Federal Judges Warn Of The Dire Threat To Democracy

A lot of things happened. Here are some of the things. This is TPM’s Morning Memo. Sign up for the email version.

The Judicial System Is Failing Democracy

In retrospect, I came into the Trump era with way too much confidence that the legal system was up to the task. The last eight years have been humbling in that regard.

As a lawyer-turned-editor, I cautioned my reporting team not to be impatient with the pace and deliberation of legal processes. These things take time. Don’t be hot-headed about it. Chill out. Let things run their course.

The sometimes plodding pace of the system is by design, more a feature than a bug. There’s an entire vernacular around the downsides of too-swift justice: “rough justice,” “lynch mob,” “show trial,” “railroaded.” The list is long.

In the early days of the Trump presidency, efforts to obtain his tax returns or enforce the Emoluments Clause were slow, clumsy, and sometimes reluctantly undertaken by Democrats in Congress. I was inclined to excuse that slowness. But as the threat mounted and become more obvious and the reaction to it failed to rise to the challenge, my own sense of urgency began to change.

When the travesties of the Trump presidency accumulated and potential accountability shifted from the political to legal realms, especially after the Jan. 6 attack, I feared that the legal system was more inclined to sweep it all under the rug than confront it. A lot of our coverage was focused on framing the Jan. 6 attack as merely the culmination of a broad, months-long conspiracy to subvert the election. While the attack on the Capitol did historic damage and finally started to stir law enforcement into action, over-focusing on the physical attack would miss the myriad other ways the election had been subverted using the powers of the executive branch.

In the years since, it has become obvious that the slowness of the legal system isn’t merely the result of a careful, deliberative adherence to the rule of law and the procedural protections necessary to do proper justice. It is also a product of a wariness in confronting Trump and his legions of supporters, an unreasonable tendency to give him the benefit of the doubt, the judiciary’s own overweening sense that it is above politics, and a fundamental failure to appreciate that a strongman who attempted to seize power unlawfully once is a threat to the very existence of the legal system itself.

When the legal system itself is under threat, it must respond with extraordinary measures that continue to protect the procedural and substantive rights of the individual defendant but girds the system against attack, prioritizes institutional self-preservation, and is self-conscious of its role as a bulwark of democracy.

Some individual jurists, like U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan, who only got the Trump Jan. 6 case last August, have performed admirably. The legal system as a whole has not. The former chief judge in DC warned last fall that we are “at a crossroads teetering on the brink of authoritarianism.” During the sentencing yesterday of Trump White House official Peter Navarro, U.S. District Judge Amit Mehta called bullshit on it being a “political prosecution.” Also yesterday, in the sentencing of a Jan. 6 rioter, U.S. District Judge Royce Lamberth, a long-serving Reagan appointee, let it rip:

The Court is accustomed to defendants who refuse to accept that they did anything wrong. But in my thirty-seven years on the bench, I cannot recall a time when such meritless justifications of criminal activity have gone mainstream. I have been dismayed to see distortions and outright falsehoods seep into the public consciousness. I have been shocked to watch some public figures try to rewrite history, claiming rioters behaved “in an orderly fashion” like ordinary tourists, or martyrizing convicted January 6 defendants as “political prisoners” or even, incredibly, “hostages.” That is all preposterous. But the Court fears that such destructive, misguided rhetoric could presage further danger to our country.

Six months ago, it looked like the first weeks of the new year would be dominated not by the GOP primary but by pretrial preparations for a whopping four criminal trials of Trump. The race was finally on to hold Trump to account for his cheating in the last two elections before he cheated in a third one. As we sit here at the end of January, the landscape is not what we anticipated.

The Mar-a-Lago case is almost guaranteed to happen after the election. So is the Georgia RICO case. The Jan. 6 case is stuck on pretrial appeals, with the DC Circuit and Supreme Court failing to push things along. The lesser of the four cases – the hush money case in New York – may be the only one tried before the election. Meanwhile, there’s a chance Trump will be brought down by the Disqualification Clause but no one is confident the courts will enforce that against him either.

