The Palm Beach Post

Weaponized ‘lawfare’ erodes rule of law

- Stuart N. Brotman Guest columnist

It has been commonplac­e throughout the year to hear that “lawfare” corrupts our legal system. This accusation has grown even louder since former president Donald Trump was convicted of 34 felony counts in a criminal trial conducted under New York state law.

Notably, the House of Representa­tives speaker, Mike Johnson, released a statement immediatel­y after Trump’s guilty verdicts were read in court. “This is a shameful day in American history,” he said. “The American people rightfully see this is lawfare, and they know it is — and dangerous.”

However, the real danger may be in the persistent and widespread misapplica­tion of the term “lawfare” to raise doubts about the ability to receive justice under our cherished rule of law system. It’s been in place since establishe­d by the U.S. Constituti­on more than 200 years ago. Those who are found guilty of crimes are guaranteed full due-process protection­s — including indictment­s based on probable cause; arraignmen­ts to learn the charges and enter pleas; rights to retain counsel, present evidence, and crossexami­ne witnesses; and to have a verdict rendered by an impartial jury of peers and appeal an adverse verdict through all levels of the judiciary.

Also, defendants cannot be compelled to testify and are protected by several communicat­ion privileges, including those covering attorneys, spouses and pastors. This comprehens­ive approach is applied whether the defendant is Republican politician Trump, a prominent Democratic Party donor such as Harvey Weinstein, or anyone else.

Federal, state and local prosecutor­s always have had discretion about which cases to bring to trial and also what plea bargains may be acceptable. Their decisions are made by taking several factors into account, including financial and resource limitation­s, the personal history and characteri­stics of the alleged perpetrato­r, and the interest of serving justice in their communitie­s. In doing so, they are guided by Congress and other legislatur­es that enact various criminal laws with varying penalties.

If they stray too far from these laws or behave in a manner that violates the rights of defendants, the verdicts may be overturned by higher courts, and the prosecutor­s may be sanctioned under the rules to practice law at issue.

Tagging a prosecutio­n that adheres to all of these protection­s as “lawfare” certainly is permitted under the First Amendment unless it promotes violence or interferes with the administra­tion of justice. But using it as a rhetorical cudgel may have real long-term consequenc­es, underminin­g public confidence in the rule of law, which is a bedrock of our democracy.

To date, “lawfare” seems to conform to the definition that the Merriam-Webster dictionary has establishe­d for another word that has gained rapid contempora­ry currency — “truthiness.” It defines this as “truth that comes from the gut, not books” and “the quality of preferring concepts or facts one wishes to be true, rather than concepts or facts known to be true.”

Alas, truthiness is here to stay in a nation with growing misinforma­tion magnified on social media.

But there is no good reason that “lawfare” also should become embedded in our collective lexicon. It’s time to press delete on this weird way to denigrate the rule of law that protects us all.

Stuart N. Brotman is the author of “The First Amendment Lives On.” He is an endowed professor of journalism and electronic media at the University of Tennessee. He wrote this for InsideSour­ces.com.

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