Legal expert comments
| Group | Ideology | In your words, what is the state of the rule of law in the United States right now? What is the single most important threat to it? |
|---|---|---|
| Federal judge | Conservative | The single most important threat to the rule of law currently is the lawlessness of anti-ICE rioters and thugs who forcefully interfere with our law enforcement officers who are doing their jobs. I have never seen so many people choosing to physically interfere with law enforcement rather than peacefully protesting, and politicians actually supporting that type of lawlessness. I have seen the videos of these rioters driving their cars toward ICE officers, throwing rocks at ICE officers, using their vehicles to block access for ICE officers, etc. I hope that the people who have committed these acts will be brought to justice. |
| Federal judge | Conservative | Threatened. Lack of understanding of civics by adult population. |
| Federal judge | Liberal | State is very bad. Trump. |
| Federal judge | Liberal | Trump |
| Federal judge | Liberal | The President and Vice President of the United States is the single most threat to the rule of law, with the Supreme Court majority ranking a close second. After that, the Attorney General and the Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security are serious threats to the rule of law and our democracy. I understand you only wanted the single most threat, but it’s hard not to include the rest. |
| Federal judge | Liberal | The Rule of Law lacks pubic meaning and public advocacy. Unless the public understands the value of the Rule of Law and its meaning to each American’s daily life, the concept faces extinction-just as public opinion polls suggest that many Americans have lost value placed in the concepts of democracy. I believe our founders counted on an engaged public in a common endeavor to build and maintain this republic, even though they distrusted voters. I feel across the Nation it is the trial courts that are most engaged in maintaining the Rule of Law and are most under threat. As may arise on appropriate occasions, the bar, the courts, and institutions have a duty to explain and support the concept and its important role in maintaining a peaceful, trustworthy, and productive society. If all public meaning and value of the Rule of Law is lost,then so are we. |
| Federal judge | Liberal | In serious danger due to the current President. |
| Federal judge | Liberal | The single greatest threat is Trump vs United States opinion of the Supreme Court decided with a President who has no norms, has little understanding of government other than his self interest and is a pathalogical liar. The Principle of Trump vs United States may have been tolerable if the president was governed by something greater or more than “his morals” that law in the United States, or international law or treaties are not relevant. All of which reflects a mistaken belief by the Supreme Court that its immunity grant would not be misapplied or misused as a sword. Secondly, Citizens United has failed in its premise that money is speach. More aptly money is volume of speach, not an equivelent to conversation or reasoned discussion. |
| Federal judge | Liberal | The nation is strong as is its commitment to the rule of law, but the current president presents the greatest threat in decades. |
| Federal judge | Liberal | We are very near to civil war |
| Federal judge | Liberal | We have lost respect for the separation of powers among the three branches of government. |
| Federal judge | Liberal | Lawlessness is rampant. The rule of law is on a precipice in the United States. The current leadership in the Executive Branch and the lack of leadership in the Legislative Branch are a double-fisted threat to the rule of law. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | Deteriorating. Donald Trump and those beholden to him. |
| Lawyer | Missing ideology response | Endangered. The president |
| Lawyer | Liberal | Largely intact, but threatened. The biggest threat is the freedom with which those with “bully pulpits” disparage judges, courts and the rule of law. This applies to elected officials of both parties, not just the current administration. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | Rapidly being lost due to Trump and his toadies. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | The rule of law is under serious threat because the president does not honor, or perhaps even understand, his “take care” obligations under the Constitution. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | The rule of law is under serious threat. The survival of democracy is in question. The actions of the Trump administration to fail to follow court orders and to seek to change election rules or otherwise threaten the broad right to vote. |
| Lawyer | Conservative | overreaching federal agencies |
| Lawyer | Conservative | The rule of law is under serious attack from both political parties now. Polarization has caused the electorate and Congress to be weaker than usual in keeping checks and balances even. The single greatest threat to the rule of law is the attack on the judiciary upon which we all depend for even-handed and non-partisan justice. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | We have a significant threat to the rule of law in the USA right now due to a president that only follows rules that benefit him. All other rules are to be disregarded when it suits him. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | Under serious threat. Trump and those who shelter under his political power to take political power themselves. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | Unrestrained executive power. The co equal branches of govt have yielded their power to the executive. No one is fighting for us. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | It is almost non-existent. Trump is the biggest threat, and congress’s unwillingness to check him. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | In crisis. Single biggest threat is Donald Trump. |
| Lawyer | Conservative | The single greatest threat to the rule of law is that the government no longer can be expected to tell the truth. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | Poor. This President. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | The state of the rule of law in this country is being threatened by the current administration. The single most important threat is the executive branches’ refusal to respect the other two branches of government. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | The state of the rule of law in the United States is under threat from arbitrary executive action and the failure of the legislature and Supreme Court to consistently enforce guardrails. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | The lack of respect for separation of powers and our system of checks and balances. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | The rule of law in the US is under attack. The single most important threat to it is the current presidential administration. |
| Lawyer | Conservative | Threats by the president. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | The rule of law is threatened every day that Donald Trump is in office. He has no respect for any authority other than himself, and no concept of how America is supposed to function. |
