Chattanooga Times Free Press

PEOPLE WILL ULTIMATELY DETERMINE IF DONALD TRUMP IS ABOVE THE LAW

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As the week began, it looked as if Donald Trump would finally face consequenc­es — or, at least, a consequenc­e — for his actions.

Last month, a New York state trial court found the former president liable for inflating his net worth and misleading banks and insurers in order to receive favorable loans for his various businesses and commercial enterprise­s. The judge, Arthur Engoron, imposed a penalty of $454 million, to be paid into the state’s general fund. Letitia James, New York’s attorney general, gave Trump a 30-day grace period to secure bond as he pursued appeal of the judgment.

As of Sunday, Trump did not have the funds lined up.

Almost any other defendant would have to face the consequenc­es of coming to court empty-handed. It was in a criminal case, yes, but Kalief Browder — arrested at 16 for an alleged robbery — spent three years at Rikers, without trial, because his family could not afford a $3,000 bond. Not Trump. On Monday, the day the money was due, a New York appeals court said that it would accept a far smaller bond of $175 million, a significan­t and unexpected victory for the former president. He has 10 days to pay. Consequenc­es for Trump? Ah! Well.

Although Trump is entitled to an appeal, which he is pursuing, it still feels outrageous that he would get this unexplaine­d courtesy after years of willfully defrauding the public. At the same time, it feels typical of Trump’s relationsh­ip to the various institutio­ns of American life.

At no point during his long career as a celebrity real estate mogul and businesspe­rson has Trump faced any meaningful consequenc­es for his fraudulent, even criminal, behavior. He has operated for decades with a shield of impunity crafted from his shamelessn­ess, his celebrity and his craven willingnes­s to intimidate critics with litigation or even just the threat of litigation.

What is striking is the extent to which this shield of impunity has only been strengthen­ed by the political and legal institutio­ns of the United States. First and foremost among these is the Republican Party, which has never wasted a chance to thrust itself between Trump and the consequenc­es of his actions. When it was the “Access Hollywood” tape, Republican­s were there for Trump. They were there for him when it was his callous reaction to the white supremacis­t violence in Charlottes­ville, Virginia. They were there for him when he was impeached for trying to coerce the government of Ukraine into supporting his political prospects, and they were there for him when he was impeached for trying to overturn the results of the 2020 presidenti­al election.

The much-vaunted guardrails of the Constituti­on have not done much to stop Trump, either. We have the antiquated rules of the Constituti­on to thank for his elevation to the White House. And those same rules facilitate­d his effort to deny the will of the voters and retain his grasp on power. The law has not been much better.

If you helped Trump try to overturn the results of the previous election, up to and including the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, then there’s a good chance you’ve had to face your day in court. One of Trump’s lawyers, Rudy Giuliani, was ordered to pay nearly $150 million in damages relating to efforts to subvert the 2020 presidenti­al election in Georgia. Another Trump lawyer, Sidney Powell, pleaded guilty to six misdemeano­r charges relating to the effort to manufactur­e evidence of voter fraud in the same state. And this is to say nothing of the hundreds of rioters who have been charged and sentenced in federal criminal court.

So far, however, Trump has gotten away scot-free. Yes, he has been indicted in federal cases related to Jan. 6 and his handling of classified documents. But the Supreme Court has in effect delayed his trial until the fall. The judge in the documents case, Aileen Cannon, seems to be looking for any avenue that allows her to dismiss the charges against the former president, who nominated her to the federal bench in 2020.

The upshot of all of this is that whether Trump will ever face consequenc­es may well depend on the outcome of the 2024 presidenti­al election. If he wins, he’ll use his powers to pardon himself and escape legal scrutiny, at least in federal court. If he loses, then perhaps his luck will have finally run out.

As it stands, we’ll almost certainly be forced to wait on the verdict of the electorate to see if Trump ever answers for his crimes.

This, in turn, gets to one of the fundamenta­l truths of the Trump era. There is exactly one force in this country that has discipline­d Trump and held him accountabl­e for his actions. It is the public.

The American people have been the single most reliable obstacle to Trump’s effort to impose himself and his will over our institutio­ns. Let us hope that they have not given up the fight.

 ?? ?? Jamelle Bouie
Jamelle Bouie

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