Blue Laws for Red Citizens

Blue Laws for Red Citizens
Former President Donald Trump, a candidate for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination, attends a pre-trial hearing at Manhattan Criminal Court, in New York, on Feb. 15, 2024. Steven Hirsch/Pool/Getty Images
Victor Davis Hanson
Updated:
0:00
Commentary

One state prosecutor and one civilian plaintiff have already won huge fines and damages from former President Donald Trump that may, with legal costs, exceed $500 million.

President Trump awaits further civil and criminal liability in three other federal, state, and local indictments.

There are eerie commonalities in all these five court cases involving plaintiff E. Jean Carroll, Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, New York Attorney General Letitia James, federal special counsel Jack Smith, and Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis.

One, they are either unapologetically left-wing or associated with liberal causes. They filed their legal writs in big-city, left-wing America—Atlanta, New York, Washington—where liberal judges and jury pools predominate in a manner not characteristic of the country at large.

Two, they are overtly political. Mr. Bragg, Ms. James, and Ms. Willis have either campaigned for office or raised campaign funds by promising to get or even destroy Donald Trump.

Ms. Carroll’s suit was funded by left-wing billionaire Reid Hoffman.

Mr. Smith sued to rush his court schedule in hopes of putting President Trump on trial before the November election.

Three, there would not be any of these cases had President Trump not run for the presidency or not been a conservative.

Ms. Carroll’s suit bypassed statute of limitation restrictions by prompting the intervention of a left-wing New York legislator. He passed a special bill, allowing a one-year window to waive the statute of limitations for sexual assault claims from decades past.

Until President Trump, no New York prosecutor such as Ms. James had ever filed a civil suit against a business for allegedly overvaluing real estate assets to obtain loans that bank auditors approved and were paid back in full, on time, and with sizable interest profits to the lending institutions.

Mr. Bragg bootstrapped a Trump private nondisclosure agreement into a federal campaign violation in a desperate effort to find something on President Trump.

Mr. Smith is also charging President Trump with insurrectionary activity. But President Trump had never been so charged with insurrection, much less convicted of it.

Ms. Willis strained to find a way to criminalize President Trump’s complaints about his loss of Georgia in the 2020 national election. She finally came up with a racketeering charge, usually more applicable to mafiosi and drug cartels.

Four, in all these cases, the charges could have been equally applicable to fellow left-wing public figures and officials.

President Joe Biden, like President Trump, was accused of sexual assault decades earlier by former staffer Tara Reade. Yet Ms. Reade was torn apart by the media and the left for inconsistencies in her memory. By contrast, the wildly inconsistent and amnesiac Ms. Carroll won $83 million from President Trump.

Mr. Smith created the precedent of charging President Trump for unlawfully removing classified files to his private residence.

But the government simultaneously did not charge President Biden for similar offenses. Yet President Biden had removed files not for two years but for more than 30. He stored them not in one location but in several.

His rickety garage was a mess, not a secure family compound like President Trump’s estate. Moreover, President Biden did so while a senator and vice president, without any presidential authority to declassify almost any presidential document he wished.

President Biden never came forward to report the crime for more than 30 years—until President Trump was charged. Indeed, he was caught on tape six years ago admitting to his ghostwriter that he possessed classified files but never reported it.

Mr. Bragg might have noticed that both Hillary Clinton (fined $113,000) and President Barack Obama (fined $350,000) broke campaign financing laws. Neither was subject to federal criminal charges by local prosecutors.

An array of left-wing celebrities, politicians, 2004 House members, former Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.), and failed Georgia gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams have all recently challenged elections. They sought either to delay or redo ballot counting or, on the federal level, to sidetrack electors to ignore popular votes in their respective states.

These lawfare cases are part of other efforts that were highly partisan and without merit. Recall the Trump “Russian collusion” hoax and the “Russian disinformation” laptop farce.

In another first, some blue states are suing to take President Trump’s name off the ballot for “insurrection,” a crime for which he has never been charged.

Total up the deaths, damage, and length of the summer 2020 Antifa/BLM riots. Then compare the tally with that of the one-day January 6 riot.

The former proved far longer-lasting, more lethal, and more destructive. Yet very few of the 14,000 arrested rioters in 2020 were ever prosecuted, much less convicted.

By contrast, the Biden administration sought to jail hundreds for crimes allegedly committed on January 6, such as “illegal parading.”

We are entering a dangerous era in America.

Ideology and party affiliations increasingly determine guilt and punishment. Opponents are first targeted, and then laws are twisted and redefined to convict them.

The left is waging lawfare with the implicit message to political opponents: Either keep quiet or suffer the consequences.

Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.
Victor Davis Hanson
Victor Davis Hanson
Author
Victor Davis Hanson is a classicist and military historian. He is a professor emeritus of classics at California State University, a senior fellow in classics and military history at Stanford University, a fellow of Hillsdale College, and a distinguished fellow of the Center for American Greatness. Mr. Hanson has written 17 books, including “The Western Way of War,” “Fields Without Dreams,” “The Case for Trump,” and “The Dying Citizen.”
Related Topics