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Joachim's avatar

The European elections show how to beat the populist right - neutralize the immigration issue. No other compromise is necessary. With immigration off the table the far right cannot exceed 20% of the votes.

Scandinavia bucked the EU trend as left wing and centrist parties did much better here than in the rest of Europe, while the far right did much worse. The reason is that our center-right and center-left parties shifted their stances on immigration towards a much stricter policy with only a small, controlled number of asylum migrants allowed yearly (to make succesful integration possible). Denmark was first, Finland and Norway followed and since 2015 Sweden finally turned as well (after having scolded the Danes for being racists for years, now Swedish politicians are talking about Denmark as a model to copy, even the center-left Social Democrats have sent its people there to learn about Danish reforms when it comes to demolishing houses and restructuring segregated neighbourhoods).

Centrist parties in Germany, France, Spain and Italy should learn from the Nordic example and take a hard line on asylum immigration. There is zero popular legitimacy for ”open borders”/uncontrolled immigration and it will only lead to a growing far right that threatens liberal democracy.

The US should learn as well. In particular, US progressives who love to idealize Scandinavia should take a closer look at the current immigration policies of Scandinavian countries. They are closer to the Republican party than to those of the Democratic party.

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David Abbott's avatar

We need more judges and we need them now. This need is especially acute in the immigration system but extends to our entire legal system.

Attorneys would be vastly more productive if we had more judges. I spend many of my working hours waiting for judges to listen to me. It’s quite normal for 50 to 150 cases to be on a single court calendar and for me to spend a two to three hours waiting in court to make a simple announcement and speak for 60 seconds. I price this time in to the fees I charge. It’s why, even when a case is so simple I can think through it in a few minutes, my fee will be thousands of dollars. It would be much, much cheaper to hire an extra judge than to have two dozen lawyers queening in court to make announcements. The problem is judicial salaries are a transparent public expense and attorney wait time is an opaque private expense.

Waiting in court is only the tip of the inefficiency iceberg. Many of my interactions with clients are dominated by the fact that we will have to wait months for a hearing. I spend quite a bit of time telling divorce clients that I can’t really influence their spouse’s behavior any time soon because I can’t get a court date. In criminal cases, plea negotiations have as much to do with court scheduling as culpability and deterrence. You can get good outcomes in mid grade criminal cases by getting a bond and keeping your client out of trouble long enough to show his crime was a “one time” mistake.

Nothing would do more for the rule of law than hiring a ton of judges.

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