Opinion: What was that about Merrick Garland not meeting the moment?
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Good morning. Iâm Paul Thornton, and it is Saturday, Aug. 20, 2022. Letâs look back at the week in Opinion.
Donald Trump is going through some things (paraphrasing the ex-presidentâs own words), so allow me to get something out of the way right now: I read your letters, so I know plenty of you prefer to read a newspaper that ignores a failed president long enough for him to fade away. But Trump isnât someone who accepted defeat and slinked away as one-term presidents from John Adams to George H.W. Bush did. Letting him leave Washington with the pomp of a normal commander-in-chief, two weeks after he watched his mob sack the U.S. Capitol, without getting some answers would be unacceptable.
And now weâre getting some hard answers, or at least approaching the point where Trump may face more than low approval ratings for his possibly criminal conduct. Columnist LZ Granderson addresses the reckoning now upon Trump and the nation as the Department of Justice appears to be moving closer to holding the ex-president legally accountable, or at least getting some answers: âThat ought to be a reckoning for him and more importantly for half of the nationâs voters â a moment of pain, but also potential. This postmortem on the disastrous Trump administration should put an end to Trumpism, before a new wave of acolytes can sweep into office this fall. Because come November, in the midterm election, weâll be deciding what kind of nation we are going to be.â
Of course, the hope is that weâll decide to be a nation of laws, and on that point Iâd like to take you back to a time of what feels like another political era, before the ex-presidentâs home in Florida was lawfully searched Aug. 8 by federal agents, when MAGA Republicans reliably sang the praises of FBI personnel. At the time, Trump appeared unbothered by Department of Justice scrutiny of his lawlessness as president, including his actions on Jan. 6, and some Democrats expressed impatience with Atty. Gen. Merrick Garlandâs fastidious notions of apolitical law enforcement. To Garlandâs critics, those views were obsolete in the era of Trump and required a more dogged, politically savvy prosecutor focused on preserving democracy more than the rule of law â or at least thatâs what some readers wrote in response to my July 23 newsletter reluctantly defending Garlandâs handling of Trump.
Now, Garlandâs fealty to plodding Department of Justice procedure is being lauded as some kind of master strategy for countering Trumpâs bombast. When the ex-president and his followers accuse the Biden administration of abusing its authority and siccing federal agents on political opponents, Garland can make a few remarks on camera, calmly produce receipts proving his attackersâ disingenuousness, and in the process utterly disarm Trumpâs conspiracy-theorizing defenders.
Can there be a better way â or a better attorney general â to prove weâre a nation of laws?
The FBI just arrested a California Democrat. Whereâs the GOPâs outrage now? The Times Editorial Board notices a difference between the reaction to former Rep. TJ Coxâs arrest and the FBI search of Trumpâs home: âA funny thing happened after the FBI arrested former California congressman TJ Cox on multiple counts of fraud and money laundering this week. Crickets. Those same conservatives and so-called âpatriotsâ so incensed about federal authorities investigating one of their own had nothing to say about the arrest of the Democrat from Fresno.â L.A. Times
This is why California canât have nice (or even minimally necessary) things: A bill passed out of the state Assembly (with the support of our editorial board in June) to improve pay and conditions for construction workers in an effort to get more housing built, but it faces headwinds in the Senate because of a split in organized labor. In short, a powerful labor group wants certain jobs set aside for apprenticeship program graduates â who are mostly union members â and this bill doesnât do that. In the New York Times, Farhad Manjoo calls on senators to âfind the courage to buck the oppositionâ and pass Assembly Bill 2011. New York Times
Watch out, NIMBY cities, because California is coming for housing scofflaws. In San Francisco, a new housing development typically takes more than 900 days to work its way through the approval process. That city may be the âNIMBYist of them all,â says the editorial board, and the state is putting San Francisco under review for its housing practices, signaling what may come to other places that stall badly needed development: â[Gov. Gavin] Newsom and his housing regulators are right to crack down on housing obstructionist cities. Itâs long overdue and the state cannot afford to let communities stop or slow-walk construction. San Francisco may be the target now, but other cities should be next.â L.A. Times
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Banning hikes to the worldâs tallest tree will never work. Look, protecting Californiaâs âsuperlative treesâ â the worldâs tallest, oldest and largest are all here â is a topic near and dear to my heart. But I have to agree with naturalist Justin Legge that efforts to keep hikers away from the Hyperion, now recognized as the worldâs tallest tree, might not be the best way to protect Californiaâs coastal redwoods. Legge suggests boosting educational efforts as a deterrent: âWhen people ask me to take them to Hyperion, my initial response is invariably a lengthy âughhh,â quickly followed by a detailed explanation of the wonder all around them. I engage with them about forest history, and take them on a trail where they can easily see gigantic old-growth redwoods and experience the glory of the complex canopy life. After that, Iâve never had a visitor who still wanted to see Hyperion. Not a one.â L.A. Times
Now that a second recall effort has failed, let George GascĂłn do the work he was elected to do. The editorial board welcomes news that the latest effort to remove Los Angeles Countyâs district attorney fell short: âVoters heard GascĂłnâs change-oriented proposals for the office during a long 2020 campaign and said âyes,â electing him over a two-term incumbent and putting him in office for a full four-year term that is not even half over. Voters can review his record in 2024 and decide then whether to keep him, assuming he runs again, or to move in a different direction.â L.A. Times
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