reluctant conservati­ve Republican­s and evangelica­l Christians rallied behind Trump, a thricemarr­ied man who had previously described himself as “very pro-choice.”

“When he ran in 2016, he promised that he would appoint conservati­ve and pro-life judges to the federal courts starting with the U.S. Supreme Court. And he kept his word,” said Ralph Reed, an evangelica­l leader and chair of the The Faith and Freedom Coalition, who was criticized in some corners for his embrace of Trump. “Those in the faith community that felt it was worth taking a chance on Donald Trump in 2016 have been vindicated.”

The GOP is now at something of a turning point in its relationsh­ip with a man who has fundamenta­lly transforme­d the party with his populist, “Make America Great Again” agenda and his fight against the establishm­ent Republican­s who used to control the party. There’s a growing debate within the party about whether Trump’s resonance is beginning to fade as he lays the groundwork for a third presidenti­al run in 2024.

Other leading Republican­s, including former Vice President Mike Pence, and Trump’s former secretary of state, Mike Pompeo,

are taking increasing­ly bold steps toward White House bids of their own. And many of Trump’s own supporters are eagerly embracing Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis as Trump’s natural successor as they look to the future.

Pence, Pompeo and DeSantis are among those who have made clear that a Trump candidacy would not influence their own decisions about whether to run. If they do run, they will all be competing for support from the same conservati­ves who fueled Trump’s rise.

Trump himself seems somewhat uncertain about how to navigate the political fallout from the past week, particular­ly the abortion ruling. He has privately expressed concern to aides that the decision could energize Democrats going into the November elections, The New York Times first reported.

Indeed, in a Fox News interview after the abortion opinion was released, Trump said that, “in the end, this is something that will work out for everybody.”

Asked about his own role in the eventual decision, Trump responded that, “God made the decision.”

Trump grew more emboldened as Friday unfolded, raising money off the decision and issuing a statement in which he took full credit for what he called “the biggest WIN for LIFE in a generation.”

He said that it and “other decisions that have been announced recently, were only made possible because I delivered everything as promised, including nominating and getting three highly respected and strong Constituti­onalists confirmed to the United States Supreme Court. It was my great honor to do so!”

At a Saturday night rally, Trump took another victory lap to cheers from the crowd.

“Yesterday the court handed down a victory for the Constituti­on, a victory for the rule of law, and above all, a victory for life,” he told supporters, who broke into a chant of “Thank you Trump!.”

While Democrats are hoping the decision will galvanize its voters heading into November’s midterm elections, Michael Caputo, a former Trump campaign and White

House adviser, argued the decision would be beneficial to Trump’s future political prospects, helping to cement his standing with conservati­ve voters if he runs again.

“President Trump has been accepting his share of the credit for the Trump Court’s decision, as he should,” Caputo said.

“This is yet another confirmati­on of his transforma­tional presidency. Suburban Republican angst is a progressiv­e myth; real suburban Republican­s know their handwringi­ng is performati­ve: This decision simply moves the abortion issue to the states where it has always belonged.”

Meanwhile, the Jan. 6 committee and related investigat­ions, including a special grand jury in Fulton County, Georgia, looking at whether Trump and others illegally meddled in the 2020 election, continue to loom.

As the committee has held a series of public hearings, few Republican­s have surfaced to defend Trump’s actions, which increasing­ly drew comparison­s to President Richard Nixon’s actions during the Watergate scandal 50 years ago.

The committee last week showed how a defeated Trump tried to use the Justice Department for his own political ends, much the way Nixon fired his top ranks in the “Saturday Night Massacre” before his resignatio­n.

John Dean, who served as White House counsel to Nixon and famously testified against Nixon in hearings about the scandal, said that watching the three Trump-era Justice Department officials recount how Trump pressured them to investigat­e baseless allegation­s and threaten mass resignatio­ns brought him back to conversati­ons he had had with Nixon.

“I did fall back and was reminiscen­t of my March 21 ‘Cancer on the presidency’ conversati­on with Nixon where I kept pushing and escalating the problems. And he clearly had made up his mind,” he recounted. “Nothing I could say seemed to get through.”

He said he hoped the

Jan. 6 hearings would help the public “understand the seriousnes­s of what Trump tried to do, that he is a threat to democracy and those who support him are a threat to democracy. Authoritar­ianism and democracy just don’t work together.”

 ?? MARK HUMPHREY AP ?? Former President Donald Trump after speaking at the Faith and Freedom Coalition’s “Road to Majority” event on June 17 in Nashville, Tenn.
MARK HUMPHREY AP Former President Donald Trump after speaking at the Faith and Freedom Coalition’s “Road to Majority” event on June 17 in Nashville, Tenn.

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