| Lawyer | Conservative | The lack of respect by the Executive Branch to the Legislative and Judicial Branches, and the willingness of the Legislative Branch (at both the Federal and State Levels) to just go along with the Executive Branch. The biggest is when both the Executive and Legislative Branches attack the Judicial Branch. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | Dangerously at risk from an administration that fails follow the rule of law. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | The rule of law in the US right now is being severely compromised. The single most important threat to it is Donald Trump. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | The rule of law is under extraordinary threat from the actions of the Executive and Judicial branch (primarily the Supreme Court) and the inaction of the Legislative Branch. What the law says and how it has been interpreted for decades, if not centuries, no longer matters. This administration does whatever it wants and concocts phony legal justification when pressed. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | There are serious threats but the majority of our local and state operations are still closely aligned to our presume approaches to the rule of law. There is a difference between what is made possible by breaches, challenges, and threats and what actual occurs because of those breaches, challenges, and threats. The federal political landscape and it’s challenges and threats to the rule of law are grave and serious and are actively impacting state and local actions and policies but it is not clear that they have fully corrupted our systems to the point that rule of law is absent. The media and the lack of historical perspective exacerbate the fear (even if the threat is real) and creates further challenges to right sizing the rule of law on all levels through hyperfocus on single activities and little focus on sharing strategies to shore up current rule of law or undermine the corrosive effects of a political party, political administration, and corrupt or cowardly political officials. There are more people who believe in the rule of law than there are of those actively undermining it or exploiting its denigration. Moreover, there is a lot of power held by those opposed to the current state of the rule of law. Political power is not the only power that matters and the rule of law is meaningless when viewed solely or narrowly from the point of view of political actions. This is why my responses reflected what seems a contradictory stance. No I don’t think rule of law in America is gone. But yes I recognize it is seriously threatened and at risk because it is currently being undermined and numerous bad actors are seeking to leverage this opportunity to further undermine or exploit the fear, instabilities power imbalances it is causing today. However I’m also aware that this is temporal and there have been many other instances in world and US history that demonstrate wild shifts in power. While I’m hopeful sanity, courage, and respect for the rule of law and our fellow Americans will return, I’m not naive to think the consequence of a significant period without the rule of law or (probably more likely) further entrenchment of the current policies adversarial to the rule of law AT THE STATE AND LOCAL LEVELS will create an untenable situation or the dismantling of the US democracy as it was intended or has been understood. Strategy to rewrite the rule of law with protections that don’t depend on people not pushing boundaries is needed. That must happen across all three branches, and, no, I don’t think we necessarily need a ton of constitutional amendments to do it. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | The rule of law is on a backslide. The biggest threat is consolidation of wealth and power channeled by Citizens United into political pawns. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | In my view, the rule of law in the United States is resilient but under sustained strain. The constitutional architecture still functions. Courts issue decisions that bind the political branches. Elections occur. Transfers of power, though at times tense, continue. Lawyers argue, judges decide, journalists investigate, and civil society organizes. Those are not trivial facts. Many countries have lost the rule of law far more quickly and far more quietly. But resilience should not be confused with invulnerability. We are experiencing a period in which foundational norms—respect for institutional roles, acceptance of adverse rulings, commitment to truth, and restraint in the use of power—are eroding. The rule of law does not depend solely on written law. It depends on habits of compliance, mutual toleration, and a shared understanding that no one is above the law—not presidents, not judges, not corporations, not activists. If I had to identify one overarching threat, it would be the erosion of public trust in institutions, especially the judiciary and the electoral system. When significant portions of the public believe: ‑Courts are political actors rather than neutral arbiters, ‑Elections are illegitimate unless their preferred side wins, ‑Law enforcement is selectively applied based on ideology, ‑Or that constitutional outcomes are negotiable based on partisan loyalty, then compliance with lawful outcomes becomes contingent rather than principled. And once compliance becomes optional in the public mind, the rule of law shifts from a shared civic commitment to a transactional tool. The rule of law ultimately rests on something intangible: legitimacy. Courts do not command armies. Judges do not enforce their own orders. The system works because most people, most of the time, accept outcomes—even painful ones—as binding. That acceptance is built on trust that the system, while imperfect, is fundamentally fair. When leaders—across the political spectrum—undermine that trust for short-term advantage, they weaken the very structure that protects all of us in the long term. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | An unchecked executive branch that is headed by unprincipled political cronies of the corrupt President that has disregarded norms and institutions, coupled with a Congress consisting of a lapdog majority party. The manifestations of abuse by this administration are too many to list here. I still have some, though diminishing confidence, that norms will eventually be restored, but not anytime soon. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | Oligarchs |
| Lawyer | Liberal | The progressive academic liberal elite that is brainswashing younger generations of students. |
| Lawyer | Conservative | State of rule of law: Under serious challenge Most important threats: (i) Administration’s use of the law to intimidate and punish political enemies; (ii) executive orders seeking to sanction law firms based on whom they represent |
| Lawyer | Conservative | The most important threat to the rule of the law is the amplification of fringe voices to central parts of the national dialogue as a result of technology. National agenda should not be set by loudmouths. That goes for both ends of the political spectrum. Members of the media are extraordinarily irresponsible about what they choose to highlight. Many of your questions, and the proffered answers, were formulated poorly because they are based on presumptions that aren’t necessarily true. I did my best. Let me give you my basic view so that you see where I’m coming from. That said, part of the poison in the country’s bloodstream now is the overwrought reactions to him — please, use a little judgment to tell when he is in carnival barker or panderer mode and when he is actually serious. Trump should shut his mouth and stop saying stupid things — it isn’t even that hard to tell which are which. He doesn’t follow through on almost any of the silly things he says, and when he does and they aren’t upheld, he pretty much uniformly follows court rulings. So his running off at the mouth in his typical hyperbolic fashion isn’t a threat to the rule of law, it’s just stupid logorrhea that makes him look silly. Courts slap him down and they should (with a qualifier below). As for some of your other questions, like firing Lisa Cook? He’s testing whether his Article II removal power extends to the Fed — you never know if you don’t try. I think he’s wrong but it’s a test case — that’s not a threat to the rule of law, it IS the rule of law. As for the prosecutions of Democrats, welcome to my world of concern about politicized prosecutions. I heard precious little about concern for the rule of law from the academic establishment when Obama’s DOJ under his “wingman” Eric Holder went after Fox News reporters or his IRS went after the Tea Party. You don’t have to like Fox News or the Tea Party — I certainly have issues with both — but Obama’s administration had no business going after them. Or when Biden’s DOJ went after all manner of political opponents. Or Jack Smith subpoenaing the phone records of the Speaker of the House and getting a confidentiality order to keep Johnson from finding out, on grounds that Johnson was flight risk (look it up — this actually happened). Trump’s administration going after his political opponents is more of the same, he’s just less coy about it. I said earlier that the district judges were checking him when he is wrong. But you also might want to check the Trump Administration’s success rate when it has appealed the district court rulings that went too far. This isn’t rocket science — the plaintiffs choose the forum they think they can win in, they file where they can find an obliging and