The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Court pick: Trump’s critiques ‘demoralizi­ng’

President continues crusade against the judicial branch.

- By Abby Phillips and Robert Barnes Washington Post

President Donald Trump’s escalating attacks on the federal judiciary drew denunciati­on Wednesday from his Supreme Court nominee, Neil Gorsuch, who told a senator that the criticism was “dishearten­ing” and “demoralizi­ng” to independen­t federal courts.

Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., said Gorsuch made the comments during a private meeting with him Wednesday, and the account was confirmed by Ron Bonjean, a member of the group guiding the judge through his confirmati­on process.

Trump on Wednesday morning declared that an appeals court’s hearing Tuesday night regarding his controvers­ial immigratio­n executive order was “disgracefu­l,” and that judges were more concerned about politics than following the law.

The remarks followed earlier

tweets from Trump disparagin­g “the so-called judge” who issued a nationwide stop to his plan and saying the ruling “put our country in such peril. If something happens blame him and court system.”

Blumenthal said Gorsuch, whom Trump nominated to the Supreme Court just over a week ago, agreed with him that the president’s language was out of line.

“I told him how abhorrent Donald Trump’s invective and insults are towards the judiciary. And he said to me that he found them ‘dishearten­ing’ and ‘demoralizi­ng’ — his words,” Blumenthal said in an interview.

Gorsuch “stated very emotionall­y and strongly his belief in his fellow judges’ integrity and the principle of judicial independen­ce,” Blumenthal added. “And I made clear to him that that belief requires him to be stronger and more explicit, more public in his views.”

The contretemp­s added another layer to the roiling nature of Trump’s young presidency. Some historians wondered if Supreme Court nominees had ever separated themselves in such a way from the president who nominated them; others tried to recall if a president had ever given a nominee reason to do so.

Less than three weeks after taking the oath of office, Trump already has a legal dispute that seems likely to arrive soon at the Supreme Court. His comments about the judiciary seem far beyond the more veiled criticism presidents usually lob at the branch, and Democrats have pointed to those comments in arguing for a close examinatio­n of Gorsuch, who has served for 10 years on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit.

Within hours of Blumenthal’s revelation of Gorsuch’s remarks, there were questions about how Trump, famously thin-skinned about criticism, would receive his nominee’s words. There was a competing theory that they were a calculated attempt by Gorsuch to assert his independen­ce.

Carrie Severino, chief counsel and policy director of the Judicial Crisis Network, a group promoting Gorsuch’s nomination, said the judge’s remarks simply confirmed what those close to Gorsuch already knew.

“He’s always been a person independen­t of the president, and it was shown by his statement,” she said.

Those on the left, meanwhile, said Gorsuch would need to do more.

“Is Gorsuch distancing himself from Trump? As we say on the Internet: LOL,” Drew Courtney of People for the American Way said in a statement. “To be clear: Donald Trump’s pattern of attacks on federal judges is more than demoralizi­ng — it’s a threat to the separation of powers and our constituti­onal system, and it’s hard to imagine a more tepid response than to call them ‘dishearten­ing.’ ”

Trump has been on a dayslong crusade against the judicial branch since U.S. District Judge James Robart of Seattle halted the administra­tion’s executive order temporaril­y halting the U.S. refugee program and barring entry to the United States from seven predominan­tly Muslim countries. A threejudge panel in the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals is deliberati­ng whether Trump’s executive order should be allowed to continue.

Speaking Wednesday at the Major Cities Chiefs Associatio­n Winter Conference in Washington, Trump said he listened to the oral arguments at the appeals court and was disappoint­ed at what he heard.

“I don’t ever want to call a court biased, so I won’t call it biased,” Trump told the group. “But courts seem to be so political, and it would be so great for our justice system if they would be able to read a statement and do what’s right.”

Trump said the arguments were “disgracefu­l” because his executive order “can’t be written any plainer or better and for us to be going through this” — he paused to mention that a judge in Boston had ruled to allow the order to continue.

Trump said the courts were standing in the way of what he was elected to do and that even “a bad student in high school” would support his policies.

“We want security,” he said. “One of the reasons I was elected was because of law and order and security. ... And they’re taking away our weapons, one by one.”

The panel of 9th Circuit judges questioned whether the administra­tion had any evidence of increased risk that would warrant the new restrictio­ns, and whether the restrictio­ns violated the law and the Constituti­on’s protection­s against religious discrimina­tion.

While it is not new for a president to disagree with the actions of another branch of government, Trump’s crusade against the federal judiciary comes before the legal process has fully played out and is unusual for its threatenin­g tone and use of personal invective.

White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer said Wednesday that the president is expressing his frustratio­n with a process that he believes should be subject to common sense.

“He respects the judiciary,” Spicer said. “It’s hard for him and for a lot of people to understand how something so clear in the law can be so misinterpr­eted.”

He added that Trump, who has a long history of punching back against his opponents both political and personal, is also speaking directly to his supporters who are looking for him to aggressive­ly deliver on his campaign promises.

“He likes to talk to his supporters, to be blunt,” Spicer added. “Part of it is that people wonder — who helped elect him — what is he doing to enact his agenda.”

Trump’s handling of the incident recalled his attacks during the presidenti­al campaign on an American judge of Mexican descent, Gonzalo Curiel, who Trump claimed could not fairly adjudicate a fraud case against now-defunct Trump University because of his ethnic heritage.

“In Trump’s world there’s a precedent where he believes a judge of Mexican heritage can’t fairly judge his case,” said longtime Republican strategist Rick Wilson, a frequent Trump critic. “It’s part of the overall pattern of the Trump White House: They want to always be on the attack. It’s not enough to say their ideas are wrong their policies are wrong; you’ve got to nuke them.”

 ?? THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Judge Neil Gorsuch (right), President Donald Trump’s pick for the Supreme Court vacancy, meets with Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C.
THE NEW YORK TIMES Judge Neil Gorsuch (right), President Donald Trump’s pick for the Supreme Court vacancy, meets with Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C.

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