Democracia y PolíticaJusticia

The New Yorker: El Tribunal Supremo, por ahora, está jugando un papel central en desacreditar de Donald Trump

Donald Trump greeting Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh.
Hasta ahora, los gambitos legales de Trump han salido mal parados en el Tribunal Supremo, a pesar de que un tercio de los jueces fueron propuestos por él. Photograph by Al Drago / Getty 

En un decisión anodina y de una sola frase, el Tribunal Supremo rechazó este jueves la petición del expresidente Donald Trump de que el máximo tribunal del país interviniera en la lucha legal por los documentos incautados en su casa de Mar-a-Lago. El fallo se produjo el mismo día en que el comité selecto de la Cámara de Representantes que investiga la insurrección del 6 de enero citó a Trump a declarar ante el Congreso sobre sus acciones de ese día. Trump reaccionó emitiendo un comunicado de cuatro páginas, con un apéndice de diez, en el que afirmaba falsamente que las elecciones de 2020 estaban «amañadas y robadas», llamaba a los miembros del comité «matones políticos altamente partidistas» y amenazaba con vengarse. «El pueblo de este país no soportará una justicia desigual bajo la ley, o la Libertad y la Justicia para algunos», escribió Trump. «Se acerca el día de las elecciones. Exigimos respuestas sobre el Crimen del Siglo».

La derrota del ex presidente en el Tribunal Supremo no fue una sorpresa. Los analistas jurídicos habían dicho que el Tribunal probablemente rechazaría su petición de que sus abogados tuvieran acceso a los ciento tres documentos clasificados que los funcionarios del Departamento de Justicia consideraban los más sensibles entre los aproximadamente once mil recuperados. Sus abogados también argumentaron que el tribunal federal de apelaciones que recientemente falló contra Trump carecía de jurisdicción para hacerlo. «Trump está pidiendo al Tribunal Supremo un alivio tan pequeño que resulta casi difícil de describir, y lo hace basándose en un argumento legal increíblemente técnico», escribió Steve Vladeck, profesor de Derecho de la Universidad de Texas, antes de que el Tribunal emitiera su fallo. «Sencillamente, debido a que sus abogados se están ciñendo (inteligentemente) a argumentos legales plausibles en lugar de a las fantasías conspirativas de su cliente y sus partidarios, es probable que la incursión del Tribunal Supremo llegue a muy poco».

Hasta ahora, los gambitos legales de Trump han salido mal parados en el Tribunal, a pesar de que un tercio de los jueces fueron propuestos por él. El Tribunal rechazó múltiples impugnaciones respaldadas por Trump para las elecciones de 2020, y rechazó su petición de que el comité del 6 de enero no tuviera acceso a ciertos documentos de la Casa Blanca. Sin embargo, la frenética búsqueda de Trump de jueces amigos continuará sin descanso. «Dudo mucho que sea el final», me dijo Vladeck, a principios de esta semana. «Tiene pocos incentivos para no intentar llevar cada una de sus derrotas al Tribunal Supremo, no porque sus probabilidades de ganar sean buenas, sino porque ayuda tanto a retrasar como a ofuscar las sentencias adversas contra él en los tribunales inferiores.»

Jake Grumbach, profesor de ciencias políticas en la Universidad de Washington, dijo que hay una lógica política en el enfoque de Trump. Las incesantes batallas legales, desde el Tribunal Supremo a los tribunales federales, pasando por los tribunales estatales y locales, son una ganancia política para el ex presidente. Si un juez falla a su favor, dirá que eso demuestra que el Departamento de Justicia y el FBI le persiguen. Si Trump pierde en los tribunales, dirá que los jueces le persiguen. Aileen Cannon, una jueza federal de Florida a la que Trump nombró en sus últimos meses de mandato, parece haber fallado repetidamente a su favor, lo que ha provocado los aplausos de los partidarios del expresidente. El viernes, el Departamento de Justicia pidió al Tribunal de Apelaciones del Undécimo Circuito, en Atlanta, que anule una de esas decisiones.

Grumbach advirtió que los líderes autoritarios han utilizado tácticas similares para tratar de deslegitimar los tribunales de sus países a los ojos del público -o, al menos, de sus más fervientes seguidores-. «También existe la dinámica política de un hombre fuerte que argumenta que es perseguido y que el Estado de Derecho no debería aplicarse a él«, dijo Grumbach. «Esta es una característica histórica común del liderazgo autoritario». Como ha escrito mi colega Andrew Marantz, el presidente Viktor Orbán, de Hungría, ha consolidado el poder no cerrando los tribunales, sino debilitándolos y desacreditándolos gradualmente. Su gobierno ha tachado de «traidores» a los jueces que han fallado en su contra, y ha amenazado con despedir a un juez que supervisaba las investigaciones sobre corrupción de miembros del partido de Orbán.