ideologically sympatico judge, and if Trump loses (which happens often) but thinks he can win on appeal, he appeals — and his people have chosen their appeals pretty well. Does the fact that the district judges get reversed on appeal on a not infrequent basis mean they are a danger to the rule of law? I don’t think so. (Though they really should stop issuing ex parte TROs — in my experience, judges should hear both sides before acting.) What I think is absolutely a threat to constitutional governance is the almost unbelievable self-enrichment this administration has been doing. (Not that prior administrations were so pristine, either — much of the federal bureaucracy turns out to have been a massive slush fund. But Trump’s people are particularly shameless.) And for some reason the corruption doesn’t get quite as much attention as the stuff the literati choose to caterwaul about. Such as supposed threats to the rule of law. Which brings me to my last observation, which is that surveys like this are part of the problem because they suggest that what Trump is doing is unique and new. It’s not, it’s just louder and cruder, and it’s aimed at your ideological allies. I am a lawyer who is concerned that the country is being polarized for profit and ideological advantage, and even more perturbed that the institutions that should be providing some sort of adult input are themselves grinding ideological axes. I think everyone needs to grow up, starting with the President. But also including college professors designing surveys. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | Those enablers of Trump. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | The rule of law is under grave threat currently. The most important threat is the failure of the system of checks-and-balances among the three branches. The Congress has essentially abdicated its role in providing meaningful checks on the Executive, and the Executive refuses to recognize the Judiciary as a co-equal branch of government. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | In Chaos.….Trump is the greatest threat. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | influenced and ambiguous; threatened by ideology and ambition |
| Lawyer | Missing ideology response | A lack of democracy due to Citizens United and progeny |
| Lawyer | Liberal | The rule of law is under threat in this country like never before, thanks to the extraordinary lawlessness and narcissism of President Trump and his appointees and the utter failure of Congress to stand up for its prerogatives. Only the courage and vigilance of the federal judiciary protects us from becoming another Hungary or Venezuela. I don’t think the public adequately appreciates how desperate the situation is because they have never seen anything like the way this administration flouts and weaponizes the legal system — people can’t grasp how bad things could become. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | The state is not good– The biggest threat was Supremes giving Prez so much immunity and the citizens united letting corporations give so much to political campaigns |
| Lawyer | Liberal | “The accumulation of all powers, Legislative, Executive, and Judiciary, in the same hands, whether of one, a few, or many, and whether hereditary, self-appointed, or elective, may justly be pronounced the very definition of tyranny.” With a Supreme Court that has been politicized and dumbed down, and a Congress that will not protect even its own authority from Presidential overstepping, our system of checks and balances has broken down. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | Executive overreach — ignoring or actively skirting court orders at any and all levels. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | Right now the rule of law is under attach by the current presidential administration. The single most important threat is Congress’ complete abdication of investigating the current administrations clear violations of the law … whether it’s attach people’s freedom of speech, arresting them without warrants, violating the emoluments clause, partisan attacks on elected officials, harassing of federal judges, etc. The list goes on. The most dangerous threat right now is the President’s campaign to attack free and fair elections by attempting to “nationalize” them, whatever that means. I fully expect him to use ICE to harass minorities at the polls in swing states. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | The rule of law in the United States is hanging by a thread. The most acute threat is the president and his enablers (including in Congress and the judiciary). The most important threat is the lack of political courage needed to reform our system and to codify political norms to prevent would-be totalitarians from exercising unchecked power. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | The rule of law is under challenge by the current administration far beyond any prior administrations. Pressure is brought on any judge that does not rule in the manner the current administration demands and the President himself publicly derides any judge that does not rule as he wishes. This pressure undermines the foundation of the rule of law which is that the law must be applied with consistent judicial principles by our courts without influence of political or economic pressures. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | Christian nationalism. Use of law enforcement as political tool for posturing or for punishing enemies; threats to speech. I have seen all this spread from Texas to federal government. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | The presidency and its abuse of the justice system for political goals. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | Rule of law is hanging on by a threat. The Trump Administration and its enablers in Congress are the gravest threat to the rule of law. They act as if they may never find themselves out of power. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | Trump, MAGA, and his Congressional acolytes who have abrogated their Constitutional obligations. Everything Trump does, 24/7, implementing Project 2025, and his personal agenda based on greed, power, contempt for the rule of law, the US Constitution and his presidential oath and obligations. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | The rule of law is under constant attack. The attacks on the judiciary for rulings the administration does not like as well as the wanton disregard of court orders are of most concern to me. An independent judiciary is the most important guardrail in a functioning democracy. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | The rule of law is under enormous attack in the United States right now, causing great peril to our democracy. The single most important threat is the extreme conservative viewpoint that “might is right” and takes precedence over the rule of law. This deliberate intent to destroy the constitutional principles that set forth the rule of law is the single most important threat, and it is magnified by President Trump’s utter lawlessness and cynical disregard for the rule of law. But unfortunately, it is a viewpoint that is also held by a large band of his like-minded advisers and extensive leading members and thought leaders in his party, who each day are taking deliberate actions to undermine the rule of law. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | Erosion of the public perception that the rule of law is a fundamental concept that creates the necessary preconditions for a functioning democratic, capitalist society |
