A MAGA judiciary? Trump rift with Federalist Society signals a search for loyal judges.
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Of all of President Donald Trump鈥檚 deals, none may be more consequential than the one he struck in 2016 with Leonard Leo. The Federalist Society, President Trump announced, would manage his judicial appointments.
Four years and 226 judges, including three U.S. Supreme Court justices, later, Mr. Trump made the federal judiciary聽much younger and much more conservative. But now, as the courts have continued to stall his policies, the president and some of his supporters are seeking another conservative judicial transformation.
In doing so, the president has widened a rift on the political right between Trump die-hards and those they denigrate as mainstream elites. The result is likely to be a ratcheting up of political rhetoric around the courts, a rhetoric that had already reached a new intensity in Mr. Trump鈥檚 second term.
Why We Wrote This
President Donald Trump previously relied on the conservative Federalist Society to help him remake the judicial branch. After recent setbacks in court, the president is signaling a new approach to vetting judicial nominees.
鈥淭rump has signaled he鈥檚 not going to defer to the people he did in the first term because they picked people he didn鈥檛 like,鈥 says Josh Blackman, a professor at the South Texas College of Law. 鈥淲here does that leave us? I don鈥檛 know.鈥
In a聽 last week, Mr. Trump laid into Mr. Leo 鈥 whom he described as a 鈥渟leazebag鈥 and 鈥渁 bad person鈥 鈥 and The Federalist Society, a conservative legal organization founded in 1982.
鈥淚 am so disappointed in The Federalist Society because of the bad advice they gave me on numerous Judicial Nominations,鈥 he wrote. 鈥淚 am very proud of many of our picks, but very disappointed in others. They always must do what鈥檚 right for the Country!鈥
For his part, Mr. Leo, co-chairman of The Federalist Society, responded cordially in a statement. 鈥淚鈥檓 very grateful for President Trump transforming the Federal Courts, and it was a privilege being involved,鈥 he said. 鈥淭here鈥檚 more work to be done, for sure, but the Federal Judiciary is better than it鈥檚 ever been.鈥
Mr. Trump now appears to favor a new kind of judicial nominee. His latest is Emil Bove: his former personal lawyer and, more recently, the face of Department of Justice efforts to combat a justice system Mr. Trump says has been weaponized against him.
On closer inspection, Mr. Bove鈥檚 nomination to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 3rd Circuit may not be as radical as it appears. Presidents have nominated personal friends for judgeships in the past, as well as people with no experience on the bench. But the nomination has set alarm bells ringing on both sides of the aisle.
A different type of nominee聽
Like countless federal judges, Mr. Bove served as a federal prosecutor. Like countless others, he worked in both private practice and the Justice Department. But his private practice involved defending Mr. Trump himself from criminal prosecutions. In the months since Mr. Trump named him an acting top prosecutor in the DOJ, he has at times acted as if he is still the president鈥檚 personal lawyer.
In January,聽he聽directed the聽firing聽of more than聽a聽dozen prosecutors聽involved in cases related to Jan. 6, 2021, when hundreds of Trump supporters attacked the U.S. Capitol. In February, he abruptly ended a prosecution of New York City Mayor Eric Adams in a seemingly quid pro quo agreement with the Trump administration. Almost a dozen prosecutors resigned聽in protest.
It didn鈥檛 start this way.
Mr. Trump鈥檚 judicial nominees this term have experience working for conservative judges and prosecutors, and experience working in the regions they have been nominated for. They have 鈥渟tandard issue鈥 credentials, says Carl Tobias, a professor at the University of Richmond School of Law.
鈥淏ove is different,鈥 he adds.
Indeed, everyone seems to agree that the Bove nomination is different. His supporters believe that Mr. Bove is the kind of different the federal judiciary needs.
