logo
In Smithsonian Role, John Roberts Encounters History, Pandas and Trump

In Smithsonian Role, John Roberts Encounters History, Pandas and Trump

New York Times4 days ago
On June 9, the leadership of the Smithsonian gathered for a quarterly, but hardly routine, meeting behind closed doors.
President Trump had already called out the Smithsonian for being part of a 'concerted and widespread effort to rewrite our nation's history' and announced he was firing the head of its National Portrait Gallery.
Now the Smithsonian's board planned to discuss a response — a resolution carefully calibrated to avoid a confrontation with the president. The resolution would reinforce that only the Smithsonian had the power to fire its museum leader, but would also order a full review of Smithsonian content for bias.
After the resolution had been introduced, Representative Carlos Gimenez of Florida, a Republican board member, interrupted, proposing instead that the board fire the gallery director, as Mr. Trump had sought. His effort was quickly shut down by the Smithsonian's chancellor — the chief justice of the Supreme Court, John G. Roberts Jr.
'We already have a motion on the floor,' Chief Justice Roberts said, according to three people with knowledge of the proceedings.
The original resolution succeeded. The meeting quickly moved on.
If the moment was unusually tense for a gathering of a museum board, the intervention by the chief justice, a committed parliamentarian, was not. As chancellor, he is known to preside over meetings with a strict focus on rules and procedures, assiduously avoiding partisan debates — a demeanor that aligns with his reputation as an institutionalist and incrementalist jurist.
Since 1851, the chief justice of the Supreme Court has served as chancellor of the Smithsonian — a role that involves running the board meetings but also includes perks like getting an early look at the National Zoo's newborn pandas.
For Chief Justice Roberts, though, the role recently has placed him in an unenviable position — helping to lead an institution in the crosshairs of President Trump.
Mr. Trump's return to the White House has brought a flurry of policy changes — ending birthright citizenship, slashing federal agencies and ending protections for hundreds of thousands of immigrants. As lower court judges blocked many of the policies, lawyers for Mr. Trump filed emergency petitions with the Supreme Court, asking the justices to weigh in. So far — at least on temporary emergency orders — the justices have handed Mr. Trump a string of victories, clearing the way for many of his proposals.
Chief Justice Roberts's role as chancellor may never bring him into a direct confrontation with the president, but his leadership post offers a window into the delicate, potentially fraught dance between a president and a powerful jurist who is, by all accounts, smitten with the Smithsonian.
'All of a sudden it becomes a political battleground and I think that's disorienting for a lot of people, but if you're the chief justice it's got to be challenging for a lot of reasons,' said Jeremy Fogel, a retired federal judge who worked closely with the chief justice as director of the judiciary's educational and research center. 'I think he's well aware of the awkwardness.'
A Longstanding Leadership Role
The chief justice's guiding role at the Smithsonian goes back nearly as far as the institution itself.
The Smithsonian, the world's largest museum, education and research complex, was created by Congress in 1846 after a British chemist and mineralogist left his fortune to create 'an establishment for the increase and diffusion of knowledge among men' in the U.S. capital.
Congress, which provides the lion's share of the Smithsonian's budget, turned over the responsibility for running the institution to a 17-member board, known as the Board of Regents, that includes the chief justice, the vice president, six members of Congress and nine citizens.
At first, the vice president had served as chancellor, but in 1851, the role was taken over by then-Chief Justice Roger B. Taney — best known for writing the infamous Dred Scott decision that upheld slavery and fueled the Civil War.
The chancellor position is largely ceremonial, and there is typically little overlap between the court and the institution aside from when the Smithsonian has featured exhibitions on topics that came before the court. When William H. Rehnquist was chief justice, the National Museum of American History presented an exhibit on the landmark school desegregation case of Brown v. Board of Education and he took the entire court to see it.
But Chief Justice Roberts, who declined to comment on his Smithsonian position, is not the first leader of the court to be thrust into controversies over the institution's collections and place in American life.
During the Civil War, the Board of Regents, led by Justice Taney, faced controversy over the museum's refusal to allow an abolitionist lecture series to use the Smithsonian auditorium, a cavernous space inside the famed castle-like building on the National Mall. The museum eventually agreed to host the series, but blocked Frederick Douglass, the leading African American abolitionist, from speaking.
