Categories
Law Politics

Court orders North Carolina to redraw its unconstitutional congressional map

In November 2016, Republican candidates for Congress in North Carolina won about the same share of the vote as Democratic candidates but garnered 10 of 13 of the state’s seats in the U.S. House of Representatives.

On Monday, a three-judge panel of the U.S. District Court in Greensboro, ruled that the map used to outline the districts that each of the seats represented — a map drawn by the GOP-controlled state legislature – favors Republicans in violation of the U.S. Constitution.

“A common thread runs through the restrictions on state election regulations imposed by Article I, the First Amendment, and the Equal Protection Clause: the Constitution does not allow elected officials to enact laws that distort the marketplace of political ideas so as to intentionally favor certain political beliefs, parties, or candidates and disfavor others,” Judge James Wynn wrote for the court.

The 321-page ruling, which Republicans are expected to ask the panel to refrain from applying to the elections scheduled for this November, holds the potential to throw the midterm election into a state of uncertainty.

According to the court, the 14 Democratic voters who filed the lawsuit demonstrated that the 2016 map gave Republican voters a greater say in choosing a member of Congress than voters who favor candidates put forward by rival parties.

The evidence, said the court, showed that Republicans drew the map of legislative districts in ways that diluted the votes of Democrats. They did that by packing Democrats into some districts and “cracking,” or separating, clusters of Democrats in others.

“The division of political subdivisions allowed the General Assembly to achieve its partisan objectives, by packing non-Republican voters in certain districts and submerging non-Republican voters in majority-Republican districts,” wrote Wynn.

The map disfavored a group of voters “based on their prior votes and political association” in violation of the First Amendment,” he added. It also contravened the constitutional requirement that the people – not the states – elect their representatives.

Republicans say they will ask the Supreme Court to stay the ruling. But a stay would require the votes of five justices, and the retirement of Justice Anthony Kennedy has left the court divided by ideology into two sides of four.

The district court, which is expected to rule on the feasibility of applying its ruling to the midterm election, said it may give the state assembly until Sept. 17 to redraw the map in a way that remedies its deficiencies

Categories
Law

Why a sitting president can be charged with a crime

In July, Representative Devin Nunes, a Republican who chairs the House Intelligence Committee, told donors gathered for a fundraiser that preserving their party’s majority in Congress matters above all because they “are the only ones” who can protect President Trump if the special counsel or the Department of Justice refuse to clear him.

The comments raise anew the question whether a sitting president can be indicted and tried for his crimes. The question has yet to be answered in practice. But among experts who have shaped my thinking about the question is Noah Feldman, a professor of constitutional law at Harvard, who in May published an analysis in The New York Review of Books.

Feldman argues from the premise that “the Constitution should not be read to allow a sitting president who has committed serious crimes to hide behind his office and avoid accountability for them.”

As he sees it, whether the crime occurred while the president is in office or before he became president, we ought to allow prosecution of the president if Congress fails to remove him from office via impeachment. I agree.

Feldman suggests a scenario in which prosecutors in New York who are investigating Michael Cohen, the president’s former lawyer, uncover evidence sufficient to charge President Trump with crimes such as money laundering or conspiracy. Could a federal grand jury indict the president?

Without precedent

A sitting president has never been indicted. Feldman chronicles debate over the prospect since 1973, when the Watergate prosecutor received a memo from a law professor at Harvard asserting that President Nixon could be indicted while in office. (The prosecutor decided not to indict Nixon once proceedings in Congress to impeach him had begun; the prosecution named the president an unindicted co-conspirator.)

The same year, the Office of Legal Counsel at the Department of Justice produced a memo concluding that all executive branch officials could be prosecuted while in office with the exception of the president, who was immune. In 2000, the office wrote a memorandum affirming that view, which has guided policy at DOJ since.

But the analysis doesn’t end there. Suppose, as Feldman does, that Trump actually shot someone on Fifth Avenue, a scenario that then-candidate Trump imagined aloud in 2016 as a brag about the loyalty of his supporters.