I’ve gone from annoyed about the repeated complaints about the slowness of the system to sharing those sentiments myself to having my hair on fire that the gravity of the moment calls for so much more than the legal system is prepared to offer. In a way this a mea culpa for urging my staff over the last few years to chill out. Things have not been this urgent since the 1860s. And we’re failing.

Editor’s Note

I dispensed with the usual rundown of the day’s news to focus on the alarming lack of responsiveness from the legal system to the current threat it faces. Normal programming will resume Monday.

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The Post-Jan. 6 Far Right Poses An Increasingly Severe Threat To The LGBTQ+ Community

This article is part of TPM Cafe, TPM’s home for opinion and news analysis. 

Threats to our humanity, and to our democracy, come in many forms. The possibility of nuclear destruction, the natural or non-natural spread of biological toxins, and environmental threats to our planet are all existential threats to our country’s future. Now we must put the extreme radical right in the same category. Americans are increasingly turning on one another, a serious problem I have often discussed in the classroom with my graduate students and in public writing. No one understands this reality better than the communities who have been targeted by the resurgent right, which has, especially in recent years, focused its ire on LGBTQ+ Americans.

The anniversary of January 6 just passed us. It will be remembered as a clarifying moment, when the right’s most violent extremists  joined together with MAGA die-hards to storm the Capitol to achieve a political end through violence. They were unsuccessful, but make no mistake: This movement did not leave with Trump’s unwilling departure from office, and the interplay between violence and politics continues to hang over our democracy. While January 6 occurred over the course of one day, every day someone in the LGBTQ+ community faces discrimination, protests, or, increasingly, violence.

In 2022, the number of anti-LGBTQ+ protests tripled, according to data from the Armed Conflict Location and Event Data Project. The rise accounted for much of the increase in U.S. far-right activity measured by the group that year. Such protests did not abate throughout 2023, either, or in these first weeks of 2024. NPR reported in June that Los Angeles-area school board meetings on inclusivity issues had prompted protests that at times turned violent; the New York Times reported in November that a far-right hate group intended to protest the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day parade because of the inclusion of nonbinary Broadway performers. These public displays of hate attract attention, but they are the tip of an iceberg: More than 36,000 people signed, at the urging of an extremist group, a petition to protest the Macy’s parade because “it will expose tens of millions of viewers at home to the liberal LGBTQ+ agenda.” While protests and petitions are forms of free speech and are protected by the 1st Amendment, the intent behind these types of activities are to stifle the freedoms of the LGBTQ+ community. The intent, simply put, is to force the LGBTQ+ community into hiding.

Protesters gather outside the Glendale Unified School District headquarters in Glendale, California, on June 20, 2023. Over 300 people gathered outside the Glendale Unified School District headquarters, as protests continued over the issue of teaching children about same-sex parents and queer issues. (Photo by DAVID SWANSON / AFP) (Photo by DAVID SWANSON/AFP via Getty Images)

The same sort of us-versus-them, anti-LGBTQ+ rhetoric has increasingly saturated Republican politics, and become common among members of Congress — including the recently elevated Speaker of the House, Mike Johnson. Johnson’s views on the LGBTQ+ community are menacing, and go back decades. In 2005, Johnson said, “if someone’s trapped in a homosexual lifestyle, it’s dangerous.” Simply put, Johnson’s rhetoric encourages his audience to see LGBTQ+ individuals as a threat, and can have the unintended effect of normalizing violence. Johnson’s op-eds have gone so far as to cast LGBTQ+ individuals as an existential threat to America, saying that “homosexuality will destroy the democratic system.” This is the language of othering — designed to stoke fears and foster behavior that motivates people to action. Johnson has never disavowed his antiquated and dangerous views, despite his new job in the presidential line of succession.