Los expertos jurídicos creen que las sentencias de los tribunales de aquí a las elecciones de 2024 desempeñarán un papel fundamental a la hora de determinar si Estados Unidos sale de la era Trump o continúa por la vía autoritaria. El Tribunal Supremo dictaminó por unanimidad, en 1974, que el presidente Richard Nixon no podía negarse a entregar pruebas -específicamente, grabaciones del Despacho Oval- en una investigación penal durante el escándalo Watergate. La sentencia, a la que se sumaron cuatro jueces nombrados por Nixon, contribuyó a asegurar su caída. Las sentencias de al menos treinta y ocho jueces nombrados por los republicanos, entre ellos varios designados por Trump, que desestimaron las afirmaciones del ex presidente de que las elecciones de 2020 habían sido robadas, desempeñaron un papel fundamental a la hora de frustrar su esfuerzo por impedir que Joe Biden asumiera el cargo. Vladeck argumentó que los doscientos veintiséis jueces federales en activo que Trump nombró -de un total de aproximadamente ochocientos jueces federales- tienen una responsabilidad clave en la defensa de la democracia y la independencia de los tribunales. «Por eso es tan importante no solo que esté perdiendo en los tribunales, sino que esté perdiendo ante los jueces y magistrados que nombró«, dijo Vladeck. «Es mucho más difícil para él presentarse como la víctima de un poder judicial que lo persigue cuando sus propios designados se suman a las decisiones en su contra».

David Laufman, ex alto funcionario del Departamento de Justicia, dijo que el propio Trump representa una amenaza existencial para la democracia estadounidense. Coincidió con Vladeck en que es fundamental que los jueces nombrados por Trump, en particular los del Tribunal Supremo, sigan fallando contra él cuando lo amerite. También advirtió que, si Trump vuelve al Despacho Oval, nombrará a más leales en los tribunales. «No puedo pensar en nada que sea más corrosivo para la democracia estadounidense que cuando el poder judicial se utiliza como un arma política en lugar de ser un árbitro neutral de los hechos que gobierna sin miedo ni favor», dijo Laufman. «Podríamos sobrevivir al daño de los últimos cuatro años, pero si tuviéramos cuatro años más de Trump nombrando jueces, incluidos los del Tribunal Supremo, estaríamos fritos».

 

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NOTA ORIGINAL:

THE NEW YORKER

The Supreme Court, for Now, Is Playing a Central Role in Discrediting Donald Trump

But the former President will continue to search relentlessly for friendly judges nationwide between now and 2024.
David Rohde
Donald Trump greeting Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh.
So far, Trump’s legal gambits have fared poorly at the Supreme Court, even though a third of the Justices are his appointees.Photograph by Al Drago / Getty 

In a bland, single-sentence order on Thursday, the Supreme Court rejected a request from former President Donald Trump that the country’s highest tribunal intervene in the legal fight over the documents seized from his Mar-a-Lago home. The ruling came on the same day that the House select committee investigating the January 6th insurrection subpoenaed Trump to testify before Congress about his actions that day. Trump reacted by issuing a four-page statement, with a ten-page appendix, that falsely claimed that the 2020 election was “Rigged and Stolen,” called the committee members “highly partisan political Hacks and Thugs,” and threatened revenge. “The people of this Country will not stand for unequal justice under the law, or Liberty and Justice for some,” Trump wrote. “Election Day is coming. We demand answers on the Crime of the Century.”

The former President’s Supreme Court loss was no surprise. Legal analysts had said the Court would likely reject his request that his lawyers be given access to the hundred and three classified documents that Justice Department officials considered the most sensitive among the roughly eleven thousand retrieved. His lawyers also argued that the federal appeals court that recently ruled against Trump lacked the jurisdiction to do so. “Trump is asking the Supreme Court for relief so small as to make it almost difficult to describe, and he’s doing it based upon an incredibly technical legal argument,” Steve Vladeck, a law professor at the University of Texas, wrote, before the Court issued its ruling. “Simply put, because his lawyers are (smartly) sticking to plausible legal arguments rather than the conspiratorial fantasies of their client and his supporters, the Supreme Court foray is likely to amount to very little.”

So far, Trump’s legal gambits have fared poorly at the Court, even though a third of the Justices are his appointees. The Court rejected multiple Trump-backed challenges to the 2020 election, and it rejected his request that the January 6th committee be denied access to certain White House documents. Trump’s frenetic search for friendly judges, though, will continue unabated. “I very much doubt it’s the end,” Vladeck told me, earlier this week. “He has little incentive not to try to take each of his losses to the Supreme Court—not because his odds of winning are good but because it helps to both delay and obfuscate the adverse rulings against him in the lower courts.”

