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Home » This mob lawyer’s fingerprints are all over Trump’s terrifying stunt

This mob lawyer’s fingerprints are all over Trump’s terrifying stunt

Raw Story by Raw Story
3 minutes ago
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Ten minutes before oral arguments began at the Supreme Court on Wednesday, a hush fell over the courtroom.Then Donald Trump walked in.No sitting president had ever done this before. Trump took a seat in the public gallery—the same rows reserved for tourists and law students and the merely curious—and watched as nine justices prepared to hear arguments on one of the central legal questions of his presidency: birthright citizenship.He wore a red tie. He sat with his hands clasped in his lap. The thumbs that usually spend the morning firing off threats on social media were, for once, perfectly still.He stayed a little more than an hour. He was, by all external appearances, the picture of decorum. But that wasn’t fooling anyone.Trump didn’t wake up Wednesday morning with a sudden appetite for civics, nor an interest in the complexities of the law.Trump showed up to intimidate the justices of the U.S. Supreme Court—or at least the ones he likes to refer to as “my justices.” He wanted them to look up from the bench and find him staring back.Just weeks ago, Trump called Justices Neil Gorsuch and Amy Coney Barrett—his own nominees—“an embarrassment to their families” after they ruled against him on tariffs. Earlier this week, he insisted the justices needed to “prove their intelligence” by siding with him on birthright citizenship.Then, on the very morning those arguments were heard, he materialized in their courtroom—a few rows behind the bench where Gorsuch and Barrett sat.They most certainly knew why he was there.Trump has long modeled himself on mob lawyer Roy Cohn, the notorious fixer and red-baiting enforcer who taught him that power is performed as much as exercised. Cohn’s method was never the paper trail—it was the presence, the stare, the message delivered in person without a word spoken. Wednesday’s courtroom visit had Cohn’s fingerprints all over it.The case itself is the heart of Trump’s nativist agenda. Birthright citizenship—the 14th Amendment guarantee that anyone born on American soil is a citizen—has been settled law for more than 150 years. It barely registered on the American political radar until Trump weaponized it as a centerpiece of his 2015 campaign—a move straight out of the authoritarian playbook.Trump wants to end birthright citizenship by executive order, claiming the amendment was intended solely to grant citizenship to freed slaves after the Civil War. Even many conservative constitutional scholars think he’s wrong. The justices across the ideological spectrum spent the morning pressing his lawyers hard on exactly that history.Trump sat behind his own Solicitor General—watching his employee plead his case to his appointees. He left after the government finished its argument. Of course, he didn’t stay to hear the other side, because that’s not what authoritarians do.Outside the building, people watching understood exactly what they had witnessed. “I think it’s basically kind of a strong-arming tactic,” one observer told reporters. “Make a decision while I’m here, looking you dead in your eye—and don’t make the wrong decision.”That sums it up as well as any legal brief could.Experts had warned that Trump’s presence would create an “awkward” atmosphere in what is normally a formal, even reverent proceeding. Awkward is far too polite.The Supreme Court is supposed to be the one institution in American government beyond the reach of presidential pressure. Its independence doesn’t rest on statutes. It rests on norms, on tradition, and on the unspoken understanding that the executive branch doesn’t stand over the judiciary’s shoulder while it works.Trump has spent his presidency testing every such norm to destruction. Wednesday was no exception. It was as brazen an act of impropriety and intimidation of the U.S. Supreme Court as any president ever perpetrated.He walked into the room.

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