Feldman writes:

“Suppose further that a Republican House did not immediately impeach him, or that the Senate could not reach the two-thirds supermajority needed to remove him from office. Could we continue to believe in the rule of law if the president were able to avoid criminal prosecution as long as he remained in office?

Our conclusion should presumably be the same if we imagine that the crime was committed before he entered office but revealed only once he was in the White House. The Constitution should be not interpreted to require such a moral outrage.”

Yet the prospect of such an outrage looms. As the comments by Nunes and the refusal of Republicans in Congress to pass a bill to protect the Mueller investigation suggest, the party could look away regardless what the evidence shows and refuse to impeach him.

Feldman acknowledges the views of scholars who oppose indicting a sitting president – either because Congress, a coequal politically elected branch of government should do it, or because, in their view, the Constitution implicitly requires impeachment and removal from office to precede criminal prosecution.

As a practical matter, Feldman notes that prosecutors could name Trump as an unindicted co-conspirator (assuming the evidence warrants) and then see whether Congress impeached him. If Congress resisted, prosecutors could try to persuade the attorney general to authorize a prosecution.

Feldman notes with approval the recommendation of Cass Sunstein, Feldman’s colleague at Harvard, that we should think about impeachment, as Feldman puts it, “based on principle, without thinking of concrete scenarios connected to specific politicians we like or despise.”

Of course, if takes some imagination to picture prosecutors actually prosecuting the president. Would the FBI arrest him if he refused to turn himself in? What would the Secret Service do if FBI agents showed up at the White House with a warrant for the president’s arrest?

There’s no precedent for such scenarios, which underscore the fears of those who say that Congress alone – subject to the voters in the election that follows – should decide the fate of presidents.

Feldman counsels a focus on practical results and consequences. He also notes that we allow for the investigation and prosecution of representatives, senators and other elected officials who have committed crimes.

“In the end, pragmatic reality should outweigh high formalism when it comes to preserving constitutional government,” he writes. “In the matter of the Watergate tapes, the case was called United States v. Richard Nixon. If it becomes necessary, the Department of Justice, acting on behalf of the people, should bring the case of United States v. Donald Trump.”

Categories
New York City

Postcard from Rockaway

It barely qualifies as a day at the beach. But the two hours that I spent at Fort Tilden on Tuesday achieved their purpose, which was to help me beat the heat wave that has enveloped the city.

The temperature at the former U.S. Army installation that’s now part of the Gateway National Recreation Area was about 7 degrees lower than temperatures here in Manhattan.

The water registered 77 degrees, which feels body temperature on a day like today. I bobbed twice in the swells for about 15 minutes at a time. About 50 feet away, a pair of lifeguards in red trunks, one male, one female, perched atop a chair eight feet high, their legs stretched out in the sun.

Between trips to the water, I snacked from a Ziploc of shelled peanuts that I had packed, and read an article in The New Yorker about the evolution of civic and private power in San Francisco across three generations of the author’s family.

On the drive to the ocean, I was reminded that traffic here in New York — even during the middle of a weekday — is a force to reckon with. On the drive home, my skin cool and salty, my t-shirt smelling like the ocean, I barely minded.

Upon arriving at Fort Tilden, I took a few wrong turns to the beach. Of course, I could feel the ocean from where I stood. It was just beyond the scrubby trees. But in the three years since I last visited the fort, the National Park Service had closed some paths and opened others.

I found my way thanks to a retiree from Amsterdam who pushed a bicycle (right?!) and pointed to a path where all one had to do was to turn right.

As we walked, she asked me what I thought of a suggestion by a friend of hers, an American who she said had retired to Spain. He asked if he could use her U.S. address as his own for purposes of claiming Social Security. She said she had some concerns about that, as she receives Social Security, too.

I suggested she trust her instinct.. We thanked each other, and each went our way.