Jake Grumbach, a professor of political science at the University of Washington, said that there is a political logic to Trump’s approach. Ceaseless legal battles, from the Supreme Court to federal courts to state and local courts, are a political win-win for the former President. If a judge rules in his favor, he’ll say it shows that the Justice Department and the F.B.I. are persecuting him. If Trump loses in court, he’ll say that judges are persecuting him. Aileen Cannon, a federal judge in Florida whom Trump appointed in his final months in office, has appeared to have repeatedly ruled in his favor, prompting plaudits from the former President’s supporters. On Friday, the Justice Department asked the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit, in Atlanta, to overrule one of those decisions.

Grumbach warned that authoritarian leaders have used similar tactics to try to delegitimize their countries’ courts in the eyes of the public—or, at the least, of their most fervent followers. “There is also the political dynamic of a political strongman arguing that he is persecuted, and that the rule of law should not apply to him,” Grumbach said. “This is a common historical feature of authoritarian leadership.” As my colleague Andrew Marantz has written, President Viktor Orbán, of Hungary, has consolidated power not by shuttering the courts but by gradually weakening and discrediting them. His government has dismissed judges who ruled against him as traitors,” and threatened to fire a judge overseeing investigations into corruption by members of Orbán’s party.

Legal experts believe that court rulings between now and the 2024 election will play a central role in determining whether the United States emerges from the Trump era or continues down an authoritarian route. The Supreme Courruled unanimously, in 1974, that President Richard Nixon could not refuse to hand over evidence—specifically, Oval Office recordings—in a criminal investigation during the Watergate scandal. The ruling, which was joined by four Justices appointed by Nixon, helped to insure his downfall. Rulings from at least thirty-eight Republican-appointed judges, including several Trump appointees, that dismissed the former President’s claims that the 2020 election was stolen played a central role in thwarting his effort to block Joe Biden from taking office. Vladeck argued that the two hundred and twenty-six active federal judges whom Trump appointed—out of a total of roughly eight hundred federal judges—have a key responsibility to defend democracy and the independence of the courts. “This is why it’s so important not only that he’s losing in court but that he’s losing before judges and Justices he appointed,” Vladeck said. “It’s much harder for him to portray himself as the victim of a judiciary that’s out to get him when his very own appointees are joining the decisions against him.”

Last month, two Trump appointees on the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals, Judges Britt C. Grant and Andrew L. Brasher, joined a Barack Obama appointee, Judge Robin S. Rosenbaum, in overruling decisions by Judge Cannon that largely halted the Justice Department’s criminal investigation into whether Trump had mishandled classified documents. The three-judge panel ruled that Trump had provided “no evidence” that he had declassified the documents when he was President, and dismissed another of his legal arguments as a “red herring.” Vladeck said the fact that Trump had appointed two of those judges appeared to reduce criticism of the ruling from the former President’s supporters. He added, “It’s hard to believe that, had the Eleventh Circuit panel had a different composition, we wouldn’t have heard a lot more from Trump and his supporters about who appointed the judges and why they can’t be trusted.”

Ilya Somin, a law professor at George Mason University, cited another factor in Trump’s legal setbacks: the claims and positions that Trump and his allies have adopted regarding the 2020 election and the Mar-a-Lago search have bordered on the legally ludicrous. “In some cases, Trump and his supporters make arguments that are so lame that almost any judge would turn them down,” he told me. Yet court rulings against Trump appear to have had little impact so far on his political base. Despite the uniform rejection of Trump’s false 2020 election claims, a majority of Republicans, according to opinion polls, do not believe that Joe Biden was legitimately elected President.

Aziz Huq, a law professor at the University of Chicago, said that the courts, no matter how they rule, cannot single-handedly ease the country’s polarization: “In a world where over the last twenty-five years the national political scene has become more polarized, the Court, no matter what it does, is going to be seen as biased on one side or the other.” That is particularly true of the current Court. Earlier this month, a poll found that only forty per cent of Americans approve of its performance. Nevertheless, Huq added, the courts, more broadly, along with universities and the news media, play a vital and constructive role in a democracy by determining basic facts needed for substantive political debate. The courts rule, for example, whether a government policy has proved effective at reducing a public harm, or that an individual is guilty or innocent of a crime, or that a law is constitutional or not. “A standard view of democracy is that it’s not just that you have elections,” Huq said. “You also need a number of institutions that are providing ground truth so we can have a debate about fact.”

David Laufman, a former senior Justice Department official, said that Trump himself represents an existential threat to American democracy. He agreed with Vladeck that it is critical that Trump-appointed judges, particularly those on the Supreme Court, continue to rule against him when merited. He also warned that, if Trump returns to the Oval Office, he will appoint more loyalists to the courts. “I can’t think of anything that would be more corrosive to American democracy than when the judiciary is used as a political weapon instead of being a neutral arbiter of fact that rules without fear or favor,” Laufman said. “We might survive the damage of the last four years, but if we had four more years of Trump appointing judges, including Supreme Court judges, we would be toast.”

 

 

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