| Lawyer | Conservative | The rule of law is better now than it was under the Biden administration, but it still hasn’t recovered from the institutional and systematic abuse inflicted on it by prior Democrat Party administrations. There are still woke idealogues and corrupt individuals in that party who are intent on perverting the rule of law to their own ends. The hyperpartisanship on the extreme Left is dangerous, ignorant, and real. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | The rule of law has been substantially weakened by the unlawful, irresponsible, and incompetent acts of Pres. Trump and his administration. The single most important threat is Pres. Trump. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | I am a Democrat and have been since 1978, before I was able to vote. I abhor Donald Trump. However, I do not think the rule of law is under siege. Recall that FDR — whom Democrats like me idolize — pressed for myriad bills that, upon promulgation, were deemed patently unconstitutional; hatched a plan to “pack the court” and add justices to SCOTUS; breached the time-honored tradition of serving only two terms as POTUS (leading to the 22A); and, forced US citizens (who happened to be of Japanese descent) into concentration camps. Those were all serious “threats to the rule of law,” and the republic withstood. It will again. Hand-wringing doesn’t help. Voting does. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | Not good and in peril because of Trump. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | Extremely threatened by an Administration that does not respect the norms of our constitutional and legal system. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | There is a sense that the population no longer trusts the legal system to deliver impartial results. The sense that everything s driven by political concerns corrodes a pillar of self-government. President Trump and his appointees seem willing to act as they wish, without regard to settled law or even court orders., and intimidate others as much as possible. Coarse and insulting comments about judges amplify the level of distrust. The Supreme Court has enabled this by abusing the emergency docket, and Congress has allowed it to happen by refusing to act on anything that could restrain a runaway executive. As a consequence, trust in the DOJ has diminished, respect for the Supreme Court is about nil, and even the notion that law should be impartial is no longer accepted as true. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | The rule of law is threatened. The Supreme Court granted the President absolute immunity from prosecution for almost any action they would take while in office, which the current president is using to take or authorize actions that violate the law, including international law. The single most important threat to the rule of law is the Supreme Court’s apparent adoption of the unitary executive theory and failure to hold the executive accountable for actions that violate the Constitution, federal statutes, or both. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | Dumpster fire |
| Lawyer | Liberal | The rule of law is under great threat. The Executive’s repeated refusal to comply with court orders is a great threat (perhaps the single most important). |
| Lawyer | Liberal | Trump |
| Lawyer | Liberal | The rule of law in the United Stares is under serious threat right now. The single most important threat is a President who feels no need (legal or normative) to consult with or abide by the recommendations or decisions of other parts of government. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | The state of the rule of law in the US is threatened by Trump and Bondi because they are making most, if not all, decisions based on furthering their political agenda. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | Breakdown and ignoring of of the written and unwritten rules that create institutional and structural checks and balances among the branches of government including by the press and public against the government. Without the guardrails, the system will veer of course and appears to be actively steered off course. |
| Lawyer | Conservative | Extreme partisanship on both sides. Media is no longer trusted by anyone. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | The authoritarian administration in power right now and the reluctance of those with checks and balances powers to uphold their consitutional obligations. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | Public ignorance of how the rule of law has historically worked and should work |
| Lawyer | Liberal | The rule of law is threatened by all three branches of the federal government. It is threatened by the Executive Branch which shows disregard for the law in many of its actions, especially regarding Presidential Executive Orders. It is threatened by Congress which will not pass needed legislation, especially in the immigration law area. It is threatened by the Judicial Branch itself, which does not adequately rein in executive action, and does not enforce its orders in a timely manner. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | Imperilled. Acquiescence by Congress and public officals; apathy by most citizens |
| Lawyer | Missing ideology response | I understand “the rule of law” as used in this survey as the U.S. constitutional order the way it was explained to me in high school and on School House Rock. But, that order has never actually existed. The rule of law is a piety, an aphorism. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | The rule of law is threatened and under siege, and the most important threat is the lack of legal professions in the government who are willing to stand up to dangerous executive leaders. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | Under severe threat. Executive continually pushing the bounds of authority. |
| Lawyer | Conservative | Good. Biggest threat is Leftist defiance. |
| Lawyer | Conservative | Imperiled. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | We are dangerously close to losing the rule of law right now. The single most important threat is apathy and political division. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | In flux. Threat: Mr. Trump |
| Lawyer | Conservative | Precarious. Growth of jurisdiction,size,and discretion of federal policing agencies |
| Lawyer | Conservative | Attempts to compromise the Supreme Court’s independence by adding more judges, term limits, jurisdictional restrictions, and other like initiatives to curb its power and prestige. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | It is rapidly declining towards authoritarianism. The project 2025 architects and those who are implementing it. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | Your list of American States, Washington DC, and Puerto Rico leaves out parts of the U.S. geographic frame. [potentially identifying information redacted] |
| Lawyer | Liberal | Presidential, DOJ, and ICE lawlessness |
| Lawyer | Liberal | It is autocratic. The absence of legislative initiative or push back |
| Lawyer | Liberal | In his second term, President Trump is the most important threat to the rule of law in the U.S., and he is straining mightily to undermine the rule of law. Congress and the U.S. Supreme Court have let him get away with it frustratingly often. But many other institutions are mostly holding firm, including lower federal courts, state courts, and the political and administrative branches at the state and local levels. In spite of Trump’s efforts, elections remain free and open. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | Trump’s refusal to respect the balance of powers, proactively flaunting his disregard for the law, which forces an astronomical number of legal challenges to actions that are clearly unlawful, and Trump’s unwillingness to abide by court decisions once there is a legal decision. This is compounded by the Supreme Court’s willingness to prematurely reverse thoughtful decisions by the lower courts through the use of the shadow docket. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | At the top of the Administration (and anything that falls within its sights), abysmal. At lower levels/day-to-day in [redacted position]s, AUSAs are still doing their job and appear to be focused on facts, not political favor. As for the threat, I cannot identify just one: The Administration’s persistent and repeated spreading of false information; persistent attempts to divide our citizens; demonization of noncitizens; general mean-spiritedness; and crackdowns on free speech and protest, combined with public apathy and unwillingness to investigate the accuracy of Administrative claims before reaching opinions, collectively pose an enormous threat to the rule of law. But if I had to choose just one thing, I would say the attempts to gerrymander districts and disenfranchise voters. |
| Lawyer | Conservative | The rule of law in America is only as good as the people responsible for performing their individual roles without prejudice or political or personal favoritisms. A significant threat to the rule of law was the Biden administration’s failure to uphold and enforce existing immigration laws by opening the Southern border to millions of individuals who had no right to come here in that manner, including two million “got-a-ways.” Now, in an effort to find and remove some of those who came here illegally the rule of law is threatened by the actions of some elected officials encouraging broad civil resistance. |
