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Regular-article-logo Friday, 19 April 2024

Donald Trump spars with chief justice over 'Obama judge'

Chief Justice John Roberts issued a statement contradicting the President and defending judicial independence

AP Washington Published 22.11.18, 07:27 AM
Donald Trump has several times blasted federal judges who have ruled against him, but this is the first time he has singled one of them out.

Donald Trump has several times blasted federal judges who have ruled against him, but this is the first time he has singled one of them out. AP

President Donald Trump and Chief Justice John Roberts clashed in an extraordinary public dispute over the independence of America's judiciary, with Roberts bluntly rebuking the President for denouncing a judge who rejected his migrant asylum policy as an 'Obama judge'.

There's no such thing, Roberts declared on Wednesday in a strongly-worded statement contradicting Trump and defending judicial independence. Never silent for long, Trump defended his own comment, tweeting defiantly, 'Sorry Justice Roberts'.

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The pre-Thanksgiving dustup was the first time that Roberts, the Republican-appointed leader of the federal judiciary, has offered even a hint of criticism of Trump, who has several times blasted federal judges who have ruled against him.

Before now, it has been highly unusual for a President to single out judges for personal criticism. And a chief justice's challenge to a President's comments is downright unprecedented in modern times.

It seemed a fight that Trump would relish but one that Roberts has taken pains to avoid. But with Roberts's court feeling the heat over the President's appointment of Justice Brett Kavanaugh, Roberts and several of his colleagues have gone out of their way to rebut perceptions of the court as a political institution divided between five conservative Republicans and four liberal Democrats.

Trump's appointments to the Supreme Court and lower federal courts have themselves spurred charges that the courts are becoming more politicised. As the justice widely seen as closest to the court's middle, Roberts could determine the outcome of high-profile cases that split the court.

Chief Justice John Roberts is pushing back against Trump’s description of a judge who ruled against the administration’s new asylum policy as an “Obama judge”.

Chief Justice John Roberts is pushing back against Trump’s description of a judge who ruled against the administration’s new asylum policy as an “Obama judge”. AP file picture

The new drama began with remarks Trump made on Tuesday in which he went after a judge who ruled against his migrant asylum order. The President claimed, not for the first time, that the federal appeals court based in San Francisco was biased against him.

Roberts had refused to comment on Trump's earlier attacks on judges, including the chief justice himself. But on Wednesday, after a query by The Associated Press, he spoke up for the independence of the federal judiciary and rejected the notion that judges are loyal to the presidents who appoint them.

'We do not have Obama judges or Trump judges, Bush judges or Clinton judges. What we have is an extraordinary group of dedicated judges doing their level best to do equal right to those appearing before them,' Roberts said.

On the day before Thanksgiving, he concluded, 'The independent judiciary is something we should all be thankful for.'

Central American migrants gather at a temporary shelter near barriers that separate Mexico and the US, in Tijuana, Mexico, on Wednesday.

Central American migrants gather at a temporary shelter near barriers that separate Mexico and the US, in Tijuana, Mexico, on Wednesday. AP

Trump hit back from his resort home in Florida, questioning the independence of federal judges appointed by his predecessor and confirmed by the US Senate. He especially criticised judges on California's 9th US Circuit Court of Appeals.

'Sorry Chief Justice John Roberts, but you do indeed have 'Obama judges', and they have a much different point of view than the people who are charged with the safety of our country,' the President tweeted.

If the 9th Circuit judges are independent, he said, 'why are so many opposing view (on Border and Safety) cases filed there, and why are a vast number of those cases overturned. ... these rulings are making our country unsafe! Very dangerous and unwise!'

Trump has never been reticent about criticising the judiciary. Last year, the president scorned the 'so-called judge' who made the first federal ruling against his travel ban. During the presidential campaign, he criticised Roberts himself for the chief justice's decisive vote in 2012 to preserve President Barack Obama's health care overhaul.

Trump also referred to an Indiana-born judge of Mexican descent, who was presiding over a fraud lawsuit against Trump University, as a Mexican who would be unable to rule fairly because of Trump's proposal to build a wall along the US-Mexican border.

The President's remarks on Tuesday came when a reporter asked for his reaction to a ruling by US district judge Jon Tigar in San Francisco that put the administration's asylum policy on hold. Under that new policy, Trump declared no one could apply for asylum except at an official border entry point. That tends to back migrants up for weeks if not months. A number of migrants remain in Tijuana after traveling in a caravan to reach the US.

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