The Smithsonian's secretary, Lonnie G. Bunch III, who is the institution's chief executive and its first Black leader, reflected on the controversy at his 2019 installation ceremony.
'Today we are here speaking in a place as an African-American, where Frederick Douglass could not speak, but we are a different institution,' Mr. Bunch told those gathered, including Chief Justice Roberts.
'A Great Side Gig'
When Chief Justice Roberts, a history buff, joined the high court in 2005, nominated by President George W. Bush, he seemed a natural fit for the Smithsonian.
In speeches, the chief justice often tells an anecdote about how he had wanted to become a historian, but changed his mind after a taxi driver told him that he, too, had been a history major at Harvard.
Leaders of the Smithsonian have praised Chief Justice Roberts for his steady leadership.
'He is really in control,' said David M. Rubenstein, the co-founder of the Carlyle Group private equity firm and a former Regent, during remarks in 2019. 'There are no 5-to-4 votes. Everything is unanimous. When the chief says this is what he wants done, we recognize that he has the ultimate authority.'
Mr. Rubenstein added that the chief justice took his responsibilities 'very seriously,' and that 'he comes to every single meeting he's supposed to, runs the meeting, and could not be a better chancellor.'
In public remarks, Chief Justice Roberts has appeared to relish the role and the perks that come with it, calling the post at one point a 'nice distraction.'
In one speech, he said he found it 'liberating' when other board members didn't expect him to be an expert in the Smithsonian's sometimes arcane matters.
'It's also very valuable, you know, when a panda is born — because you get to go see it right away,' he added.
At another appearance in 2022, the chief justice called his position at the Smithsonian a 'historical accident,' adding that it had 'resulted in some wonderful moments' for him.
He described the excitement of touching the robes of the first chief justice, John Jay. 'The curator was not looking at the time, because you are not supposed to do that,' he joked.
He cajoled the Smithsonian into loaning the court Louis Armstrong's trumpet so that the famed trumpeter Wynton Marsalis could play it at a court ceremony.
'The curator again was not too keen on the idea, but we got the trumpet for him, and it was such a joy to watch him play and to think of the history behind it,' Chief Justice Roberts said, adding that his role as chancellor was 'a great 'side-gig,' and I'm happy to have it.'
When the Supreme Court itself becomes a focus of the Smithsonian's attention, the overlap in the chief justice's roles can become more awkward.
In 2016, for example, when the National Museum of African American History and Culture opened to fanfare, Justice Thurgood Marshall, the first Black man to serve on the court, was featured in an exhibit. But Justice Clarence Thomas, the court's second Black jurist, was only mentioned in a display that reported Anita Hill's accusations that he had sexually harassed her. Several conservative lawmakers accused the Smithsonian of bias.
Justice Roberts never commented publicly on the controversy, and it is unclear if he played a role in easing tensions. The Board of Regents discussed the matter at a January 2017 meeting, where they were told the museum had arranged for curators to speak with members of Congress and their staffs, and that senior Smithsonian staff had met with lawmakers. But the meeting minutes show that the chief justice did not come to the meeting until later in the day, per usual.
Though it left up the Hill display, the museum later in 2017 quietly added a display that recognized Justice Thomas in the exhibit that featured Justice Marshall. In the display, Justice Thomas, who has denied Ms. Hill's account, was pictured as a college student and on the cover of Jet Magazine.
A President With a Smithsonian Agenda
An incident shortly after Mr. Trump's first election in 2016 helped to fuel the White House's recent interest in the leadership of the Smithsonian's National Portrait Gallery.
Julian Raven, an artist and ardent Trump supporter, asked the Smithsonian's National Portrait Gallery to display his 2015 acrylic painting of Mr. Trump — 'Unafraid and Unashamed,' which showed Mr. Trump next to a rising sun with a bald eagle — during the inauguration.
After the museum refused to exhibit his portrait, Mr. Raven sued. He focused in particular on Kim Sajet, the head of the gallery and the first woman to run it, accusing her of political bias against Mr. Trump.
Federal District Judge Trevor N. McFadden, a Trump appointee, appeared sympathetic to Mr. Raven, who represented himself. The judge noted in his 2018 ruling that the regents include members of the executive, legislative and judicial branches, and compared the governance model to Cerberus, the monstrous, three-headed dog from Greek mythology who guards the gates of the underworld.
But the judge ultimately dismissed the lawsuit.
