http://www.newsmax.com/PatrickBuchanan/class-action-judge-suit/2016/06/07/id/732625/
Trump Is
Right to
Question
Judge's
Motives
Newsmax,
by Patrick
Buchanan
6/7/16
Before
the lynching
of The
Donald
proceeds,
what exactly
was it he
said about
that
Hispanic
judge?
Stated
succinctly,
Donald Trump
said U.S.
District
Judge
Gonzalo
Curiel, who
is presiding
over a
class-action
suit against
Trump
University,
is sticking
it to him.
And the
judge's bias
is likely
rooted in
the fact
that he is
of Mexican
descent.
Can there be
any defense
of a
statement so
horrific?
Just this.
First, Trump
has a
perfect
right to be
angry about
the judge's
rulings and
to question
his motives.
Second,
there are
grounds for
believing
Trump is
right.
On May 27,
Curiel, at
the request
of The
Washington
Post, made
public
plaintiff
accusations
against
Trump
University —
that the
whole thing
was a scam.
The Post,
which Bob
Woodward
tells us has
20 reporters
digging for
dirt in
Trump's
past, had a
field day.
And who is
Curiel?
An appointee
of President
Obama, he
has for
years been
associated
with the La
Raza Lawyers
Association
of San
Diego, which
supports
pro-illegal
immigrant
organizations.
Set aside
the folly of
letting
Clinton
surrogates
like the
Post
distract him
from the
message he
should be
delivering,
what did
Trump do to
be smeared
by a
bipartisan
media mob as
a "racist"?
He attacked
the
independence
of the
judiciary,
we are told.
But
Presidents
Jefferson
and Jackson
attacked the
Supreme
Court, and
FDR, fed up
with New
Deal
programs
being struck
down, tried
to "pack the
court" by
raising the
number of
justices to
15 if
necessary.
Abraham
Lincoln
leveled
"that
eminent
tribunal" in
his first
inaugural,
and once
considered
arresting
Chief
Justice
Roger Taney.
The
conservative
movement was
propelled by
attacks on
the Warren
Court. In
the 1950s
and 1960s,
"Impeach
Earl
Warren!" was
plastered on
billboards
and bumper
stickers all
across God's
country.
The
judiciary is
independent,
but that
does not
mean that
federal
judges are
exempt from
the same
robust
criticism as
presidents
or members
of
Congress. Obama
himself
attacked the
Citizens
United
decision in
a State of
the Union
address,
with the
justices
sitting
right in
front of
him.
But Trump's
real hanging
offense was
that he
brought up
the judge's
ancestry, as
the son of
Mexican
immigrants,
implying
that he was
something of
a judicial
version of
Univision's
Jorge Ramos.
Apparently,
it is now
not only
politically
incorrect,
but, in Newt
Gingrich's
term,
"inexcusable,"
to bring up
the
religious,
racial or
ethnic
background
of a judge,
or suggest
this might
influence
his actions
on the
bench.
But these
things
matter.
Does Newt
think that
when LBJ
appointed
Thurgood
Marshall,
ex-head of
the NAACP,
to the
Supreme
Court, he
did not
think
Marshall
would bring
his unique
experience
as a black
man and
civil rights
leader to
the bench?
Surely, that
was among
the reasons
Marshall was
appointed.
When Obama
named Sonia
Sotomayor to
the Supreme
Court, a
woman of
Puerto Rican
descent who
went through
college on
affirmative
action
scholarships,
did Obama
think this
would not
influence
her decision
when it came
to whether
or not to
abolish
affirmative
action?
"I would
hope that a
wise Latina
woman with
the richness
of her
experiences
would more
often than
not reach a
better
conclusion
than a white
male who
hasn't lived
that life," Sotomayor
said in a
speech at
Berkeley law
school and
in other
forums.
Translation:
Ethnicity
matters, and
my Latina
background
helps guide
my
decisions.
All of us
are products
of our
family,
faith, race,
and ethnic
group. And
the
suggestion
in these
attacks on
Trump that
judges and
justices
always rise
above such
irrelevant
considerations,
and decide
solely on
the merits,
is naive
nonsense.
There are
reasons why
defense
lawyers seek
"changes of
venue" and
avoid the
courtrooms
of "hanging
judges."
When Obama
reflexively
called Sgt.
Crowley
"stupid"
after
Crowley's
2009
encounter
with that
black
professor at
Harvard, and
said of
Trayvon
Martin, "If
I had a son,
he'd look
like Trayvon,"
was he not
speaking as
an
African-American,
as well as a
president?
Pressed by
John
Dickerson on
CBS, Trump
said it's
"possible" a
Muslim judge
might be
biased
against him
as
well. Another
"inexcusable"
outrage.
But does
anyone think
that if
Obama
appointed a
Muslim to
the Supreme
Court, the
LGBT
community
would not be
demanding of
all
Democratic
Senators
that they
receive
assurances
that the
Muslim
judge's
religious
views on
homosexuality
would never
affect his
court
decisions,
before they
voted to put
him on the
bench?
When Richard
Nixon
appointed
Judge
Clement
Haynsworth
to the
Supreme
Court, it
was partly
because he
was a
distinguished
jurist of
South
Carolina
ancestry.
And the
Democrats
who tore
Haynsworth
to pieces
did so
because they
feared he
would not
repudiate
his Southern
heritage and
any and all
ideas and
beliefs
associated
with it.
To many
liberals,
all white
Southern
males are
citizens
under
eternal
suspicion of
being
racists. The
most
depressing
thing about
this episode
is to see
Republicans
rushing to
stomp on
Trump, to
show the
left how
well they
have
mastered
their
liberal
catechism.
Patrick
Buchanan has
been an
adviser to
three
presidents,
a two-time
candidate
for the
Republican
presidential
nomination,
and the
nominee for
the Reform
Party in
2000. He was
also a
founding
member of
"The
McLaughlin
Group,"
which began
on NBC, and
CNN's
"Capital
Gang" and
"Crossfire."
His latest
book is:
"The
Greatest
Comeback:
How Richard
Nixon Rose
From Defeat
to Create
the New
Majority."
For more of
his reports,
Go Here Now.
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