MOSCOW тАУ Until the cease-fire, the worldтАЩs attention was trained on IsraelтАЩs airstrikes on Gaza, which may have suited Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, who is facing trial on corruption charges. And Netanyahu is hardly the only populist leader in legal peril.
From Austria to the United Kingdom to the United States, similar investigations are under way. Have democracies finally found the means and the willingness to vanquish their domestic enemies?
To answer that question, let us begin by looking at the poster child for anti-democratic populism: former U.S. President Donald Trump. He is in the crosshairs of prosecutors in both New York (for potential tax and other business-related crimes) and Atlanta (for his efforts to overturn the 2020 U.S. presidential election).
Some of TrumpтАЩs closest associates also have targets on their backs. Rudy Giuliani, the former mayor of New York City who became TrumpтАЩs personal lawyer, is facing a federal criminal investigation into his dealings in Ukraine.
If he is charged, Giuliani, who rose to prominence in the 1980s as a mafia-fighting federal prosecutor, will not be the first Trump crony to face criminal prosecution. He will follow TrumpтАЩs campaign chairman, Paul Manafort, and his first national security adviser, Michael Flynn. The difference is that, with Trump no longer president, Giuliani cannot count on a pardon.
To TrumpтАЩs acolytes, such investigations are utterly illegitimate: the prosecutors are representatives of a тАЬdeep stateтАЭ bent on protecting the corrupt elites from a Trump administration that heroically stood up to them. TrumpтАЩs detractors, meanwhile, may be feeling schadenfreude: After years of open contempt for U.S. law, Trump and his cronies are finally getting their comeuppance.
If only.
Most of the prosecutors who have investigated Trump and his associates have done so as if on tiptoe. At times, it seems that they are seeking not just a smoking gun, but a smoking cannon and a neatly stacked pile of dead bodies. Prosecuting anything less wouldnтАЩt be worth the onslaught from Trump World.
More broadly, it may be premature to conclude that AmericaтАЩs democratic institutions have proved their resilience by weathering the Trump stress test. A newly unsealed court document revealed that, last year, TrumpтАЩs Department of Justice secretly obtained a grand-jury subpoena to identify a Twitter user who had been mocking U.S. Representative Devin Nunes, a close Trump ally.
Under President Joe Biden, the DOJ withdrew the subpoena. But that doesnтАЩt change the fact that career prosecutors at the DOJ did not balk at carrying out the Trump administrationтАЩs lawless order.
This left TwitterтАЩs lawyers to stand up for the rule of law: тАЬTwitter is concerned the subpoena may not be supported by a legitimate law enforcement purpose,тАЭ the companyтАЩs motion stated. In that case, тАЬthere cannot be any need тАФ let alone a compelling need тАФ for the government to unmask the user.тАЭ Moreover, TwitterтАЩs motion urged the court to conduct a тАЬsearching analysisтАЭ to determine whether the subpoena тАЬviolates the First Amendment.тАЭ
This was hardly the only instance when the DOJ accommodated the Trump administrationтАЩs legally questionable demands. Even when top officials refused, there were those who were willing to flout their obligations.
For example, in the Trump administrationтАЩs last days, the DOJтАЩs acting attorney general, Jeffrey A. Rosen, refused to go along with a harebrained scheme to force Georgia lawmakers to overturn the stateтАЩs presidential election results. But the Trump administration nearly ousted Rosen over his resistance тАФ a plan hatched in cahoots with the then-head of the DOJтАЩs civil division, Jeffrey Clark.
So, yes, AmericaтАЩs legal institutions have ostensibly snapped back to duty, but they clearly bent very far under Trump. How can we be so sure that they wonтАЩt bend again тАФ or even snap тАФ in the future?
Meanwhile, in the U.K., Prime Minister Boris Johnson is under investigation for numerous ethical improprieties. This implies that the rule of law is alive and well, even if the wheels of justice move slowly. And yet, again, there is reason to doubt that they will always move forward.
Johnson has initiated a number of investigations of his Cabinet colleagues тАФ the most prominent concerning allegations that Home Secretary Priti Patel bullied her staff. Ultimately, JohnsonтАЩs independent adviser on the code governing ministersтАЩ behavior determined that Patel had violated it тАФ a finding that would usually lead to a ministerтАЩs resignation. Yet Johnson overruled the independent inquiryтАЩs findings. As for investigations into his own improprieties, Johnson has stonewalled.
A similar story is unfolding in Austria. Chancellor Sebastian Kurz has often manipulated and undermined investigators and prosecutors. He has called a corruption probe triggered by the so-called Ibiza Affair тАФ when the leader of KurzтАЩs far-right coalition partner was caught on video offering to trade lucrative public contracts for cash тАФ тАЬdeeply flawed.тАЭ
Kurz himself is now being investigated for allegedly committing perjury during the Ibiza Affair investigation. But the timing of the investigation тАФ a moment when KurzтАЩs popularity has cratered тАФ is probably not a coincidence. The scandal broke in 2019, but it is only now that AustriaтАЩs judges and investigators have had the courage to challenge Kurz.
Populists claim to base their strength on representing the will of the people, including demands for security and тАЬlaw and order.тАЭ But the truth is that populism is fueled by human weakness тАФ timidity, mendacity, and cupidity тАФ from which legal institutions are not immune. And while populism may be sputtering in many places, human weakness is an infinitely renewable resource.
Nina L. Khrushcheva, professor of international affairs at The New School, is the co-author (with Jeffrey Tayler), most recently, of тАЬIn PutinтАЩs Footsteps: Searching for the Soul of an Empire Across RussiaтАЩs Eleven Time Zones.тАЭ ┬йProject Syndicate, 2021.
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