The Courts

Some history on judge appointments and what about the present with criminal defense lawyer, Emil Bove? A friend of Trump?

The Court rejected the National Industrial Recovery Act (NIRA) in the case, holding that provisions that authorized the President to approve “codes of fair competition” for the poultry industry and other industries were unconstitutional. The law would have permitted the imposition of minimum wages, prices, maximum work hours, and collective bargaining. Congress delegated a great deal of authority to the president under the law. All good things from FDR’s point of view, but not from the Courts.

The only way to become a federal judge is by being initially nominated by a sitting president. That sets up one of the fundamental conundrums of the judiciary—a judge gets there by having sufficient political pull to be appointed, but is expected to leave it behind and be fair and objective once confirmed by the Senate. There is a push and pull between the merits of selecting judges via appointment versus through elections. Both have their pluses and minuses. The expectation in the federal system is that once appointed, judges have life tenure and need fear no reprisal based on how they rule; they are free to follow the law and the facts and exclude other considerations.

“Mr. Bove ‘stressed to all in attendance that the planes needed to take off no matter what,’ according to Mr. Reuveni’s account. Mr. Bove then broached ‘the possibility that a court order would enjoin those removals before they could be effectuated.’

‘Bove stated that D.O.J. would need to consider telling the courts ‘fuck you’ and ignore any such order,’ according to the account. ‘Mr. Reuveni perceived that others in the room looked stunned, and he observed awkward, nervous glances among people in the room. Silence overtook the room.’”

Stacey Young, a former DOJ employee who is now the executive director and founder of Justice Connection, put it like this: “Erez Reuveni’s allegations aren’t unique – he is just brave enough to say publicly what many DOJ attorneys throughout the department have shared with us privately. They have been told by Department leadership that their primary duty isn’t to enforce the law or uphold the Constitution, but to advance the President’s political agenda. Emil Bove has been the enforcer – sidelining, demoting or firing employees of the highest integrity because they are perceived as disloyal. He should be nowhere near a federal bench.”

The Senate Judiciary Committee is chaired by Iowa Senator Chuck Grassley. The other Republicans on the committee are Lindsey Graham, John Cornyn, Mike Lee, Ted Cruz, Josh Hawley, Thom Tillis, John Kennedy, Marsha Blackburn, Eric Schmitt, Katie Britt, and Ashley Moody. If they belong to you, make sure you let them know how you feel about this nomination as soon as possible.

A vote for Bove, at this point, is a vote that says: It’s okay to f*** the courts; it’s acceptable to ignore decisions made by federal judges. The whistleblower reporting confirms much of what observers of this administration have increasingly suspected, given the way, for instance, in the D.V.D. case the Supreme Court ruled in last night, the government flouted a court order, paying lip service to it without complying in a transparent fashion, that everyone—except apparently the conservative majority on the Supreme Court—saw through. We may have a president who doesn’t believe in having courts that fulfill their constitutional role, but that’s no way to run a democracy. And it’s all the more reason to demand that senators reject Bove’s nomination.

Senators may think voters have short memories and the midterm elections are a long way off, but this is an electorate that marches carrying “due process” signs. We understand the courts matter.

In the first Trump Administration, after Trump lost the election and was desperate to use his false claims of election fraud to overturn the will of the voters, he tried to install the head of the Environment and Natural Resources Division, Jeffrey Clark, as the Attorney General. As we learned during the January 6 Committee hearings, the reason was that Clark was willing to push Trump’s lies about election fraud, putting the weight of the Justice Department behind them. Now we are in Trump 2.0, and Trump has a new Clark, Emil Bove, who, if the whistleblower allegations are true, is willing to put his loyalty to the president ahead of his loyalty to the rule of law. These allegations will be tested in the Senate confirmation process, and if they hold up, he doesn’t belong on the bench.

Republicans are about to tell us if they still believe in the rule of law. Let’s make sure they know we’re waiting for the answer, and we will hold them accountable for it.

We’re in this together,