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MAHATMA GANDHI ~ Truth never damages a cause that is just.
Monday, 20 February 2017
Americans discover a new must-read for the Trump age: the US constitution
Interest in the United States’ oft-cited, little read founding
document is booming as concerned citizens identify the law as a bulwark
against executive overreach
Noah Foster and Jennifer Platou consult their pocket-sized versions of
the US constitution and a hand-out on the court system at Le
Resistance’s salon.
Photograph: Joanna Walters for the Guardian
They drifted in, to the smell of pork roasting and the dulcet tones of Billie Holiday.
The apartment was cozy, as freezing rain fell outside, covering
nearby Central Park and the rooftops of New York’s liberal Upper West
Side neighborhood.
The dozen friends could have been meeting up for any one of their regular gatherings to eat, sip wine and shoot the breeze.
But with Donald Trump’s bombastic administration running amok, already in an epic confrontation with the courts over his executive order
on immigration and refugees, the group was meeting to discuss the US
constitution and the role the judiciary plays when citizens believe a
president is overreaching.
“I want to learn more about the nooks and crannies of this branch of
government, so I’ll be able to figure out who to write to spur legal
challenges to Trump’s actions on refugees, access to healthcare or
threats to the independence of the judiciary and the press,” said
Victoria Foster, a public health manager who was hosting the group in
her apartment.
The Trump candidacy and now presidency have brought the constitution
and the courts into the everyday news cycle, shining greater light on
the branch of the US government that is typically most likely to be
ignored or overlooked.
And appetite is voracious for a greater understanding of the
constitution and how courts can become an activist’s tool, experts say,
particularly among activists resisting Trump.
“People are getting very excited and engaged about the role of the
constitution and the power of the judiciary – you normally hear lots
about the White House and Congress, and often the supreme court, but now
people are realizing we have all these federal courts deciding pivotal
cases every day,” said Zinelle October, vice-president of network
advancement for the American Constitution Society.
ACS,
a not-for-profit organization that promotes greater understanding of
the constitution and the freedoms it protects, has seen an uptick in
demand for the pocket-sized copies of the constitution it distributes
and for experts to address groups about the document’s role in
government, she said.
October pointed out that it was the attorney general of Washington state, an elected official, who got Trump’s travel ban blocked as unconstitutional via a federal court earlier this month.
ACS is non-partisan, but she added: “When you have someone in office
threatening people’s rights, you have to be responsive to that and focus
on how the constitution matters in such a situation.”
The friends meeting in New York to chat and chew have formed a small,
French-style salon to strategize their newfound political activism
against Trump.
Last Sunday, in only their second such meeting, they decided the theme should be the constitution and the courts.
Dipal Shah, an attorney in New York, had been invited to share his
expertise on the constitution. He began with a sober message.
“It’s important to be non-partisan when you consider the constitution
… It’s not a document for Republicans or Democrats. Now more than ever
it’s being tugged at by those with a political agenda, rather than a
philosophical one,” he said.
Friends uncorked more wine to digest his explanation that, yes, the staunchly conservative judge Neil Gorsuch would almost certainly be confirmed to the supreme court as Trump’s pick
to replace the late Antonin Scalia, even though Barack Obama’s nominee
Merrick Garland was stalled by Republicans for nearly a year.
Paul de Lucena, 36, a software architect attending the salon, said he
wanted to explore the legalities of churches, mosques and even private
citizens harboring undocumented immigrants in the event of a crackdown.
And Noah Foster, a public school teacher and Victoria’s brother, who has already written to lawmakers in protest of Trump’s newcontroversialguns- and charter-school-loving
education secretary, Betsy DeVos, asked the group: “Should we be
writing to senators and identifying judges we would like to see
nominated for federal court vacancies?”
The group murmured its affirmation.
Landon Ewers, chief information officer at Amalgamated Bank, said: “Donald Trump has personally attacked federal judges and a disturbing portion
of Americans appear to think he should be able to override the courts.
We must fight for the checks and balances in the constitution – there’s
already fear that under the guise of religious freedom he will sanction discrimination against LGBT people.”
People gather at Le Resistance Salon in Manhattan to
discuss the US constitution with Dipal Shah. Photograph: Joanna Walters
for the Guardian
Doug Pennington, spokesman at the Constitutional Accountability
Center in Washington, a progressive thinktank and advocacy group, said
many Americans are showing renewed interest in the importance of the US
constitution.
“The more people understand the courts and feel their own power in
advancing their rights [there], the better it is for American democracy.
The third branch is the bulwark of liberty in this country,” he said.
Trump has a long history of fighting his business battles in court, both as plaintiff and defendant, and becoming president has not stopped lawsuits flying against him and now his administration more widely.
San Francisco is suing
over Trump’s executive order targeting sanctuary cities for their
stance on immigration. The legal watchdog Citizens for Responsibility
and Ethics filed
a federal lawsuit against Trump shortly after his inauguration accusing
the president of breaching the emoluments clause of the constitution,
which prohibits receiving payments or gifts from foreign governments.
As
part of an ACS project to educate people, Love our Constitution, Dan
Cotter, an attorney in Chicago, gave a talk to a troop of Boy Scouts
there last Monday night.
“We talked about Brown v Board, the same-sex marriage and Affordable Care Act cases, what happens when you have a vacancy in the supreme court that results in a four-four split,”
said Cotter. “We talked about the recent executive order on travel. We
had a pretty good discussion and the youngest scouts participated as
much as anyone.”
And in New York, Jarrett Adams, a lawyer, gave a talk on Friday to 100 high schoolers.
He discussed Trump’s travel ban and court rulings but also told the
students how, while an inmate for 10 years, he built a successful case
that he had been denied his constitutional rights to an effective
defense that could have proved his innocence in 1998, when he was
arrested in Wisconsin at 17 for rape.
Adams was eventually exonerated and released. He graduated from law school last year and is now an attorney with the Innocence Project.
“When I was 17 I could recite an entire album by Tupac but I couldn’t
recite the first through the fifth amendments of the constitution,” he
said.
“Many can recite it but don’t really understand the implications.”
Friends and associates outside law circles have been flocking to ask
him about such matters as the legality of the travel ban, whether
Mexican co-workers will be deported, whether the federal government can
intervene in the gang violence in Chicago, as Trump has hinted, and fears over gun safety, he said.
“When you have executive orders written overnight, we saw that you
can file in federal court to challenge whether that’s legal,” he said.
“The constitution is the fabric that holds this country together and the
students need to understand and know how to use that, not just be able
to recite it. Now especially.”
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