…It makes sense that there is still a lot of interest in
understanding Project 2025. When has Donald Trump ever lied to the public? If
his claim that he has no connection to Project 2025 is true, then it’s pretty
amazing that he was able to force Paul Dans, who was running the Project at the
Heritage Foundation, to step down and end the Project.
Dans was the Chief of Staff at the Office of Personnel
Management during the Trump Administration. There is still good reason for the
public to pay attention to Project 2025. In
any event, we had a fascinating conversation last night that you
can watch on YouTube in its entirety if you missed it.
But I wanted to share with you one part of our conversation
that I think was especially important. Congressman Raskin stalked out this
territory: it’s no longer appropriate to refer to Trump Republicans and to the
faction of the Supreme Court appointed by Republican presidents as
“conservatives.”
That old-timey word implies a legitimacy that the
unprincipled members of the cult of personality don’t deserve. This is
something I’ve been thinking about and having conversations with colleagues
about for the last couple of weeks.
As someone who believes in the rule of law and believes it’s
critical to the health of our democracy, it’s painful to acknowledge that
what’s happening at the Supreme Court isn’t business as usual judges deciding
close cases on the basis of legitimate differences of opinion over how to apply
guiding principles. But it would be even worse to fail to acknowledge it.
Precedent is dead at the Court, at least insofar as
sidestepping it is necessary to protect Donald Trump. Whether it’s the 14th
Amendment case that ignored the plain language of the Constitution, or the
presidential immunity case where the Court created a safe harbor from criminal
prosecution for Donald Trump that the Constitution doesn’t give voice to, it’s
hard to avoid the conclusion that the Court is behaving like an unelected
political body.
The Court itself hasn’t given us reason to. As an
institution, it has refused to address clear abuses by Justices Thomas and
Alito, adopting a nonbinding ethics code but not using it to rectify what is
wrong. Its decisions have split along ideological lines where Trump’s interests
are concerned.
So much for the notion that there is a “conservative wing” of
the Court. As columnist and founding editor of the National Review Online Jonah
Goldberg wrote in 2020, “For most Americans, conservatism
basically means the stuff Republicans are for, and liberalism means whatever
Democrats are for. I don’t mean this as a criticism, just a statement of
fact.” Today, the “stuff” Republicans are for is Trump.
It’s important that we use more precise language to convey
that the decisions made by the MAGA faction on the Supreme Court are
unprincipled and the people who make them have abandoned the rule of law and
the Constitution in the service of Donald Trump. They will let us slip into his
authoritarian rule if he is reelected, and they may well have some say in the
outcome of the presidential race. We cannot gloss over that reality.
That means that the language we use is critical. I’m working
on exorcising “conservative” from my vocabulary when talking about these
Justices or elected politicians. Representative Raskin suggested that we use
the term “neo-monarchical” to describe them, which seems precise.
My husband, who I shared the conversation with, said his word
is “corrupt.” That fits too. How have you been describing it? I’m still trying
to decide exactly what words to use, and this feels like the kind of thing
we’re good at hashing out together.
The conversation with Representative Huffman and
Representative Raskin was uplifting despite the dark topic. Two members of
Congress took an hour out of their day to talk with not just their own
constituents but with people from across the country about a topic of serious
importance to all of us. In a time when Americans need examples of good
leadership, this is a shining one.
At the opposite end of the spectrum, today is the
one-year anniversary of Trump’s indictment in the District of Columbia for
trying to steal the 2020 election. Although Trump is the only defendant in that
case, he obviously did not act alone.
DOJ lawyer Jeffrey Bossert Clark, a Trump co-defendant in the
Fulton County case, was the acting Assistant Attorney General for the Civil
Division who was willing to sacrifice DOJ to support Trump’s fake claims of
voter fraud. Clark pressured the leadership at DOJ to get on board with Trump
or step aside so he could be appointed acting AG.
That culminated in a contentious meeting at the White House
with Trump that we heard testimony about during the January 6 committee
hearing. Clark was a proponent of the plan to have Republican-controlled
legislatures appoint Trump electors in states where President Biden was the
winner. If there is anyone who merits prosecution alongside Trump, it’s the
lawyer who took an oath to uphold the Constitution but was willing to corrupt
the Justice Department to shred it.
Like a number of Trump’s other lawyers, Clark is also facing
disbarment proceedings. We learned today that the District of
Columbia Bar hearing committee assigned to the matter recommended that Clark be suspended from practicing
law for two years rather than the recommending disbarment, despite finding that
Clark’s conduct threatened to destabilize the country. Disbarment would have
been a far more appropriate remedy.
This is not the final decision. The matter now goes to the
Bar’s Board of Professional Responsibility, which will make a recommendation to
the D.C. Courts after it reviews it, a process that could take another year
before it’s complete and discipline is imposed. Meanwhile, Clark is frequently
mentioned as a possible Attorney General pick for Trump.
And why not? There’s every reason to believe he would
continue to do Trump’s bidding. Clark is one of those loose ends that is yet to
be tied up almost four years after the insurrection. While his future is
uncertain, it is clear he is not a conservative. He is a Trumpist.
So, when we’re talking about neo-monarchical Trumpists, I’m
working on purging the word “conservative” from my vocabulary. Because that’s
not what they are.
We’re in this together,
Joyce Vance
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