| Lawyer | Liberal | Using the Department of Justice to investigate political opponents or critics. |
| Lawyer | Conservative | The public in general prioritizes a particular result in cases rather than prioritizing a decision in accordance with the rule of law. This preference plays out politically. |
| Law professor | Liberal | Donald Trump is the most important threat. He has created a cult of personality and the Republican Party is no longer a working party — it is the instrument of the President. The state terror campaign against immigrants |
| Law professor | Liberal | The President and Congress. |
| Law professor | Liberal | I adhere to Ernst Fraenkel’s “Dual State” theory of dictatorship, in his eponymous book about the Nazi regime. In everyday matters, the rule-of-law state (“Normative State”) endured; but it had layered on it a “Prerogative State” where the executive could impose his will and override the rule of law. We certainly aren’t in a dictatorship, but Trump 2.0 is upping the prerogative-to-normative ratio. The single most important threat to the rule of law is the acquiescence of a large part of the American public, and increasing public indifference to whether a constitutional and rule-of-law democracy endures. |
| Law professor | Liberal | Most of the questions here relate to federal law and public law. That’s fine, and to the extent that’s the frame of reference, I think the state of rule of law is in serious jeopardy, and the most important threat is a sociopathic president who does not care about anyone but himself, and has surrounded himself with sycophants and yes-people. That said, as someone who studies state and local government, I think that this survey leaves a lot of what affects/constitutes the rule of law in the U.S. out of the picture, which makes it hard sometimes to answer these questions when private law and state and local governments also matter in the scheme of things. |
| Law professor | Liberal | The rule of law is under threat from multiple directions, the most serious of which is the Trump Administration. |
| Law professor | Liberal | The rule of law is under active and very dangerous attack by the Trump administration for the reasons listed in your survey. The Supreme Court is also endangering the rule of law through (a) Trump v. U.S., granting Trump absolute immunity even with respect to the most severe attack mounted against the constitutional order since the Civil War–namely, Trump’s self-coup attempt on Jan. 6, 2021; (b) abuse of the emergency docket by failing to balance the equities in lifting lower courts’ stays of Trump administration actions, even when those actions are flagrantly illegal; © making up constitutional law where nothing in the text, history, or precedent justifies this, so as to effectively sideline the legislative branch, enforce a conception of the president as having untrammeled power to extort money from private businesses and universities, to take bribes, and reduce the DoJ to an instrument of personal vengeance; and (d) making up constitutional law (as in the subjective major questions and nondelegation doctrines) so as to appropriate a veto power over legislation and regulations that the Court doesn’t like. |
| Law professor | Liberal | The rule of law is under extraordinary threat, and the single most important threat is Donald Trump’s ability to act with impunity because Congress will not restrain him and because of the Supreme Court’s immunity decision. |
| Law professor | Liberal | Donald Trump |
| Law professor | Liberal | Donald Trump, his administration, and ICE are the single most important threats to rule of law in the United States. |
| Law professor | Missing ideology response | Out is under threat, but guardrails are still mostly holding. The Trump Admin. is currently the greatest threat, especially if they disregard constitutional court orders. |
| Law professor | Liberal | Dire. The president. |
| Law professor | Liberal | Inability of the courts and Congress to check the executive branch. This results in corruption, bias and diminution of individual rights |
| Law professor | Liberal | We are in serious danger of losing whatever legal guardrails we have. The single greatest threat is President Trump |
| Law professor | Liberal | The rule of law in the United Statues is in very bad shape. The populace’s belief in the rule of law in the United States is at an all time low in my lifetime. The single most important threat to the Rule of Law in the United States is the lack of due process citizens have in interactions with federal law enforcement. |
| Law professor | Liberal | Both Congress and the Supreme Court have abdicated their role to serve as a check on executive authority, allowing the president to essentially rule by decree. |
| Law professor | Liberal | The rule of law is under attack and President Trump is the single most important threat to it. |
| Law professor | Liberal | The rule of law is unevenly practiced at present. In most cases, most of the time, it remains robust. The greatest threat to the rule of law is the use of federal agencies to target political opponents of the Trump administration. |
| Law professor | Liberal | Executive overreach and consolidation of executive power |
| Law professor | Liberal | Rule of law in the United States in under great strain. The single most important threat is Donald J. Trump whose self-centered, small-minded, short-term approach to power elevates what benefits him personally, even when those benefits jeopardize the rule of law. The U.S. Supreme Court has not helped, particularly in the way it has undercut the legitimacy of the lower courts, criticized judges, used the emergency docket to empower the Trump administration, and established a “rule for the ages” giving the President broad immunity. But the Supreme Court’s threat to the rule of law is merely derivative. Donald Trump remains the most serious threat to the rule of law in the modern world. |
| Law professor | Liberal | The rule of law is under serious threat at the federal level due to attacks on judicial independence and efforts to create a unitary executive with strong and perhaps largely unconstrained powers. These developments have been enabled by an increasingly polarized political discourse that entrenches differences among the electorate rather than building a sense of common purpose and shared fate. I would say that disregard of the rule of law at the highest levels of our federal government are the single most important threat, but this disregard is enabled by a toxic political environment. |
| Law professor | Liberal | The rule of law is in a precarious position, primarily due to President Trump’s lawless actions. |
| Law professor | Liberal | Pretty poor. The current administration has little regard for the rule of law, and is openly perverting it in the interests of an autocratic and far-right administration |
| Law professor | Liberal | The rule of law in the US is in a state of rapid deterioration. It’s hard to name a single most important threat, though. In some sense, the President is the ultimate cause of this deterioration. But the President couldn’t have this effect on his own. His advisors and appointees; the Supreme Court; and majorities in Congress are necessary to allow him to undermine the rule of law. So maybe I should say that the most important threat is the collusion of powerful people across the federal government’s branches in undermining the rule of law. |
| Law professor | Conservative | The politicization of what should be neutral law enforcement. You asked a lot of questions about Trump, but I’m also concerned that the Justice Department for political reasons refused to bring, much prosecute any cases for violating federal law during anti-Israel protests, and that mayors in a dozen or so cities refused to allow the police to help universities enforce local anti-trespassing and related laws. |
| Law professor | Liberal | I believe we are facing a dire threat to the rule of law, more so than in any other time I have practiced law. |
| Law professor | Liberal | Executive branch and its overreach |
| Law professor | Conservative | The rule of law in the United States is threatened. The single most important threat is executive branch disregard of judicial orders and legislation. |
| Law professor | Liberal | The rule of law is at a tipping point because public officials, especially in the current administration, lack integrity. |
