If Trump is cornered, the judges he disdains may finally bring him down
Walter Shapiro
The president thinks justice only matters as it affects him. As his defenders fall away, he may find this all too painfully true
Sat 24 Nov 2018 01.00 EST
A rational president, who had just bludgeoned Brett Kavanaugh onto the supreme court, would not jeopardize the long-awaited conservative majority by picking a fight with Chief Justice John Roberts. But rationality has never been Donald Trumps strong suit when it comes to dealing with the judiciary.
According to an estimate by the Washington Post, the Trump administration has been overruled in more than 40 federal court decisions. While correlation does not imply causation, it does suggest that Trumps constant bleats and tweets about biased judges represent an odd strategy to tilt the scales of justice.
Many phrases might describe Roberts 13 years as chief justice since he was appointed by George W Bush, but hot-headed is not among them. It presumably took dozens of provocations before he yielded to the temptation to instruct the president that with an independent judiciary, we do not have Obama judges or Trump judges, Bush judges or Clinton judges.
Nothing better illustrates Trumps solipsistic approach to crime and punishment than the recent revelation by the New York Times that last spring he talked about ordering the justice department to prosecute Hillary Clinton and James Comey.
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https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2018/nov/23/donald-trump-judges-walter-shapiro