Los Angeles Times

Trump’s trash talk on judges

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As a candidate, Donald Trump famously impugned the integrity of a federal judge presiding over a lawsuit against Trump University, suggesting he couldn’t be impartial because of his Mexican ancestry. As president, Trump has continued to attack the independen­ce of federal judges, describing as a “so-called judge” the federal jurist who put a temporary hold on his executive order blocking travelers from seven mostly Muslim countries and suggesting that only politics or bias would lead a judge to rule against the order.

This trash talk about an independen­t branch of government is disgracefu­l. Presidents, like any other citizens, have a right to criticize decisions of the courts, and Trump’s predecesso­rs have done so, sometimes in scathing terms. Barack Obama denounced the Supreme Court’s Citizens United decision in a State of the Union address attended by most of the justices. But Trump’s comments have been different. Referring to U.S. District Judge James Robart as a “so-called judge” wasn’t just insulting; it implied that the judge lacked the authority to rule on the legality of Trump’s order.

Trump also has suggested that, by subjecting his order to legal and constituti­onal scrutiny, the judicial system might be putting the nation at risk. “The judge opens up our country to potential terrorists and others that do not have our best interests at heart,” he warned in one tweet last weekend. “Bad people are very happy!” He followed that with an even more offensive tweet: “Just cannot believe a judge would put our country in such peril. If something happens blame him and court system. People pouring in. Bad!”

Federal judges have life tenure, and they are duty-bound to ignore criticism from presidents or anyone else. Still, when presidents call into question the legitimacy of judges, or, worse, lay the groundwork for blaming them for a terrorist attack, public confidence in the courts can erode. That’s why Trump’s attacks on the judiciary are so dangerous.

They also have sullied what had been one of the few relatively rational moments of his first month in office: the nomination of an experience­d and well-respected conservati­ve federal judge to a vacancy on the U.S. Supreme Court. Judge Neil M. Gorsuch now finds himself caught between Democratic senators who demand that he denounce Trump’s attacks on his fellow judges and a president who is notoriousl­y intolerant of what he considers disloyalty.

On Wednesday, Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) said Gorsuch confided in a private conversati­on that he had found Trump’s criticism of judges “demoralizi­ng” and “dishearten­ing.” That’s hardly surprising, given Gorsuch’s stature in the legal profession and reputation for civility. But a dispute immediatel­y ensued over whether Gorsuch was referring specifical­ly to Trump’s comments or, as former Sen. Kelly Ayotte (R-N.H.), suggested, saying generally that “he finds any criticism of a judge’s integrity and independen­ce dishearten­ing and demoralizi­ng.”

Characteri­stically, Trump rushed to Twitter to accuse Blumenthal of distortion: “Sen. Richard Blumenthal, who never fought in Vietnam when he said for years he had (major lie), now misreprese­nts what Judge Gorsuch told him?” But the Washington Post reported that Blumenthal’s version of the conversati­on was vouched for Ron Bonjean, a member of the team guiding Gorsuch through his confirmati­on process.

Actually, it doesn’t matter much which version is correct: Gorsuch was reacting to Trump’s objectiona­ble comments the way any responsibl­e judge would. And he’ll no doubt have additional opportunit­ies to distance himself from Trump’s tweets at his confirmati­on hearings, because Senate Democrats are determined to get him on the record on the subject, as much to embarrass the president as to establish Gorsuch’s independen­ce from the man who appointed him. On Thursday Senate Democratic Leader Senate Leader Chuck Schumer of New York upped the ante by demanding that Gorsuch go public with his criticism of Trump: “To whisper to a senator but to refuse to say anything public is not close to good enough to show an independen­ce,” Schumer said.

Fair enough. Fortunatel­y, whatever other objection there may be to Gorsuch’s nomination, independen­ce from the president who appointed him doesn’t seem likely to be one of them. Unlike some other advisors and appointees, the judge isn’t a Trump crony, for which even the nominee’s critics should be grateful.

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