'Mr. Raven claims that the decision was motivated by political bias, violating his rights under the First and Fifth Amendments,' Judge McFadden wrote. 'He may be right about the motivation, but he is wrong about the law.'
In November 2019, Mr. Raven asked the Supreme Court to take his case. About two months later, the justices rejected the matter with a notation that the chief justice had recused himself.
When Mr. Trump returned to office earlier this year, he released a flurry of executive orders, including one in March that focused on the Smithsonian, which relies heavily on federal funds. In the last decade, Mr. Trump declared, the country had 'witnessed a concerted and widespread effort to rewrite our nation's history.' He argued that the Smithsonian had 'in recent years, come under the influence of a divisive, race-centered ideology.'
What is more, the White House communications director, Steven Cheung, directly criticized the leadership of Mr. Bunch, characterizing him as a liar, a failure and a partisan Democrat. In the midst of such rhetoric, several supporters of Mr. Bunch said they hoped that the chief justice's role at the heart of the Smithsonian's operations might temper or avert a full-fledged attack on the institution.
Former Senator Patrick Leahy, a Vermont Democrat and a longtime Regent who stepped down in 2023, said he viewed the chief justice as a man who believed in the Smithsonian's mission and independence. 'He is not anyone who is going to be pushed around by anybody,' he said. The White House did not respond to a request for comment for this article.
Two months after the executive order, on May 30, Mr. Trump took to social media to announce that he had fired the museum director, Ms. Sajet, calling her 'a highly partisan person, and a strong supporter of DEI, which is totally inappropriate for her position.' It is not clear exactly what led to the announcement, but the White House released a long list of bullet-points that it said bolstered the president's claims. The list included donations to Democrats, the dispute over Mr. Raven's painting and language from a photo caption of Mr. Trump that included a reference to his impeachments.
Mr. Trump had cited no legal authority for the firing, and the Smithsonian did not follow through on it. Ms. Sajet continued to report to work, though two weeks later she said she had voluntarily chosen to step down. In announcing her move, she seemed to reflect on her efforts to broaden the museum's perspective.
'Together,' she wrote, 'we have worked to tell a fuller, more American story — one that fosters connection, reflection and understanding.'
Experts who are closely watching the Smithsonian say Ms. Sajet's resignation is unlikely to end the Trump administration's focus on the institution and the pressure it puts on the Board of Regents, with the chief justice at the fore.
Only last week, the Trump administration expressed satisfaction when an artist, Amy Sherald, canceled a Smithsonian exhibition because she believed the institution, fearing the president, intended to remove her painting of a transgender Statue of Liberty. A White House official described the work as an effort 'to reinterpret one of our nation's most sacred symbols through a divisive and ideological lens.'
In his executive order, Mr. Trump also asked Vice President JD Vance, a Smithsonian board member, to help ensure that as terms of regents expired, his administration was in a position to appoint citizen members aligned with his values. Representative Gimenez, a newly appointed regent who, like Mr. Vance, has promoted Mr. Trump's viewpoint to other Smithsonian leaders, did not respond to a request for comment.
Not all of Mr. Trump's focus on the Smithsonian has been critical. He helped secure a deal with Saudi Arabia to bring two rare Arabian leopards to the National Zoo. The regents voted to approve that cat exhibit at its June 9 meeting, contingent on a $50 million gift from Saudi Arabia.
Judge Fogel said he thought the chief justice viewed his Smithsonian role as 'mind-expanding and enjoyable,' and would be likely to recuse himself from any Smithsonian-related matter that might lead to litigation.
Until recently, Judge Fogel said, 'I don't think it's been a place that's politically fraught in the sense that the administration is demanding that somebody be fired. That's happened to a lot of institutions — the Library of Congress, the Holocaust Museum, the Kennedy Center — places that have been above 'big P' politics. I think that puts people who saw it as a national service in an awkward position.'
Samuel J. Redman, a history professor at the University of Massachusetts Amherst who has written extensively about the Smithsonian, described this moment as unprecedented.
'We have never encountered a political assault — a direct frontal assault on the Smithsonian in this way,' he said. 'Therefore, the Board of Regents has become more important politically than it has in any previous moment.'
That puts increased pressure on the chief justice, he said.
'The chief justice has a really interesting aspect in this new political moment in the U.S.,' he said. In the past, 'different justices have mostly been a figurehead — no longer.'