Data behind the rising tide of anti-LGBTQ+ hate in America shows it’s not just exemplified by protests and political rhetoric. Violent acts against LGBTQ+ people have also significantly increased. Last year, in California, a woman was shot and killed because she displayed a gay pride flag. Nearly one year prior, on November 19, 2022, an individual, using an AR-15 style assault rifle, opened fire on people at an LGBTQ+ nightclub in Colorado Springs, killing five and injuring 17. These incidents are not outliers. Indeed, reports released by the Institute for Strategic Dialogue and the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) found that there has been a significant rise in violence against the LGBTQ+ community in 2023.

The ADL reported that there were 350 incidents of harassment against the LGBTQ+ community between June 2022 and April 2023, and further explained that the uptick coincided with an increase in rhetoric and legislation aimed at demonizing the LGBTQ+ community. For example, failed Republican presidential candidate and Florida Governor Ron DeSantis spearheaded an initiative to revoke special business privileges to Disney because it would not comply with DeSantis’s “Don’s Say Gay” law that is aimed at prohibiting discussion on sexual orientation and gender identity. At the same time, we’ve seen extremist groups like Moms for Liberty vilify the LGBTQ+ community, taking the fight full throttle at public schools throughout the country. In Oklahoma, the recent appointment to an Education Department advisory committee of a right-wing firebrand and LGBTQ+ hating book banner, Chaya Raichik of “Libs of TikTok,” is a case study of the GOP’s efforts to exert control over education. These politicians and activists, either explicitly or tacitly, through true belief or cynical political calculation, normalize the wrongdoing of violent right-wing actors who are trying to dehumanize and erase LGBTQ+ Americans, our neighbors and friends, from our streets, schools, stores, and country.

A message reading “Thank you for standing up for what’s right” is seen among flowers at a makeshift memorial outside the Mag.Pi clothing store in Cedar Glen, near Lake Arrowhead, California, on August 21, 2023. The owner of the store, Laura Ann Carleton, was fatally shot on August 18 by a man who “made several disparaging remarks about a rainbow flag” displayed outside her store, according to the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s department. The suspect was later killed during an encounter with deputies. (Photo by Robyn Beck / AFP) (Photo by ROBYN BECK/AFP via Getty Images)

Like many right-wing causes, the growing movement against LGBTQ+ people in the U.S. isn’t really a coherent one. But there is a synergy between anti-LGBTQ+ politicians, activist groups, and fringe, violent extremists that is intensifying and may become a movement that will be difficult to confront and stop. The forthcoming 2024 election cycle and recent developments at the House of Representatives, such as the rise of a little-known political figure, Johnson, to the position of speaker of the house, are combustible ingredients that will raise threat-levels for all of us in this country, especially those in the LGBTQ+ community.

Very simply, the very extreme right in America poses an existential threat to the LGBTQ+ community, and to our democracy. Threats to the LGTBQ+ community are diffuse and varied, but they are united in one thing — blinded hatred. Politicians who traffic in the same rhetoric are playing with fire. Lawmakers at every level — federal, state, and local — need to recognize this and finally push back against the ugly tide of othering that truly threatens the tapestry of free expression and individuality, a right that every citizen should be able to peacefully enjoy.

Some threats we have no control over, like natural disasters; however, some, like voting for candidates who can make change to protect our humanity, we can control. Whatever hurts our LGBTQ+ communities hurts all of us. The 2024 elections can be the start of making positive changes to the leadership in Congress where we can replace othering with belonging while respecting and supporting our differences.

Arizona Senate Race Looking More And More Promising For Democrats 

A couple tantalizing data points have made the Senate seat currently held by Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (I-AZ) look like an increasingly bright spot for Democrats amid an unquestionably tough cycle. 

