“All the rights secured to the citizens under the Constitution are worth nothing, and a mere bubble, except guaranteed to them by an independent and virtuous Judiciary.” So said President Andrew Jackson, according to reports from the time. Of course, Jackson also reportedly said after another Supreme Court ruling from the 1830s: “[Chief Justice] John Marshall has made his decision.
Let him try and enforce it!” Both quotes illustrate America’s complicated relationship with its independent judiciary. ALSO READ: ‘Journalistic dystopian nightmare’: Inside a Tennessee college media meltdown We all value a court free from political influence. Until we lose.
A jury has found Donald Trump guilty in his case involving allegations of paying off a porn star with so-called “hush” money in an effort to keep a sexual affair secret before the 2016 election, and our attitudes on the court are likely to be dictated by the verdict, rather than abstract legal principles. Having an independent judiciary — that is, one largely free from the meddling of legislators and government executives — is a big deal. Bigger than most Americans appreciate.
As my students and I studied last fall, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had been trying to take away rights associated with his country’s independent judiciary, which polarized the population on whether it had the power to hold the prime minister accountable for alleged corruption. The Muslim Brotherhood lost power when it.
