facebook-pixel

Letter: Where are the guardrails on our democracy?

(Manuel Balce Ceneta | The Associated Press) In this Oct. 6, 2011 photo, Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia participates at the third annual Washington Ideas Forum at the Newseum in Washington. The late Supreme Court Justice, Tom Cruise, and Stephen Colbert are among the 51 people nominated for the New Jersey Hall of Fame. The hall honors people in five categories who live or have lived in New Jersey.

Sen. Mike Lee's single-handed blockage of legislation to protect the Mueller investigation is almost farcical, because he said the proposed protection threatens government's “separation of powers.”

His justification was a dissent concocted by Justice Antonin Scalia against an old 7-1 Supreme Court decision saying a law that creates an independent counsel is constitutional. Furthermore, the excuses used by the present Republican leadership, that legislation for protection of Mueller's work is not needed, is equally farcical. As we know, despite assurances otherwise, Trump can change his mind on issues quicker than a flag changes direction in a hurricane.

My impressions of the first two years under Trump are quite different. I've been shocked at what power and influence this authoritarian wannabe apparently has. To single-handedly trash vital regulation, impose tariffs, stifle investigations, violate the Emoluments Clause, separate families, withdraw from treaties and, without repercussion, demonize the press, his opponents and many other world leaders, and outright lie constantly, my question is: Where are the guardrails on this guy? How can this happen in our democracy?

The new Congress should get busy and strengthen the “separation of powers,” or the awful stink of authoritarianism and extreme corruption could overcome us.

John Kennington, Cottonwood Heights

Submit a letter to the editor

Support free news for Utah

sltrib.com is now free to access — no subscription required. We made this decision because we believe access to trustworthy, independent news shouldn’t depend on what you can afford — especially as misinformation and AI-generated content continue to rise.

Free to read doesn’t mean free to produce. Our reporters show up every day to ask hard questions and hold powerful institutions to account. That work takes resources. As a nonprofit newsroom, we rely on support from people who believe it matters. Make a donation today to fund local news that serves Utah communities.

You can help us bring more local news to more communities today.