The Peterborough Examiner

Fear of constituti­onal crisis escalates in U.S.

Canadians can relate to the mounting tension

- JAMES MCCARTEN

WASHINGTON — The prospect of a constituti­onal crisis is familiar to Canadians, one that triggers feelings of dread, fear and no small measure of loathing — and now perhaps pity for the United States, which some say Donald Trump is leading toward a constituti­onal crisis of its own.

The pressure points are everywhere: a president who floats conspiracy theories to undermine the electoral process, deploys the military and pulls other executive levers purely for political gain, revokes White House media credential­s for partisan reasons and is willing to flout constituti­onal norms in replacing his attorney general.

“It does violence to the constituti­on and the vision of our founders to appoint such a person in such a manner to be the chief legal officer in our country,” the presumptiv­e new House of Representa­tives speaker Nancy Pelosi said Sunday on “Face the Nation,” of Trump’s appointmen­t of Matthew Whitaker as the acting replacemen­t for the fired Jeff Sessions.

Democrats are convinced Whitaker, who has not been confirmed by the Senate as the constituti­on requires, has been named to the role to thwart special counsel Robert Mueller’s Russia probe — something Sessions famously refused to do, frustratin­g the president by recusing himself from the investigat­ion. Lawyers in Maryland asked a federal judge Tuesday to nullify Whitaker’s appointmen­t on the grounds that he “cannot, under the constituti­on or by statute, be appointed to the position,” according to a court filing.

The U.S. Constituti­on is a robust document that’s already survived more than its share of conflict, said Ryan Hurl, a constituti­onal scholar at the University of Toronto.

“Canadians, of course, we’re concerned about the stability of the United States — it can be frightenin­g looking down south at the political scene down there. But we have to remember, the United States has been there before,” Hurl said in an interview. “There are very few eras of good feelings in the United

States. There’s a lot of intense partisan conflict; it’s happening all the time. We’re obviously experienci­ng that now. That’s still several steps away from the complete breakdown of the political system.”

The not-quite-a-crisis escalated on another front Tuesday.

CNN, which is squarely on the front lines of Trump’s war with the media, took the remarkable step of filing a lawsuit against Trump and several aides, alleging that the stripping of correspond­ent Jim Acosta’s White House credential­s last week was a gross violation of constituti­onal rights.

“The wrongful revocation of these credential­s violates CNN’s and Acosta’s First Amendment rights of freedom of the press, and their Fifth Amendment rights to due process,” the broadcaste­r said in a statement.

The basic definition of a constituti­onal crisis is when the document itself, or the institutio­ns empowered to defend it, lack a clear remedy to a problem, said Carissima Mathen, a University of Ottawa professor with particular expertise in Canadian and U.S. constituti­onal law. In Canada, examples might include a prime minister who refuses to resign after losing a confidence vote in the House of Commons, or a Governor General withholdin­g royal assent to a law duly passed by the Commons and the Senate.

Or a separation referendum in Quebec in which a bare majority voted yes on a muddy, hard-to-understand question. To head off that possibilit­y, the federal government asked the Supreme Court to lay out standards for a separation vote in 1998.

“So as long as the constituti­on provides a remedy that people are willing to respect ... you can get quite far along the line of bad behaviour without facing a true constituti­onal crisis,” Mathen said. Indeed, said Hurl, the U.S. Constituti­on is actually designed to foster clashes between the various branches of government.

“In the system of the separation of powers, the potential for conflict between the executive and the legislativ­e branch is obviously much more likely,” he said. “So what we’re really seeing here in the United States, it’s not so much constituti­onal crises per se as constituti­onal tensions that actually show how the constituti­on was meant to operate. A crisis hasn’t really formed merely because there are disagreeme­nts between the branches. There’s supposed to be disagreeme­nts between the political branches.”

It’s when elected leaders choose to circumvent the protection­s enshrined in a country’s constituti­on that problems arise, said Mathen.

 ?? OLIVIER DOULIERY TNS ?? Trump upsets the equilibriu­m.
OLIVIER DOULIERY TNS Trump upsets the equilibriu­m.

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