Some people use the term “Banana Republic” to describe the United States. According to Meriam-Webster.com, a banana republic is “a small dependent country usually of the tropics, especially one run despotically.”
A despotic government is one that exerts “oppressive absolute power and authority … excess of law … a system of government in which the ruler has unlimited power.”
Hans
von Spakovsky at The Heritage Foundation used different words to describe
what happened in Manhattan, New York, District Court. He called the court case
and conviction of Donald Trump “Venezuela-on-the-Hudson” and gave the following
explanation.
It’s hard to adequately describe what
happened to Donald Trump in Venezuela-on-the-Hudson. Outrageous? A travesty of
justice? A devasting blow to the sanctity of our justice system and its
reputation for fairness and nonpartisanship? An American repetition of the
Soviet show trials of the 1930s?
It’s all of those things. And you don’t
have to be a Trump supporter to understand that.
A former president was convicted of 34
misdemeanors for paperwork errors (whose statute of limitations had run out) that
were changed to felonies because he had supposedly violated another state law –
nowhere mentioned in the indictment – that makes it a crime to use “unlawful”
means to promote or oppose the election of a candidate.
And what was that “unlawful” means? Well,
the defendant didn’t know because those other “unlawful” means (i.e., other
crimes) weren’t mentioned in the indictment, either. The judge told the jurors
that they didn’t need to even agree on what other crimes the defendant had
committed, seemingly in conflict with hundreds of years of English and American
jurisprudence, including the Constitution’s guarantee of due process of law.
No, said the judge, the jury could
consider violations of tax law or a violation of federal campaign finance law
or of some other unnamed law for listing as a legal expense – instead of as a
campaign expense – a settlement payment made to an individual who represented
by counsel in a perfectly legitimate, and perfectly legal, transaction. But no
need for a unanimous decision on that issue.
A violation of federal campaign finance law?
What were a local prosecutor and a state court judge doing bringing up a
violation of federal law over which they have no jurisdiction whatsoever?
And if that was something the members of
the jury – who know nothing about federal campaign finance law – could consider,
why did the judge tell the defendant he would not allow Brad Smith, a former
federal election commissioner and one of the nation’s leading experts on
federal campaign finance law, to explain to the jury what is considered – and what
is not considered – a campaign-related expense under federal law?
The judge acted like a member of the
prosecution team throughout this case, a case so lacking in merit that the
prior district attorney – the one who preceded the Soros-supported rogue
prosecutor Alvin Bragg – refused to file it.
Judge Juan Merchan consistently ruled
against Trump and allowed the prosecution to essentially do whatever it wanted,
including admitting evidence and allowing testimony to matters that were
completely irrelevant to the actual charges and whose only purpose was to
confuse the jury and blacken the character of the defendant.
Legal
authorities from both the Left and the Right have declared that the case should
have never gone to court. It should have been thrown out by the judge – if the
judge had been honest. Judge Merchan should have reclused himself and not
presided over the case. The people in Manhattan should be ashamed for the
decision made by the jury.
We will
know if we live in a banana republic or not by how the appeals court manages
the case. If they overturn the case, then there may be hope for our nation.
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