| Law professor | Conservative | No different than under Biden |
| Law professor | Liberal | Donald Trump and MAGA politicians |
| Law professor | Conservative | Unchecked immigration and asylum fraud |
| Law professor | Liberal | The Trummp administration’s failure to follow court orders on a regular basis. |
| Law professor | Conservative | Very precarious Undermining of the equal right of all citizens to participate in free and fair elections |
| Law professor | Conservative | It is deeply imperiled. The most important threat is the right’s lack of concern about Donald Trump’s lawless actions and rhetoric. |
| Law professor | Liberal | 1) Endangered. 2) The Executive Branch’s disregard for the legal limits on its authority and for judicial efforts to enforce those limits. |
| Law professor | Liberal | The rule of law in the United States is at a precarious tipping point moment. The Trump administration, through both rhetoric and actions, is the most important threat. |
| Law professor | Liberal | Seriously endangered. Disregard by Trump Administration. |
| Law professor | Liberal | It is very much at risk and currently being undermined with regularity. The biggest threat is the total lack of accountability for the brazen corruption and illegality. |
| Law professor | Liberal | Terrible. The single most important threat to the rule of law in the United States is Donald Trump. |
| Law professor | Liberal | Establishment of lying as the prevailing cultural norm on questions of policy, political accountability, or enforcement of civil or criminal law. |
| Law professor | Liberal | It turns out that the equilibrium in which other elites (courts, congress, corporate America) would coordinate to control the president’s abuse of power depended on a shared belief about other elites doing so that has utterly collapsed. |
| Law professor | Conservative | Good. Double standards |
| Law professor | Liberal | State of rule of law in U.S. right now is terrible. Donald Trump’s hold on the Republican Party is the single most important threat to it. |
| Law professor | Liberal | There is very little rule of law left. Biggest threat is Trump Impunity authorized by US Supreme Court |
| Law professor | Conservative | Rule of law is fragile. Most important threat is decades-long disengagement of citizens from democratic deliberation and everyday talk with neighbors in favor of empowering federal courts and administrative agencies to decide questions of political, economic, and sociocultural practice. |
| Law professor | Conservative | The single greatest threat is that young people are encouraged, from a young age, that their personal ideals of justice or “equity” should trump policies that have been enacted as law through our democratic political system. This extends through legal education, thanks to the Boomers who took over and eventually dominated the discipline. The Left engages in more of this through the educational system, which definitely leans Left, but the far Right has followed suit, as evidenced by January 6th. Trump is more a symptom than a cause. The lawfare against him has backfired by radicalizing him and his base, and his attempts at lawfare are going to have the same effect. Hopefully reasonable people will realize that a pluralistic society cannot be governed this way. The Rule of Law is more about form and process than about substance, and we need to return to that understanding. |
| Law professor | Liberal | The biggest threat to the Rule of Law right now is the failure of the Supreme Court to place meaningful limits on the executive and the executive’s failure to abide by limits placed on it by lower courts. |
| Law professor | Liberal | The state of the rule of law is terrible. The single greatest threat is the failure of Congress (both parties) to provide a check on the President as required by the Constitution. |
| Law professor | Liberal | The rule of law is hanging on by a thread. Undermining election integrity and planting seeds to (1) threaten voters at polls with the presence of ICE and (2) impose onerous identification requirements on women are part of the larger project to suspend elections guarantee a Republican party “win” even if the votes don’t reflect that win. That is the greatest current threat. |
| Law professor | Liberal | The US has slipped out of the category of democracy and has become an electoral autocracy. The single most important threat is the overreach of the President and Article II more broadly under the unitary executive theory. This, coupled with the Supreme Court’s immunity decision and its current failure to check key abuses, leaves the country vulnerable to growing autocracy and breakdown of the rule of law. The existence of a class of people (undocumented, for sure but more broadly, non-citizens) who are systematically excluded from core due process guarantees is emblematic of what could be done to vulnerable communities and persons more broadly down the line. While the lower federal judiciary is holding strong, protecting impartial and independent justice, the Supreme Court has to often reversed those courts on the shadow docket, harming both the rule of law and the public’s ability to access impartial and fair justice more broadly. |
| Law professor | Liberal | Dire. The Republican Party. |
| Law professor | Liberal | Black money donations to political action committees. |
| Law professor | Liberal | war hawks launching unprovoked attacks on other nations to engage in regime change (e.g., Venezuela, Iran, Gaza (Palestine), Ukraine). |
| Law professor | Liberal | The rule of law is under serious threat, but is not in imminent danger of collapse. The single biggest threat is Donald Trump’s personalist and Caesarist view of the presidency. |
| Law professor | Liberal | under increasing threat by both the current administration and an economic elite that supports the administration and belives the law does not bind them |
| Law professor | Liberal | The rule of law is neither a rule, nor a law. It “lives” in a professional culture that puts certain actions (for example, openly boasting about attempts to victimize critics) firmly off limits, that places obligations on public servants (such as prosecutors or government officials) to apply the law neutrally and even handedly, and that supports important civil society actors (such as universities, law firms and media companies) to reflect those same values and to protest when they are violated, without fear of retribution. Every one of these components is under threat or already compromised and that fact is blindingly obvious. The question is whether this “system” which is not a system, can regrow those virtues. The obstacles to that are horrifyingly great. Once one has pretended that election fraud is rampant, that January 6th was not an insurrection and that the Justice Department is not run by political hacks, one must continue to deny those facts going forward. The threat of systemically disadvantaging one particular political view through gerrymandering, and executive and legislative actions, the authors of whom *admit* that is their primary goal, means that the ballot box is no longer a remedy on which we can rely. |
| Law professor | Liberal | Not very good. Arrest and deportation and killing without due process of law |
| Law professor | Liberal | Lawyers who implement Presidential directives without regard to ethical duties and the rule of law are the single most important threat. Presidents will always have the wrong motives. The current state of the rule of law is “under great stress, with courts largely holding, and political appointees playing with treason.” |
| Law professor | Liberal | The rule of law is under threat by the federal administration and an inactive congress. In my state the rule of law is under threat by an over-zealous, lawless state legislature. The judges–both federal and state–are holding the line. Single most important threat? Ambition and money in politics |
| Law professor | Liberal | The rule of law is under attach like never in my lifetime. The biggest threat is President Trump, combined with a supine Congress, plus a Supreme Court which subscribes to the risible “unitary executive” theory. |
| Law professor | Liberal | Under severe chalenge. Executive overreach and legislative timidity, and judicial unrestraint |
| Law professor | Liberal | President Trump is the single most important threat because of his disregard for the norms that have governed the Executive branch. |