Continue reading “Arizona Senate Race Looking More And More Promising For Democrats “

Flaunting, Not Flouting: Abbott Stages Big Show Along Border After SCOTUS Rules Against Him

Texas Governor Greg Abbott (R) has done nearly everything except what his supporters on the right are praising him for: defy the Supreme Court and the Biden administration.

Continue reading “Flaunting, Not Flouting: Abbott Stages Big Show Along Border After SCOTUS Rules Against Him”

Trump Gives Minutes-Long Testimony, Speaks Out Of Turn, Mutters ‘This Is Not America’

Former President Donald Trump was called by his lawyer to testify in his own defense in E. Jean Carroll’s civil defamation case this afternoon, and the proceedings quickly went off the rails. The former president spoke out of turn, made remarks that had to be struck from the record, and muttered about being persecuted on his way out the door.

Continue reading “Trump Gives Minutes-Long Testimony, Speaks Out Of Turn, Mutters ‘This Is Not America’”

Navarro Sentenced To 4 Months In Prison For Refusing To Comply With Jan 6 Subpoena

Former White House adviser Peter Navarro was sentenced to four months in prison Thursday for criminal contempt of Congress after he defied subpoenas for testimony from the House Jan. 6 select committee when it was investigating the attack on the Capitol in 2022, according to Politico and AP reporters in the room. 

Continue reading “Navarro Sentenced To 4 Months In Prison For Refusing To Comply With Jan 6 Subpoena”

Romney: Trump Killing Immigration Deal To Keep Using Border Against Biden ‘Appalling’

Sen. Mitt Romney (R-UT), armed with the candor of a politician nearing the end of his career, on Thursday denounced Donald Trump’s efforts to wave Republican senators off an immigration deal so the former president can keep using the border as a cudgel against President Joe Biden.

Continue reading “Romney: Trump Killing Immigration Deal To Keep Using Border Against Biden ‘Appalling’”

Trump Wants Haley Gone Like Yesterday. Did He Mention That?

Conventional wisdom can evolve in unexpected and unpredictable ways. Conventional wisdom isn’t necessarily valid, of course. The “conventional” label hints that it’s probably not, or at least that it’s incomplete. But conventional wisdom, regardless of its merits, can shape how real world events are perceived and thus the reality of how they unfold. I say all this as preface to note that the day-after reactions to the New Hampshire primary results seemed a bit different from what we heard and saw that night.

Kate Riga mentioned this in the podcast episode we recorded yesterday. We heard all these wild things on Tuesday night about Trump’s resounding victory, how the nomination race is essentially over. And of course it is over if we’re talking about whether or not Trump is going to be the nominee. But I’m seeing more and more comment from the insider commentators and newsletters finally getting around to the idea that while these results almost certainly lock down the nomination, they show general election weakness rather than strength.

Continue reading “Trump Wants Haley Gone Like Yesterday. Did He Mention That?”

Ralph Norman Has No Regrets About His Call For ‘Marshall Law’

A lot of things happened. Here are some of the things. This is TPM’s Morning Memo. Sign up for the email version.

Ralph ‘Marshall Law’ Norman Is Still At It

It’s been more than a year since TPM first revealed the now-infamous “Marshall Law” text that Rep. Ralph Norman (R-SC) sent Trump White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows three days before Biden’s inauguration – and Norman can’t seem to get his story straight.

In December 2022, when we first reported on the text, Norman asked us to send him the text to review then never got back to us.

In January 2023, Norman told a local newspaper in South Carolina, “Obviously, Martial Law was never warranted.”

But then yesterday on CNN, Norman said his only regret about the text was misspelling “martial.”

Peter Navarro To Be Sentenced Today

Prosecutors are seeking a six-month sentence today for Trump White House official Peter Navarro’s contempt of Congress conviction. Navarro failed to comply with a subpoena from the Jan. 6 committee.

Trump May Testify Today

Donald Trump may in fact testify today in the defamation trial against him by E. Jean Carroll.

