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Trump's Political Incorrectness Is Sabotaging His Racist Policies

Trump's words are coming back to haunt him - and his Muslim ban is being found discriminatory, and therefore unconstitutional, by court after court. By being, you know, "politically incorrect," what he said outside the courtroom is now being used to hammer him inside the courtroom. And it's simply wonderful.
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Right-wing knuckle-draggers always like to bray and screech about "political correctness."

Many years ago, I wrote in the National Post about how Stockwell Day, and those like him in the Canadian Alliance, were always going on and on (and on) about "political correctness." The column is a bit ancient, but I think it stands up. You can read it here.

In the main, I wrote, there were a couple reasons why the mouth-breather contingent were endlessly against "political correctness." To wit:

Sometimes, it is done by intolerant people hoping to give a patina of respectability to their intolerance -- to wit, This may not be politically correct, but I think all refugees should be thrown in detention when they arrive here. And, sometimes, it is done by politicians to chill legitimate criticism of their views on issues like abortion, or sexual orientation, or something else.

Donald Trump, as is now well-known, used "political correctness" as cudgel on all of his critics, over and over. He was a genius at it. He wielded that metaphorical cudgel to (a) normalize his bigotry and (b) to silence his critics and legitimize/mobilize other bigots. It worked like a charm.

Throughout the presidential campaign, however, I told my wife -- about a thousand times, as we toiled as volunteers for Hillary Clinton -- that Trump's words would come back to haunt him, in the unlikely event that he ever became president of the United States. His hateful words -- about Muslims, women, blacks, Mexicans, the disabled and myriad others -- could be used against him in litigation, I told her.

"You've said that about a thousand times," she'd say, which was true. "But how can political rhetoric, even his, be considered admissible in a court of law?"

Because, I replied, it's relevant. It has probative value, as we lawyers like to say.

In the U.S., you often find this sort of non-legal stuff in something called a Brandeis Brief. It takes its name from Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis who -- as a lawyer in 1908, before his elevation to America's highest court -- made a legal submission that was (literally) two per cent legal argument, and 98 per cent data, social science, reports and near-anecdotal material.

Trump's words are coming back to haunt him.

In the Commonwealth, we have long done likewise. Here, for example, we have permitted judges to consider what is called "legislative intent" when a statute's words aren't as clear as they'd like. So, judges will often read up on rough-and-tumble debates in the Commons to discern Parliament's intention. It's messy, but it works.

And, in the Charter era, Canadian judges have often gone even farther. Non-sworn, extrinsic evidence has been accepted in Canadian courts for decades. As no less than Chief Justice Bora Laskin put it, this sort of material "may be considered by the Court in determining whether the legislation rests on a valid constitutional base."

Which is a rather genteel way of summarizing the constitutional dilemma Donald Trump has created for himself. By being, you know, "politically incorrect," what he said outside the courtroom is now being used to hammer him inside the courtroom. And it's simply wonderful.

Here's the Washington Post explaining why Trump's words are coming back to haunt him -- and why his Muslim ban is being found discriminatory, and therefore unconstitutional, by court after court:

"The states of Washington and Minnesota, which sued to block Trump's order, are citing the president's inflammatory rhetoric as evidence that the government's claims -- it's not a ban and not aimed at Muslims -- are shams.

In court papers, Washington and Minnesota's attorneys general have pulled out quotes from speeches, news conferences and interviews as evidence that an executive order the administration argues is neutral was really motivated by animus toward Muslims and a 'desire to harm a particular group.'"

Get it, Donald? Do you understand, now? Being "politically incorrect" may have transformed you into a politician who was seen as unconventional. But, along they way, it has likely rendered you unconstitutional, too. Your words are being used against you, and properly so.

There are three lessons, here, for politicians -- almost always of the conservative variety -- who want to throw off the oppressive bonds of "political correctness," and say whatever pops into their tiny craniums. Heed them well, conservatives.

  • Words matter.
  • You are always, always on the record.
  • "No comment" is sometimes a really good idea.

It's like what no less than the Prophet Muhammad said, some 1,400 years ago. It's one for the ages. You know: "Say good, or remain silent."

Donald Trump -- who had the right to remain silent, but didn't -- may soon be wishing he had followed the Prophet's advice.

(Not that he'd let the Prophet into America to be heard by anyone, of course.)

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