Gulf Today

It’s a victory for American democracy: One thrilling moment took place last week in Philadelph­ia

- Trudy Rubin,

One good news story from election 2020 that has goten insufficie­nt atention is the continued independen­ce of America’s courts. Across the country, state and federal judges — appointed by both parties — have resisted President Donald Trump’s efforts to subvert the voters. From Pennsylvan­ia to Georgia to Michigan and beyond, judges have rejected false White House claims of massive fraud and chastised his lawyers for failing to present evidence.

One thrilling moment took place last week in Philadelph­ia, when federal appeals court Judge Stephanos Bibas, a Trump appointee, bluntly rejected efforts to reverse certificat­ion of Pennsylvan­ia’s voting results. “Free, fair elections are the lifeblood of our democracy,” he wrote in a unanimous decision joined by two George W. Bush appointees. “Charges require specific allegation­s and then proof. We have neither here.”

As autocrats around the world try to crush rule of law and Trump tries to subvert it, the show of judicial independen­ce by Bibas and other judges signals to the world that America’s democratic instincts remain strong.

Just compare Bibas’ rebuke with the system of “telephone justice” in Russia, a still-used Soviet term meaning officials can phone a judge and tell him how to rule.

Or take note of the ongoing tragedy in Hong Kong, where an independen­t judiciary has been the foundation of this quasi-democracy. Hong Kong courts, steeped in British judicial traditions (complete with robes and wigs), were what made Hong Kong an internatio­nal financial hub. Unlike mainland courts, they weren’t servants of the Communist Party.

But with Beijing’s recent decision to crush Hong Kong democracy, the judiciary has become a target. A new national security law passed in Beijing permits the mainland to bypass local courts, oust elected lawmakers — or even force Hong Kongers to stand trial on the mainland. Pro-democracy protesters are jailed and judges who show them lenience are denounced. Party officials call for reigning in judicial autonomy.

To Hong Kong’s mainland overlords, “rule of law” now means “rule by party laws” laid down by Beijing.

Even sadder is the democracy backslide of post-1989 democracie­s Poland and Hungary. Keep in mind that the nationalis­t leaders in both countries have been embraced by Trump.

Following Hungary’s lead, Poland’s ruling party packed its Constituti­onal Tribunal and the National Judicial Council (which appoints judges) with party loyalists. Then the so-called “muzzle law” enabled the sacking of judges who speak up for rule of law.

The repression of judicial independen­ce in Warsaw and Budapest has goten so egregious that the European Union is trying to tie their access to EU funds to their renewing respect for rule of law.

So the shining example provided by US judges in rebuffing fake Trump charges of fraud is important not just for US democracy, but to show the world that America’s judicial independen­ce has survived.

Mark Aronchick, an atorney who represente­d several Pennsylvan­ia counties, including Philadelph­ia, in election cases brought by the Trump campaign, believes they proved the health of our judicial system. “The (US) judiciary has been under a stress test for the last four years,” he told me. “But if you had any belief that all these atacks from Trump or surrogates would erode judicial independen­ce, the proof is that nothing like that happened.”

“Why did (Rudy) Giuliani not get away with it?” he asked rhetorical­ly about the Trump personal lawyer’s theatrical court performanc­es. “Because he was in a controlled legal seting where you needed to provide facts and evidence and not go in with conspiracy theories.

“In a totalitari­an country, Giuliani could make that kind of an argument to a judge. That’s not what we have here.”

Aronchick still believes that there are too many checks on the choice of federal and state judges to undermine the overall quality, no mater the party they come from and despite a few lemons. The checks, he says, include the media, bar associatio­ns, and legal veting by lawyers who take the process seriously. On the Supreme Court, he argues that Americans should take a wait and see approach to learn how the balance shakes out.

When it comes to America’s example to the world, he recalled a lecture he gave to students and faculty at Beijing’s prestigiou­s Tsinghua Law School, where the audience was convinced rule of law was quickly eroding under Trump. He cited 20 executive orders handed down by Trump that courts had mostly rejected, which were then either withdrawn or appealed. “Trump abided by the rulings,” Aronchick told the Chinese.

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