This Trump term is about appointing judges 鈥渨ho will be more courageous,鈥 says Will Chamberlain, senior counsel at The Article III Project, a conservative legal organization founded in 2019 that it brings 鈥渂rass knuckles to fight leftist lawfare.鈥
This desire for 鈥渃ourageous鈥 judges appears to be a product of the Trump administration鈥檚 ongoing struggles in the courts. Federal judges have issued聽 pausing Trump policies, believing them to be unlawful. The U.S. Supreme Court 鈥 with six conservative justices, including three Trump appointees 鈥 has been an unreliable backstop.
These frustrations reached a boiling point last week. The day Mr. Trump officially announced the Bove nomination, the U.S. Court of International Trade ruled that the president鈥檚 order for sweeping international tariffs was unlawful. The decision prompted the president鈥檚 500-word anti-Federalist Society post.
The Wall Street Journal editorial board responded the next day.
鈥淚n Mr. Trump鈥檚 universe the only good judge is one who always rules in his favor,鈥 the board聽. Because of his 鈥渁ttacks on judicial conservatives,鈥 the board added, 鈥淢r. Trump is likely to see fewer judges retire, lest they be replaced by partisan hacks.鈥
Other conservative critics of the Bove nomination, and of Mr. Trump鈥檚 recent rhetoric, include Ed Whelan, a legal commentator at聽 National Review; and John Yoo, a high-profile lawyer in the George W. Bush administration.
贬补惫颈苍驳听 Mr. Bove as a 鈥淒OJ henchman鈥 in one column, Mr. Whelan doubled down in a later piece.
鈥淚 have serious doubts that Bove has the character and integrity to be worthy of confirmation as a federal judge,鈥 he聽. 鈥淚 hope very much that my doubts prove ill-founded.鈥
What is a 鈥榗ourageous鈥 judge?
At a time when threats to judges are rising, others believe judicial courage has been on display as judges have checked what they view as overreaches of presidential power.
鈥淭he way the Framers adopted [the Constitution] was to make the judiciary an independent branch of government,鈥 says Professor Tobias. 鈥淭he notion that a judge would base an opinion on loyalty to the president is anathema to that idea.鈥
For now, the Bove nomination is an outlier. Of Mr. Trump鈥檚 handful of judicial nominations so far, Mr. Bove is the only one with this level of partisan controversy. But the question now becomes whether the Bove nomination remains an outlier or is the start of a new trend.
鈥淚 expect more nominations along those lines,鈥 says Mr. Chamberlain.
鈥淵ou look at if they鈥檝e shown courage,鈥 he adds. 鈥淚f you look at the Supreme Court, they haven鈥檛 been particularly courageous.鈥
Some examples: The justices have held that individuals subject to deportation under an 18th-century wartime law must receive reasonable due process; the high court then issued a late-night emergency order in April, bypassing the normal appeals process, because it appeared the government was violating that order; earlier this week, the court declined to hear two challenges to state laws banning assault-style weapons.
鈥淭he court prioritizes dropping everything on behalf of illegal immigrants 鈥 while slow-walking [cases about] gun rights,鈥 says Mr. Chamberlain. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not good enough.鈥
The criticism is striking in the context of recent Supreme Court rulings in favor of key conservative causes. In the past three years, for example, the justices have overturned Roe v. Wade, struck down affirmative action and a聽decades-old regulatory doctrine, and given Mr. Trump broad immunity from criminal prosecution.
Yet that makes the Trump administration鈥檚 recent struggles in court even starker, says Gbemende Johnson, a political scientist at the University of Georgia.
鈥淭he success of The Federalist Society, and the conservative legal movement, is not just to get these wins but to make sure they鈥檙e protected moving forward,鈥 she says.
For some, 鈥渉igh-profile losses, or legal questions not being taken up, raises concerns that you could potentially lose some ground.鈥
For other conservatives, however, the response is a complete reversal of what the conservative legal movement 鈥 embodied by The Federalist Society 鈥 has sought to change for decades.
The movement was founded in part on the belief that judicial appointments should be guided by ideology, not patronage, Professor Yoo told聽.
鈥淐alling for the impeachment of judges or wanting to appoint judges who are not the best and the brightest, but instead are people getting personal rewards from the president,鈥 he added, 鈥渋s how it was before the Federalist Society.鈥