Categories
News

News quiz, week ending July 13

1. Which two nations signed a peace deal?
a. Yemen and Saudi Arabia
b. Syria and Turkey
c. Ethiopia and Eritrea

2. David Davis and Boris Johnson resigned from the British government. What positions, respectively, did each hold?
a. Brexit secretary and foreign secretary
b. Chancellor of the Exchequer and Brexit secretary
c. Home Affairs secretary and foreign secretary

3. Who are the world’s three richest people, in order, according to Bloomberg?
a. Bill Gates, Jeff Bezos, Warren Buffett
b. Bill Gates, Jeff Bezos, Mark Zuckerberg
c. Jeff Bezos, Bill Gates, Mark Zuckerberg

4. Starbucks said it would stop using disposable plastic straws by 2020. Roughly how many straws would the move eliminate annually?
a. One million
b. One billion
c. Two billion

5. Where did Brett Kavanaugh, President Trump’s nominee to the Supreme Court, attend college and law school?
a. Stanford
b. Harvard
c. Yale

6. How many boys were rescued from a cave in Thailand
a. 10
b. 12
c. 13

7. Which of the following social networks announced steps to remove suspicious accounts?
a. Twitter
b. Snapchat
c. Facebook

8. Elon Musk said he would fund which of the following?
a. Research into so-called superbugs
b. Research to develop the world’s fastest quantum computer
c. Installation of filters on taps in houses in Flint, Mich. that have contaminated supplies of water

9. The U.S. Department of Justice charged 12 Russian with which of the following in 2016:
a. Meeting with representatives then-candidate Donald Trump
b. Hacking the Clinton presidential campaign and the Democratic National Committee
c. Hijacking Facebook and other social media platforms

10. Which of the following two teams will meet in soccer’s World Cup final?
a. England and France
b. France and Croatia
c. France and Russia

 

 

 

 

 

Answers
1. c
2. a
3. c
4. a
5. c
6. b
7. a
8. c
9. b
10. b

Categories
News

News quiz, week ending July 6

1. Who won Mexico’s presidential election?
a. Enrique Pena Nieto
b. Andres Manuel Obrador
c. Juan de Dios Rodriguez

2. What team will LeBron James play for next season?
a. The Golden State Warriors
b. The Cleveland Cavaliers
c. The Los Angeles Lakers

3. This fall, Britain’s National Health Service will become the first such service in the world to do which of the following?
a. Read, analyze and interpret patients’ DNA to help diagnose rare diseases
b. Use artificial intelligence to analyze images of cancers
c. Offer mental health services for children

4. Rescuers worked to free 12 boys trapped in a cave in which country?
a. Sri Lanka
b. Argentina
c. Thailand

5. The killing of which of the following by an American hunter in South Africa sparked an outrage worldwide?
a. A black rhino
b. A male lion
c. A male giraffe

6. How old was the United States on Wednesday?
a. 229 years
b. 242 years
c. 257 years

7. Who resigned as administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency?
a. Jeff Sessions
b. Scott Pruitt
c. Ryan Zinke

8. Which retailer pulled “Impeach 45” clothing from its website after an outcry from Trump supporters?
a. Amazon
b. Target
c. Walmart

9. Which of the following did the mayor of London approve in advance of President Trump’s visit to the United Kingdom next week?
a. A closure of air space above the city
b. A blimp that caricatures Trump as a diaper-wearing infant
c.  A giant inflatable chicken that resembles Trump

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Answers
1. b
2. c
3. a
4. c
5. c
6. b
7. b
8. c
9. b

Categories
News

News quiz, week ending June 29

1. Which of the following is the first sitting world leader to give birth in more than three decades?
a. The prime minister of New Zealand
b. The prime minister of Iceland
c. The prime minister of Chile

2. Now that Saudi Arabia has ended its ban on female drivers, how many other countries ban women from driving?
a. None
b. One
c. Two

3. Turkey’s president won reelection in a vote that does not authorize which of the following:
a. A third term as president
b. Sweeping new powers over the legislature and judiciary
c. Tighter ties with NATO

4. Which of the following companies said it would move some production to other countries to avoid tariffs on U.S. goods?
a. Ford Motor
b. John Deere
c. Harley-Davidson

5. According to the US Supreme Court, President Trump’s travel ban:
a. Falls within the scope of presidential authority
b. Exceeds the scope of presidential authority
c. Ought to be addressed by Congress rather than by the courts

