J. D. Vance warns the federal courts to get in line

J. D. Vance warns the federal courts to get in line

Ruth Marcus writes:

Vice-President J. D. Vance offered some unsolicited advice to Chief Justice John Roberts the other day: the federal courts need to be more deferential to Presidential authority, and the Supreme Court must do a better job of keeping lower-court judges in line. Vance was speaking to the New York Times’ Ross Douthat about the Trump Administration’s nearly unbroken string of court losses in immigration-related cases. These setbacks, in Vance’s telling, represent an undemocratic project by some federal judges to undo the election results.

“I know this is inflammatory, but I think you are seeing an effort by the courts to quite literally overturn the will of the American people,” Vance told Douthat. He referenced a recent interview with Chief Justice Roberts, in which Roberts said that one role of the Court is to check the excesses of the executive. “I thought that was a profoundly wrong sentiment,” Vance said. “That’s one half of his job. The other half of his job is to check the excesses of his own branch. You cannot have a country where the American people keep on electing immigration enforcement and the courts tell the American people they’re not allowed to have what they voted for. That’s where we are right now.”

To quote Vance, this diagnosis is “profoundly wrong.” It misconceives the essential role of the judiciary, which is to superintend the division of powers among the three branches of government—in fact, Roberts said that the Court’s job is to check excesses of both Congress and the executive—and, just as important, to preserve individual rights against governmental overreach. In fact, the courts have been diligently performing their constitutionally assigned role, and polling suggests that the American people are happier with the judiciary’s performance on that score than they are with President Donald Trump’s.

Vance’s comments are not the product of ignorant bluster (for this, see the recent assertion by Kristi Noem, the Secretary of Homeland Security, that “habeas corpus is a constitutional right that the president has to be able to remove people from this country”). Vance is a graduate of Yale Law School, and his wife clerked for the Chief Justice. He surely understands that Roberts—the author of Trump v. United States, the 2024 ruling on Presidential immunity that is perhaps the broadest grant of executive authority in the history of the Court—is no foe of Presidential power but one of its fiercest advocates. Yet Vance has for years been picking an argument with the Chief Justice over the legitimacy of federal court orders. If Vance were giving Trump one piece of advice, he said in 2021, it would be to “fire every single mid-level bureaucrat, every civil servant in the administrative state. Replace them with our people. And when the courts—because you will get taken to court—and when the courts stop you, stand before the country like Andrew Jackson did and say: ‘The chief justice has made his ruling. Now let him enforce it.’ ” Roberts warned against remarks like these in his latest year-end report on the federal judiciary, saying that “elected officials from across the political spectrum have raised the specter of open disregard for federal court rulings. These dangerous suggestions, however sporadic, must be soundly rejected.”

The dispute assumed higher stakes after Trump took office, and federal courts across the country started to push back on the new Administration’s behavior. “Judges aren’t allowed to control the executive’s legitimate power,” Vance posted on X on February 9th. His exchange with Douthat represents another escalation of the Administration’s anti-court rhetoric. Vance’s argument—that judges are not simply treading on the President’s constitutional authority but actively frustrating the will of the electorate—is, at bottom, a repudiation of the constitutional structure. It is “emphatically the province and duty of the Judicial Department to say what the law is,” as Chief Justice John Marshall put it in Marbury v. Madison—even when, and perhaps especially when, its conclusion is unpopular. That is the reason federal judges are not elected and are granted lifetime tenure. Alexander Hamilton termed this arrangement “the best expedient which can be devised in any government, to secure a steady, upright, and impartial administration of the laws.” [Continue reading…]

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