As Powell put it, “The threat of criminal charges is a consequence of the Federal Reserve setting interest rates based on our best assessment of what will serve the public, rather than following the preferences of the president.”
We don’t have to imagine why, instead of fighting back, some prominent leaders of law firms, media companies and universities have chosen to issue statements about how they can improve their procedures, cultivate respect and fairness or work to restore trust in their institutions. The threats from the White House and the Justice Department are real, and the federal government has enormous powers — especially when it doesn’t follow its own rules or adhere to conventions of fairness. Americans now know that the president feels his only limitation is his own mind and his own morality, and that his chief advisor believes in the iron laws of strength. Leaders of institutions in the president’s crosshairs have good reason to be afraid.
I don’t know if Powell and Young are afraid, but they didn’t back down. They didn’t accept the nonsense put before them and instead chose to speak frankly and directly. They are well-aware, as are now elected officials in Minnesota, that the price one pays for defying the preferences of the president can include being placed under criminal investigation.
I don’t know if Powell and Young are afraid, but they didn’t back down.
But the price of allowing the preferences of any president to dictate the policies and practices of organizations that depend on freedom and autonomy is to destroy the legitimacy of those organizations. The price of letting any president rule over the country with no limitations but his own mind is the destruction of our democracy. Powell said that “public service sometimes requires standing firm in the face of threats.” Judge Young has written that his sense of duty prevents him from acquiescing in “political persecution…anathema to our Constitution and everything for which America stands.”
Some law firms are challenging Trump’s administration, while many career prosecutors are resigning rather than helping carry out Trump’s agenda, including his most recent attempts to smear the name of ICE shooting victim, Renee Nicole Good. And although many university presidents are accommodating the president by cloaking themselves in neutrality, other higher education leaders, including those at George Mason, Princeton, Bard, Harvard and Mount Holyoke, are resisting federal pressure.
I have no idea if the Federal Reserve chair is on the right path in regard to interest rates, or if Judge Young’s approach to free speech will prevail at the Supreme Court, but I am sure they have chosen paths of integrity in the face of an increasingly authoritarian White House. The health of our educational sector and of our democracy may well depend on how many other institutional leaders make that same choice.
Michael S. Roth is president of Wesleyan University and the author of “Safe Enough Spaces: A Pragmatist’s Approach to Inclusion, Free Speech, and Political Correctness on College Campuses” and “The Student: A Short History.”
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