6. Uber regained its license to operate in which city?
a.Paris
b.London
c.Barcelona

7. Justice Anthony Kennedy, who said he would retire, is the court’s leading champion of which of the following:
a. The death penalty
b. Gay rights
c. Restrictions on abortion

8. Where do Presidents Trump and Putin plan to meet on July 16?
a. Brussels
b. Moscow
c. Helsinki

9. A gunman in the U.S. killed five people at the offices of which newspaper?
a. The Baltimore Sun
b. The Lexington Herald
c. The Capital Gazette

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Answers
1. a
2. a
3. c
4. c
5. a
6. b
7. b
8. c
9. c

Categories
Law

Refugees

In his 2004 novel, “The Plot Against America,” Philip Roth imagines the United States overtaken by fascism. Charles Lindbergh, the aviator and Nazi sympathizer, wins the Republican nomination for president and, with a pledge to keep America out of war, defeats Franklin D. Roosevelt in the election of 1940.

In the authoritarian administration that follows, Lindbergh enters into a nonaggression pact with Hitler and resettles Jews to the interior from cities such as Newark. Roth’s narrator — a boyhood version of the author — recalls a democracy all too capable of abandoning its values in the thrall of a hero turned president.  It’s a terrifying alternate history that challenges the idea it couldn’t happen here.

Roth’s is a work of fiction. But the nightmare has happened in the U.S. In the 1830s, Native Americans were removed by force from their homelands east of the Mississippi River and resettled in Oklahoma. In 1942, the government resettled Americans of Japanese descent from their homes in Northern California to camps in the interior. Two years later, in Korematsu v. United States, a majority of the Supreme Court authorized the internment.

This month, the Supreme Court is expected to rule on a ban on visitors from five predominantly Muslim countries that followed statements by President Trump before and after he took office that he intended to bar Muslims from entering the U.S.

Trump also is leading attacks on allies such as German prime minister Angela Merkel while failing to criticize populists like Italy’s deputy prime minister Matteo Salvini, who has called for a census of that country’s Roma population to determine which should be deported. “Make no mistake, there is a concerted attack on the constitutional liberal order,” Constanze Stelzenmuller, a German scholar at the Brookings Institution, told the Financial Times. “And it is being spearheaded by the president of the United States.”

Last year, 68.5 million men, women and children across the world were forced to leave their homes as a result of persecution, violence, conflict or violations of their human rights, according to a report released last Tuesday by the UN Refugee Agency. The total includes 25.5 million refugees and 40 million people displaced within their own countries.

The numbers tell of misery for the people forced to abandon their homes and, in many instances, to seek refuge in a foreign country. That includes people who seek asylum in the U.S., children in tow, because they fear for their lives in Central American countries plagued by violence.

On the day the UN issued its report, the president addressed a trade group in Washington, where he mocked the Refugee Act of 1980, which offers asylum to immigrants who can document “a well-founded fear of persecution.” According to the president, lawyers for asylum seekers advise their clients “exactly what to say.” He continued:

“They say, ‘Say the following:’ — they write it down — ‘I am being harmed in my country.  My country is extremely dangerous. I fear for my life.’ ‘Say that. Congratulations. You’ll never be removed.’  This is given to them by lawyers who are waiting for them to come up… But, in a way, that’s cheating because they’re giving them statements.  They’re not coming up for that reason. They’re coming up for many other reasons and sometimes for that reason.”

As Trump sees it, invoking the law in pursuit of asylum constitutes cheating. Meanwhile, his administration has separated children of asylees from their parents without recording clearly which kids belong to which parents and without plans (or, apparently, the ability) to reunite them.

Whatever you think of the immigration laws and the need to revise them, the people who invoke them are asserting their rights set forth in the statute. Words have legal significance, including the words uttered by someone who seeks asylum in America.

Trump himself knows the power of words to trigger laws. Or at least he does when it serves his interest to invoke them. Like when the president stated 16 times in one interview last winter that there was “no collusion” between Russians and him to influence the 2016 election.

Some other words that Trump has uttered bear on the immigration crisis he has incited. They’re in the Constitution, which prescribes the oath Trump swore at his inauguration, when he pledged to  “faithfully execute the office of president of the United States.”

