All About Politics and Not the Law

When They Come for the Judges, Civil Discourse

Utah Senator Mike Lee knows better than this, which means that it’s about politics and not about the law. Specifically, it’s about letting politics trump the rule of law, the principle that there are laws that everyone, including the government, must follow. Apparently, the senator is no longer a fan.

Senator Lee, the son of Rex Lee, Solicitor General of the United States during the Reagan administration, was both an Assistant United States Attorney and a law clerk to U.S. Supreme Court Justice Sam Alito after graduating from law school. He most decidedly understands that his tweet, which implies that judges who rule against the administration are corrupt, is false.

Calling for judges to be impeached just because you don’t like their decisions is nothing short of anti-constitutional. Judicial review, the power of the courts to declare laws passed by Congress or actions taken by the president unconstitutional, is a deep-seated part of our rule of law system.

Judicial review prevents excesses by either Congress or the president. The basis for it is logical if you use the same starting point the Founding Fathers did, that men are not angels and so, we must guard against abuses of power by those in control of government.

But that’s where we are. Elon Musk, lacking the finesse of Lee, simply calls for judges to be fired, ignoring the fact that they have life tenure.

It’s unlikely that he doesn’t understand how the Constitution works in this regard. His constant repetition on this theme seems more likely an effort to destabilize the judiciary. If enough people can be convinced judges are corrupt, it is so much easier to push them out of the way; just like they down with federal law enforcement, the intelligence community, and government employees in general.

And isn’t that what this is really about? The judiciary is one of the few democratic institutions left that can interfere with the plan to place all the reins of power in the hands of the president. So when Mike Lee calls for judges to be impeached and Elon Musk responds that “it is the only way,” we know where this is headed.

I am reminded again, as we are likely to be endlessly over the course of the next few months, of the words of the German pastor and theologian Martin Niemöller, who wrote:

“First they came for the socialists, and I did not speak out—because I was not a socialist.

Then they came for the trade unionists, and I did not speak out—because I was not a trade unionist.

Then they came for the Jews, and I did not speak out—because I was not a Jew.

Then they came for me—and there was no one left to speak for me.”

The words reflected his early complicity in Nazi Germany and later change of heart.

It seems like an extreme example. But they are coming for the judges. And not just the judges. Already they have come for federal employees, transgender people, immigrants, lawyers, the press, epidemiologists, scientists, and more.

The time for all of us to speak up and join forces to protect each other is now, before it is too late.