Gulf Today

Do ‘Trump judges’ exist? We’re about to find out

- Noah Feldman,

Start circling the wagons. That’s the message a federal district judge is sending to other Trump-appointed judges by allowing a special master to review the documents seized from a Mar-a-lago safe. By suggesting that former president Donald Trump might be able to invoke executive privilege ater leaving office, Judge Aileen Cannon contravene­d wellsetled precedent. It’s the first step in a process whereby Trump’s judicial appointees could delay the Justice Department investigat­ion that places the former president in serious legal jeopardy.

On the surface, the judge’s order to appoint a special master doesn’t sound all that extreme. It’s not unheard of for a judge to appoint a special master to review materials seized under a search warrant to determine if some are subject to atorney-client privilege. With respect to atorney-client privilege, having the judicial branch review a potential defendant’s rights is a good thing, not a bad one.

But executive privilege is different from atorney-client privilege. Broadly, executive privilege is a president’s interest in maintainin­g the confidenti­ality of communicat­ions with the most senior presidenti­al advisers.

Judge Cannon could have directed the special master to focus only on atorney-client privilege. Instead, her order ventured into the dangerous territory of underminin­g existing law on executive privilege.

In opposing the appointmen­t of a special master, the Justice Department asserted that former presidents cannot assert executive privilege to shield material from the current executive branch. This position is legally correct and logically almost unassailab­le.

The siting president has — or rather should have — access to any and all relevant government­al material that a predecesso­r had access to. It makes litle sense to say that the Department of Justice, which is itself part of the executive branch, is blocked by executive privilege from seeing material that a previous president saw.

To claim otherwise is to suggest that the privilege ataches to the president as an individual person. It doesn’t. Executive privilege is a privilege of the office, not the person who occupies it.

But Cannon reasoned that “the government’s position arguably overstates the law.” She quoted the Supreme Court as saying that the current president “is in the best position” to determine the interest of the executive branch when it comes to privilege. But then, instead of applying that principle to rule against Trump, she asserted that this “did not rule out the possibilit­y” of judges ruling for a former president against a siting president on executive privilege.

At best, that’s a biased reading of the Supreme Court’s precedent on executive privilege. At worst, it flouts that precedent. Cannon’s rumination­s don’t make new law; as a district court judge, she doesn’t have that power. But they do send a signal to the US Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit (a court with a majority of Trump appointees) and to the Supreme Court a direction they could take if they want to block the Department of Justice from using materials seized in the search.

Elsewhere in her ruling, Judge Cannon also pointed out that in the very different context of a presidenti­al assertion of privilege against Congress, the current Supreme Court had noted that the issue of a former president’s capacities to exert privilege were still undecided. This, too, is a message to the court of appeals: It suggests that the current justices could deviate from existing precedent to protect Trump, and hints that the court of appeals should anticipate that possibilit­y instead of applying existing precedent, which is their legal and constituti­onal duty.

In practical terms, Cannon’s order extends the timeline of the current investigat­ion. A special master review could take weeks or even months. If the Justice Department appeals, the process could extend substantia­lly further — the Court of Appeals would have to rule and ultimately the issue would be brought to the Supreme Court. That leaves the Department of Justice with a tricky choice: Save time by leting the district judge’s ruling stand or try to thwart the judge’s proposed game plan by appealing. If it were me, I might let this ruling remain in place, since it does not actually make any new law — again, that’s beyond Cannon’s remit — but rather hints that new law might be made by other, moresenior courts.

Regardless, the judge’s order has already damaged the rule of law by suggesting that Trump appointees might do still more to protect the man who appointed them, and who could promote them to beter jobs if he’s re-elected. Trump himself was rightly and roundly criticised by Chief Justice John Roberts for slamming “Obama judges.” Orders like this one underscore why it’s so important to have a judiciary that’s deferentia­l to precedent and reliably nonpartisa­n.

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