Categories
News

News quiz, week ending June 22

1. Who is Ivan Duque?
a. The President-elect of Colombia
b. The President-elect of Bolivia
c. The President-elect of Venezuela

2. A magnitude 6.1 earthquake rocked which of the following countries?
a. Sri Lanka
b. The Philippines
c. Japan

3. Which of the following became the first G-7 country to legalize recreational use of marijuana?
a. Germany
b. Canada
c. Italy

4. How many people around the world in 2017 had to flee their homes as a result of war or persecution, according to the UN refugee agency?
a. 30.1 million
b. 50.2 million
c. 68.5 million

5. What did the US ambassador to the UN label a “cesspit of political bias?”
a. The Group of Seven
b. The UN Human Rights Council
c. The European Union

6. Instagram unveiled which of the following additions to its service?
a. Audio
b. Messaging
c. Video

7. What candy did President Donald Trump give German Chancellor Angela Merkel at the G-7 summit in Canada, according to an attendee?
a. Life Savers
b. Starburst
c. M & M’s

8. Can US states force online merchants to collect sales tax, according to the Supreme Court?
a. Yes
b. No
c. It depends whether the merchant has a physical presence in the state

9. Who made headlines for wearing a jacket that said, “I really don’t care, do U?”
a. Gayle King
b. LeBron James
c. Melania Trump

10. Which of the following companies was dropped from the Dow Jones Industrial Average?
a. GE
b. Disney
c. Walgreens Boots Alliance

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Answers
1. a
2. c
3. b
4. c
5. b
6. c
7. b
8. a
9. c
10. a

Categories
News

News quiz, week ending June 15

1. Who won this year’s French Open women’s championship?
a. Sloane Stephens
b. Jelena Ostapenko
c. Simona Halep

2. Which of the following about Siya Kolisi, a South African rugby player, is not correct?
a. He became the first black African to captain South Africa’s Springboks in an international test match
b. He became the first black African to play for the Springboks in an international test match
c. He became the first black African to captain a victory for the Springboks in an international test match.

3. Which of the following did Dennis Rodman not do at the Trump-Kim summit in Singapore?
a. Wear a “Make America Great Again Hat”
b. Offer to serve as US Ambassador to North Korea
c. Cry

4. Which of the following did the US and North Korea not agree to in a joint statement they signed at the summit?
a. To recovering and repatriating remains of prisoners of war
b. To work toward complete denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula
c. That North Korea would destroy a missile testing site

5. Which three nations will host soccer’s World Cup in 2026?
a. Morocco, Egypt and Tunisia
b. The US, Canada and Mexico
c. Spain, Portugal and Malta

6. Who is London Breed?
a. The first African American woman to be elected mayor of San Francisco
b. The first African American woman to be elected mayor of Los Angeles
c. The first African American woman to be nominated for governor of Georgia

7. Elon Musks’ Boring Company won a contract to build which of the following:
a. A high-speed underground rail link between Los Angeles and San Francisco
b. A high-speed underground rail link between Washington and Baltimore
c. A high-speed underground rail link between Chicago’s O’Hare airport and the city’s downtown

8. Which of the following best describes a report by the US Department of Justice about former FBI Director James Comey’s handling of an inquiry into Hillary Clinton’s emails?
a. That Comey’s actions biased the investigation
b. That Comey’s actions departed from FBI norms
c. That Comey’s actions promoted transparency

9. About how many migrant children did the US separate from their families at the southern border, over a six-week period ending May 31?
a. Almost 1,000
b. Almost 2,000
c. Almost 3,000

10. What the French president, Emmanuel Macron, refer to when he accused Italy of being “cynical and irresponsible?”
a. The Italian government’s barring a ship carrying 629 migrants from entering any Italian port
b. The Italian government’s threatening to leave the European Union
c. The Italian government’s proposing to regulate bloggers

Bonus: In honor of the World Cup 2018, here are 31 photos of soccer fields around the world. You need not be a fan of soccer to appreciate the images.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Answers
1. c
2. b
3. b
4. c
5. b
6. a
7. c
8. b
9. b
10. a

Categories
Asides

Channeling Saul Steinberg