| Law professor | Liberal | The state of the rule of law is dire, the united states is a backsliding democracy and the single most important threat to it is the Supreme Court of the United States |
| Law professor | Liberal | I am extremely concerned that the second Trump term has done damage that is irreparable or at a minimum not reparable for generations. I believe our (former?) allies no longer believe that we have the rule of law. I see the U.S. as well down that path currently and in a very short period of time. I am extremely concerned about access to truthful news. The executive branch willingness to disobey court orders is terrifying. I would seriously consider moving out of the country but for the feeling of obligation to stay and try to remedy things. |
| Law professor | Liberal | The rule of law is under attack and often losing. The threat is President Trump, his administration and elected republicans. |
| Law professor | Liberal | The rule of law is in a very vulnerable state. Thankfully there is a large cadre of lawyers who are willing to hold the line, including many who identify as Republican. |
| Law professor | Liberal | The US government and its institutions are very large. In thousands of settings, the rule of law is being followed by administrators, lawyers, judges, etc. However, under especially the second Trump administration, this bedrock aspect of American governance is facing sustained attack. The single most important threat to the rule of law right now is the executive branch–the small group of advisors around Trump that push him to take extreme positions on the law, move the Overton window in public on what they can lawfully do, and dare SCOTUS to disagree with them. |
| Law professor | Liberal | It is in a horrible state. The single most important threat is hard to narrow down, but the gestapo police killing American citizens, dismantling of federal institutions, ignoring court rulings, and racism (birthright citizenship, DEI threats, reverse racism claims) top the list. |
| Law professor | Liberal | Increasingly weak. The most important threat is the political apparatus created by Donald Trump. |
| Law professor | Liberal | The current federal administration, and specifically the president, does not understand or respect its role in the constitutional structure and does not feel constrained by anything outside of himself. Congress has abdicated its role and the Supreme Court is not constraining the president either. We have no effective checks and balances. |
| Law professor | Conservative | Joe Biden’s administration was the greatest threat to the rule of law probably in American history. The use of lawfare against President Trump and members of his administration to try to influence the 2024 election and to imprison and bankrupt them on political grounds is chilling. Bringing criminal prosecutions against his lawyers for providing advice was unprecedented. Pressuring social media companies into censoring speech by private individuals and banks to debank people for their speech and religious beliefs is clearly an effort to end-run the Constitution. The double-standard in the excessive criminal prosecutions of non-violent January 6 participants versus the rioters during the BLM riots in summer 2020 was egregious. And to top it off with the in-your-face pardons of Hunter Biden and other members of the Biden family as well as the prospective pardons of people like Anthony Fauci (who appears to have almost certainly perjured himself repeatedly before Congress) illustrated the degree of the double-standard of justice that prevailed during the Biden Administration. The weaponization of the FBI for political purposes, lying to the FISA Court, the Steele dossier, the use of the FBI to investigate and intimidate parents at PTA meetings, pro-life protestors, and the Catholic Church. The double-standard in how the DOJ handled Trump’s classified papers in Mar-A-Lago versus Biden’s classified papers in his garage. Fortunately the Trump Administration appears to be serious about trying to restore regularity and pull back on the use of law enforcement agencies and others to intimidate and silence critics. They also tried to blackball any of Trump’s lawyers from future legal practice. Given the thuggishness of the Biden administration and its allies in NYC, Atlanta, and elsewhere, I have reluctantly concluded that the only way we are going to restore the rule of law is through a tit-for-tat strategy against the perpetrators of this injustice. Otherwise the Democrats will adopt the playbook of the Biden Administration for all future elections and governance. Use the power of the federal government and your allies in the state and federal government to prosecute your opponents, silence those who criticize your policies, and throw your leading electoral opponents in jail. Thank goodness the Biden lawfare and thuggishness was repudiated at the ballot box. The Biden Administration really did have us slipping into a Banana Republic-style system of two-tiered justice based on one’s political beliefs and fealty to Biden. I am now optimistic that the Trump Administration is serious about reversing that and that the repudiation of Democratic lawfare tactics in November 2024 might get us back on track so that the Democrats do not do the same thing when they return to power. |
| Law professor | Liberal | It is in grave danger. The greatest threat arises from Congress’s failure to exercise its own authorities to constrain presidential abuses of power. |
| Law professor | Liberal | not great! The biggest threat is a federal secret police force determined to violate the rights of Americans, including by murdering them, in the name of ethnically cleansing the nation. |
| Law professor | Liberal | The rule of law in the U.S. is under severe threat and is rapidly eroding. The country is no longer a consolidated democracy; it is clearly a competitive authoritarian system akin to Hungary or India. Donald Trump poses the most direct threat to the rule of law, but he is only able to pose such a threat because of the collapse of the will of the other branches of government to constrain him. |
| Law professor | Liberal | Worst in past 100 years.by a significant margin, even compared to Trumps’ first term. Trump. |
| Law professor | Liberal | The rule of law is under multiple & repeated direct threats from the Administration, abetted by a compliant Congress, with limited & belated resistance from the Supreme Court. |
| Law professor | Liberal | Poor. Trumps threats to undermine elections. Billionaire money. |
| Law professor | Liberal | arbitrary and unchecked power by the president |
| Law professor | Liberal | Grievously under threat, but still resilient. The single greatest threat is that the legislature has refused to employ any of the constitutionally prescribed accountability mechanisms against the executive. |
| Law professor | Liberal | The state of the Rule of Law is poor. The single most important threat is partisan executive branch overreach. |
| Law professor | Liberal | The single most important threat to the rule of law is the current presidential administration, which knowingly violates the law, refuses to comply with court orders, violates civil rights, weaponized the justice department against the president’s perceived enemies, instructs government lawyers to bring legal actions against various entities without evidence, and fails to comply with legally required processes and procedures. There have been few consequences for these actions. Now the administration is undermining faith in the election process, so there may never be consequences for these actions. It isn’t clear that we have the rule of law right now in this country, at least with respect to constraints on government overreaching. |
| Law professor | Liberal | Significantly threatened. Single threat: Trump administration. |
| Law professor | Liberal | It is under grave threat. The single most important threat is the failure of co-equal branches to rein in an out-of-control executive. The lower courts have been doing their job, but the Supreme Court has mostly been cowardly and the Congress is completely absent. |
| Law professor | Liberal | It has been declining with increasing partisan polarization and bitterness for a few decades, but has rapidly accelerated during the second Trump Administration. You didn’t ask about the use of the office to enrich himself, and Congress’ refusal to challenge that. That too is an extraordinary threat to the rule of law. |
