Reagan-Appointed Judge Resigns So He Can Attack Trump

A Reagan-appointed federal judge just did the unthinkable. After four decades on the bench, he walked away so he could finally say what he claims the law wouldn’t let him say out loud. His warning is blistering, personal, and aimed straight at the heart of the Trump administration’s use of pow

Mark L. Wolf’s resignation lands like a warning flare from inside the institution he spent his life defending. Shaped by the post-Watergate insistence on a neutral Justice Department, he now argues that line has been crossed, that the law is being bent to shield allies and batter opponents. For a judge steeped in restraint to abandon the bench suggests he believes quiet dissent has become complicity.

The White House’s counterattack, branding him a “radical judge,” only sharpens the stakes. Wolf insists he left precisely to avoid that charge, stepping down before speaking out. His break with silence comes as Republicans amass a massive war chest for the midterms, and the struggle over courts, power, and trust in democratic norms intensifies. In choosing conscience over robes, Wolf forces the country to ask whether the guardrails he fears are failing have already begun to give way.

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