Trump Prosecutions In Holding Pattern

With the DC Circuit Court of Appeals taking its own sweet time handing down its decision on whether presidents have immunity from criminal prosecution, Judge Aileen Cannon slow-rolling the Mar-a-Lago documents case, and Fani Willis’ Georgia case plodding along, the Stormy Daniels hush money trial set for March 25 is looking more likely to be Trump’s first criminal trial.

Trump Threatens, Bullies, And Ices Out Haley Donors

As I noted Monday, Donald Trump isn’t just capturing the GOP nomination, he’s consolidating absolute power within the party. Here’s his threat to Nikki Haley donors:

Anybody that makes a ‘Contribution’ to Birdbrain, from this moment forth, will be permanently barred from the MAGA camp. We don’t want them, and will not accept them, because we Put America First, and ALWAYS WILL!

Fun, Fun, Fun

In his bankruptcy proceeding, Rudy Giuliani has been ordered to testify in person next month about the state of his finances.

4 More Years Of Sketchy Trump Biz Dealings?

  • WSJ: Trump’s Golf-Course Tax Break Could Reach $323 Million
  • Miami Herald: Russian investor made millions off insider trading tied to Trump Media, court docs say (for the record, Trump is not implicated in this alleged scheme)

Hate To See It

The House Ethics Committee probe of Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL) over allegations that led to a federal investigation but no criminal charges against him is ramping up, ABC News reports.

Kari Lake Still Sowing Chaos In Arizona

WaPo:

Arizona Republican Party Chairman Jeff DeWit announced his resignation Wednesday after a recording was made public that appeared to show him attempting to entice Republican Kari Lake to sit out the 2024 election for the state’s U.S. Senate seat.

GOP Bails On Border Bill To Help Trump

Donald Trump and the GOP would rather have the border as an issue to flog Joe Biden with during this year’s campaign than actually pass a border bill in which Democrats agree to give them big concessions. Mitch McConnell conceded as much yesterday. More importantly, a collapse of border bill negotiations leaves Ukraine aid high and dry with no clear path forward to overcome Republican opposition.

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What Politicizing The Border Looks Like

At the same time the border bill was foundering on the Hill, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott released one of the most inane, over-the-top, secession-esque statements I’ve ever seen:

It’s not just Abbott. Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) ratified the move.

For those keeping score at home, Abbott is cartoonishly claiming his state is being invaded and left defenseless by the federal government as a justification for nullifying federal law (and basically abandoning the entire structure of federalism) while at the exact same time Trump and the GOP writ large are torpedoing border legislation so they can use racist and xenophobic rhetoric more effectively against Joe Biden for their own partisan electoral aims. Good times.

!!!

Houston Chronicle:

Texas saw an estimated 26,313 rape-related pregnancies during the 16 months after the state outlawed all abortions, with no exceptions for survivors of rape or incest, according to a study published Wednesday in the Journal of the American Medical Association.

Of Course They Did

Philip Bump does a public service by comparing a just-released transcript of a witness interview in the House GOP’s Hunter Biden jihad to the misstatements, half-truths, and spin that the Rep. James Comer (R-KY) and his ilk put on the closed-door testimony between the time it happened and the transcript was released.

Ohio Bans Gender-Affirming Care

Overriding a veto by Republican Gov. Mike DeWine, the Ohio legislature has banned gender-affirming care and transgender girls from playing on school sports team for girls and women.

Florida Is Still In The Grip Of DeSantis Fever

NYT:

Students can no longer take sociology to fulfill their core course requirements, Florida’s state university system ruled on Wednesday. Instead, its board of governors approved “a factual history course” as a replacement.

Jon Stewart’s Swan Song

In a fitting tribute to the two old white guys beyond their prime running for president, the Daily Show is bringing back Jon Stewart to host – but a full schedule is too much at this stage of his career, so he’ll only host on Mondays. Too acerbic?

In honor of the moment, the most-watched Stewart segment on YouTube:

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