Paranoia “Striking Deep” Early on In This Administration with Immigration

Early this morning I stepped outside into the thirty-degree weather we are experiencing in the Arizona desert. My across-the-street US Citizen Mexican neighbor was loading up his pickup truck to go do some landscaping work. His is one of the few pickup trucks I have seen with the backend box filled with the essentials needed to go to work. Most of the other ones I see are not working – related vehicles.

The other pickup trucks around here are akin to the toy Tonka trucks boys would play with as kids. Some have not gotten this out of their system yet. Vrooming away . . .

Anyways my neighbor does not seem to be too concerned about all of this taking place. I wonder about whether SCOTUS will slap Trump down in a few levels to the reality of:

“Hey you! You are a president and not a dictator reality.”

And then? Would Trump obey the same court that has created a pathway for him to disrespect the nation’s constitution, laws, and its citizens? The confrontation to reality is really early on in his rein, oops I meant presidency.

Center Stage: Immigration

The day started off with the Justice Department’s new management directing prosecutors to investigate, and even prosecute, what they perceive as state or local efforts to obstruct immigration enforcement.

It’s an injection of poison into the bloodstream of democracy. Trump is threatening to prosecute those who don’t go along with his plans—legal or not, consistent with state policy or not, part of their job or not. The message is, bend your will to the leader or else. That’s autocracy.

Internal DOJ memo directing federal prosecutors to investigate and prosecute their state and local partners who fail to support Trump’s immigration plans

In other words, what’s happening here is unconstitutional according to a widely venerated conservative Justice. Presumably, even an acting official at the Justice Department is capable of reading the law and knowing that what they’re ordering Justice Department employees across the country to do is contrary to well-established law.

The memo is signed by acting deputy attorney general and former Trump lawyer Emil Bove. That makes it difficult to avoid questions about whether this memo is the product of DOJ taking explicit direction on criminal cases from the White House, if not from the President himself. Even though the courts would be unlikely to let DOJ prosecute on this unconstitutional theory, that won’t stop this Justice Department from trying to coerce state and local officials into going along because it’s easier. Federal officials who are willing to can (ab)use their power to make life extremely unpleasant for officials who refuse to bend the knee. That makes the entire situation all the more disturbing.

Now, Trump’s DOJ is demanding that federal prosecutors devote even more resources to the cases, which means other cases will go undone. But they are further elevating these cases, requiring frequent reporting on statistics.

They are also requiring that any declination to prosecute a case must be reported to the Deputy Attorney General’s office, using an “urgent report,” a process for advising the DAG of ultra-important matters. Urgent reports are usually reserved for the kinds of developments an attorney general would not want to read about on the front page of the New York Times without prior warning. Not for declinations on misdemeanor cases.

It’s day three of the 2.0 Trump presidency, and we’re already talking about a constitutional crisis that is taking shape.

We’re in this together,