| Law professor | Missing ideology response | Single most important threat is reorganization of one of the two major parties around a charismatic leader espousing authoritarian values |
| Law professor | Missing ideology response | It is significantly threatened but compared to other countries there are still relatively strong norms and protections. The single biggest threat is that financial power is concentrated in a way that enables the authoritarian tendencies of whoever is in power. |
| Law professor | Liberal | Threatened |
| Law professor | Liberal | An unbound executive is the single greatest threat to the United States. |
| Law professor | Liberal | The rule of law in the United States is rapidly crumbling. The Republican party, led by Donald Trump, is the greatest threat to the rule of law. |
| Law professor | Conservative | There are many threats to the rule of law, but the very greatest threat to the rule of law is the ideology of the Republican Party. |
| Law professor | Liberal | Rule of law is in danger from many members of the current federal administration and some members of the administrations in some states. |
| Law professor | Liberal | The rule of law and faith in government are under assault. Sustained and coordinated efforts to undermine substantive and procedural legal safeguards, and sustained and coordinated efforts to eliminate or erode essential government institutions. |
| Law professor | Liberal | The rule of law is under threat but it is not disappeared. How the Supreme Court will respond I think remains to be seen. Single most important threat is the public no longer expecting political actors to respect rule of law. |
| Law professor | Liberal | President Trump and his enablers are the most important threat. |
| Law professor | Liberal | uncertain. Trump |
| Law professor | Liberal | Political pressure and threats to judges. |
| Law professor | Missing ideology response | Your question on original meaning shouldn’t have been framed as a binary I think the rule of law is, as a concept, narrower than how you’ve framed it in some of the questions. The rule of law is IMO properly conceptualized as having 8 elements: 1. Generality. Roughly, there must be rules, cognizable separately from (and broader than) specific cases, such that the rules can be applied to specific cases, or specific cases can be seen to fall under or lie within them. 2. Notice or publicity. Those who are expected to obey the rules must be able to find out what the rules are. 3. Prospectivity. The rules must exist prior in time to the actions being judged by them. 4. Clarity. The rules must be understandable by those who are expected to obey them. 5. Non-contradictoriness. Those who are expected to obey the rules must not simultaneously be commanded to do both A and not‑A. 6. Conformability. The addressees must be able to conform their behavior to the rules. 7. Stability. The rules must not change so fast that they cannot be learned and followed. 8. Congruence. The explicitly promulgated rules must correspond with the rules inferable from patterns of enforcement by functionaries (e.g., courts and police). The biggest threat to the rule of law right now is best understood as a problem of generality–rules are being applied against some and not others. While that’s long been a problem in the US (it’s a by product of, e.g., prosecutorial discretion), the uneven application seems to be politically motivated. |
| Law professor | Liberal | The rule of law is threatened by Trump’s political appointees who are blindly loyal to him and who disregard the Constitution in order to serve Trump. |
| Law professor | Liberal | It is seriously endangered and continuing to backslide, as recognized by many expert scholars in the field and organizations dedicated to measuring rule of law and democracy. The greatest threat is a federal executive that has no respect for it, enabled by a Congress that largely refuses to exercise its constitutional powers to check the executive’s abuses. |
| Law professor | Liberal | The rule of law in the U.S. is under serious threat. If you interview average people on the street, they’ll tell you the law doesn’t apply to wealthy and powerful people. The single biggest threat to the rule of law is the major lack of accountability for elected officials and wealthy people who break the law or behave unethically. |
| Law professor | Liberal | There is a full-frontal assault on the rule of law, with an attempt to turn the legal system into the personal weapon of the President, and there is a great deal of complicity in that by many important actors. However, we started from a strong point, and so the collapse cannot happen all at once. The single most important threat is the weaponization of the DOJ. |
| Law professor | Missing ideology response | The rule of law in the United States is in shambles. There are many threats, but I think the two biggest threats are corruption and a weak Congress–I’m not sure which is doing more damage right now. |
| Law professor | Liberal | The rule of law is generally sound, but very unstable in high profile instances of political salience. |
| Law professor | Liberal | Seriously imperiled. |
| Law professor | Liberal | It is under threat. The most important threat is craven enabling by powerful people and institutions. |
| Law professor | Liberal | The rule of law is desperately under attack in the U.S. The DOJ has been hijacked by the Trump Administration, and putting unqualified judges and prosecutors in place can have long-term ramifications. Threats to our fair elections can have existential effects. |
| Law professor | Liberal | The single most important threat is President Trump bullying the SCOTUS to do whatever he feels is correct. It is so hard to teach law students that we have a rule of law when they are constantly seeing the President do whatever he wants to do. |
| Law professor | Liberal | The rule of law in the US right now is under significant threat. |
| Law professor | Conservative | The rule of law is under threat because of Trump and his minions. |
| Law professor | Liberal | The rule of law in the United States is hanging by a thread. There is a strong legacy of rule of law that gives us hope to emerge from the current situation, but the rule of law is under active attack by the executive branch of the federal government. The legislative branch is doing nothing to address the situation, and the judiciary, so far, has been inadequate to prevent significant erosion to the rule of law. The single most important threat to the rule of law is the administration of Donald J. Trump. |
| Law professor | Liberal | Very poor. Congress’s failure to restrict or limit the executive branch is the most important threat. |
| Law professor | Liberal | Donald Trump is the biggest threat. We are in a constitutional crisis. |
| Law professor | Liberal | Rule of law in the United States is being eroded rapidly. The single most important threat is the unwillingness of the Courts and Congress to effectively utilize their constitutionally provided checks and balances. |
| Law professor | Liberal | President Trump is using the Department of Justice and FBI to carry out an agenda focused on enriching himself in terms of power and wealth and punishing those who try to constrain his corruption. Transforming the DoJ into Trump’s personal legal attack dogs (who also protect him against liability or exposure — see Epstein Files) is despicable and is destroying the rule of law in our country. Likewise transforming the FBI (and Homeland Security) into Trump’s personal police force and using it to terrorize perceived enemies, stir up fear and division in American cities, and insulate Trump and his cronies against any investigation of their own misconduct pokes hole after hole into the rule of law in this country. I am sickened and saddened that rule of law has already — in just one year of this administration — been decimated to this extent. if it doesn’t stop soon, we will be a nation where might, not law, reigns supreme. |
| Law professor | Liberal | Executive branch overreach undermining the checks and balances from Congress and the judiciary. |
| Law professor | Liberal | Rule of law has deteriorated substantially in the United States. The country no longer has a fully free and open democracy. The single most important threat to it is the persistence/reanimation of white supremacy, currently manifested in such activities as expanded and abusive executive power. |
Potentially identifying information and positions are redacted.