Julie Tate and Kitty Bennett contributed research.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump announces 25% tariff on India and unspecified penalties for buying Russian oil
Trump announces 25% tariff on India and unspecified penalties for buying Russian oil

Yahoo

time25 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Trump announces 25% tariff on India and unspecified penalties for buying Russian oil

WASHINGTON (AP) — The United States will impose a 25% tariff on goods from India, plus an additional import tax because of India's purchasing of Russian oil, President Donald Trump said Wednesday. The new tariffs were part of a flurry of trade activity that included a series of executive actions regarding Brazil, copper and shipments of goods worth less than $800, as well as a reduced 15% tax on imports from South Korea, including its autos. It was all a prelude to Friday when Trump's new tariff regime is scheduled to start, an event the White House has portrayed as a testament to Trump's negotiating skills even as concerns persist about the taxes hurting growth and increasing inflationary pressures. India 'is our friend,' Trump said on his Truth Social platform announcing the taxes, but its tariffs on U.S. products 'are far too high.' The Republican president added India buys military equipment and oil from Russia, enabling Moscow's war in Ukraine. As a result, he intends to charge an additional 'penalty' starting on Friday as part of the launch of his administration's revised tariffs on multiple countries. Trump told reporters on Wednesday the two countries were still in the middle of negotiations on trade despite the tariffs slated to begin in a few days. 'We're talking to India now," the president said. "We'll see what happens.' The Indian government said Wednesday it's studying the implications of Trump's tariffs announcement. India and the U.S. have been engaged in negotiations on concluding a 'fair, balanced and mutually beneficial' bilateral trade agreement over the last few months, and New Delhi remains committed to that objective, India's Trade Ministry said in a statement. Trump on Wednesday also signed separate orders to tax imports of copper at 50% and justify his 50% tariffs on Brazil due to their criminal prosecution of former President Jair Bolsonaro and treatment of U.S. social media companies. Trump also signed an order saying that government now had the systems in place to close the tariff loophole on 'de minimis' shipments, which had enabled goods priced under $800 to enter America duty-free, largely from China. The South Korea agreement will impose a 15% tariff, instead of the 25% Trump had threatened. South Korea would also buy $100 billion in energy resources from the U.S. and provide $350 billion for 'investments owned and controlled by the United States, and selected by myself, as president,' Trump said. There is also an agreement with Pakistan that includes the development of its oil reserves. Meanwhile, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent briefed Trump on trade talks with China. Trump's view on tariffs Trump's announcement comes after a slew of negotiated trade frameworks with the European Union, Japan, the Philippines and Indonesia — all of which he said would open markets for American goods while enabling the U.S. to raise tax rates on imports. The president views tariff revenues as a way to help offset the budget deficit increases tied to his recent income tax cuts and generate more domestic factory jobs. While Trump has effectively wielded tariffs as a cudgel to reset the terms of trade, the economic impact is uncertain as most economists expect a slowdown in U.S. growth and greater inflationary pressures as some of the costs of the taxes are passed along to domestic businesses and consumers. There's also the possibility of more tariffs coming on trade partners with Russia as well as on pharmaceutical drugs and computer chips. Kevin Hassett, director of the White House National Economic Council, said Trump and U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer would announce the Russia-related tariff rates on India at a later date. Tariffs face European pushback Trump's approach of putting a 15% tariff on America's long-standing allies in the EU is also generating pushback, possibly causing European partners as well as Canada to seek alternatives to U.S. leadership on the world stage. French President Emmanuel Macron said Wednesday in the aftermath of the trade framework that Europe 'does not see itself sufficiently' as a global power, saying in a cabinet meeting that negotiations with the U.S. will continue as the agreement gets formalized. 'To be free, you have to be feared,' Macron said. 'We have not been feared enough. There is a greater urgency than ever to accelerate the European agenda for sovereignty and competitiveness.' Seeking a deeper partnership with India Washington has long sought to develop a deeper partnership with New Delhi, which is seen as a bulwark against China. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi has established a good working relationship with Trump, and the two leaders are likely to further boost cooperation between their countries. When Trump in February met with Modi, the U.S. president said that India would start buying American oil and natural gas. The new tariffs on India could complicate its goal of doubling bilateral trade with the U.S. to $500 billion by 2030. The two countries have had five rounds of negotiations for a bilateral trade agreement. While U.S. has been seeking greater market access and zero tariff on almost all its exports, India has expressed reservations on throwing open sectors such as agriculture and dairy, which employ a bulk of the country's population for livelihood, Indian officials said. The Census Bureau reported that the U.S. ran a $45.8 billion trade imbalance in goods with India last year, meaning it imported more than it exported. At a population exceeding 1.4 billion people, India is the world's largest country and a possible geopolitical counterbalance to China. India and Russia have close relations, and New Delhi has not supported Western sanctions on Moscow over its war in Ukraine. The new tariffs could put India at a disadvantage in the U.S. market relative to Vietnam, Bangladesh and, possibly, China, said Ajay Sahai, director general of the Federation of Indian Export Organisations. 'We are back to square one as Trump hasn't spelled out what the penalties would be in addition to the tariff,' Sahai said. 'The demand for Indian goods is bound to be hit.' ___ Roy reported from New Delhi. Associated Press writers Samuel Petrequin in Paris, and Darlene Superville and Seung Min Kim in Washington contributed to this report. Josh Boak And Rajesh Roy, The Associated Press Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Trump Unleashes a Flurry of Trade Surprises on Eve of Deadline
Trump Unleashes a Flurry of Trade Surprises on Eve of Deadline

Yahoo

time25 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Trump Unleashes a Flurry of Trade Surprises on Eve of Deadline

(Bloomberg) -- President Donald Trump unleashed a series of tariff deals and demands on allies and adversaries alike on the eve of his Friday deadline aimed at establishing a new global trade order. The World's Data Center Capital Has Residents Surrounded An Abandoned Art-Deco Landmark in Buffalo Awaits Revival Budapest's Most Historic Site Gets a Controversial Rebuild San Francisco in Talks With Vanderbilt for Downtown Campus We Should All Be Biking Along the Beach The US president on Wednesday announced tariffs of 15% on imports from South Korea that matched the rate for neighbor Japan, and a painful 25% levy on imports from India that was accompanied by criticism of its purchases of Russian energy and weapons. Deals were also in the offing for Thailand and Cambodia after they agreed to a ceasefire Monday, buttressing Trump's self-professed goal of being seen as a global peacemaker. Trump also shocked markets with new tariff rules on copper, sinking prices in New York by a record after exempting the most widely traded forms of the metals from 50% tariffs. The onslaught comes on the eve of an Aug. 1 deadline, when the White House threatened reciprocal levies for countries without bilateral agreements, which most don't have. Trump has said rates globally will come in from 15% all the way to 50% — executing policies he believes will bring home manufacturing and raise government revenue, while giving him enormous leverage on countries whose exports depend on US consumers. 'Today we got a flurry of details and it's the case of the old saying: 'you can't see the forest for the trees,'' said Rob Subbaraman, chief economist at Nomura Holdings Inc. 'Stepping back, Trump has by and large followed through on his tariff threats. Right now it's just a lot of noise.' Most countries are still without a trade deal, and key details are scant for those who have one — including potential exemptions, investment promises and potential changes to rules of origin. The uncertainty and confusion amid the long rollout of Trump's new trade order has already hit global economic growth and weighed on investment, even as markets remain optimistic. 'These deals ramming against the clock — it's really not a good sign,' said Alicia Garcia Herrero, chief economist for Asia Pacific at Natixis. The reach pushes countries to an agreement to avoid potentially higher levies, but could end up costing their economies more, she said. Meanwhile, the mood music between the US and China remains favorable for now. Speaking in the White House on Wednesday, Trump said the US will have a 'very fair deal with China.' Talks this week in Sweden strengthened trust between the two sides and boosted confidence in resolving economic disputes via discussions, the Communist Party's official newspaper said. The trade news wasn't limited to foreign countries. US consumers and small businesses will soon face higher costs on shipments, as Trump announced tariffs would apply from Aug. 29 on de minimis shipments, or imports that are below $800. Such shipments have been a boon for consumers and retailers, many of them in China, that ship products direct. A surprise reprieve for many Brazilian goods rallied its currency and stocks. Meantime, Bloomberg News reported Trump will speak with his Mexican counterpart Claudia Sheinbaum on Thursday morning, sending the peso higher. Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney said Wednesday that talks with the US may not finish by Trump's Friday deadline. Prospects for a better deal dimmed further when Trump posted on Truth Social that Canada's decision to back Palestinian statehood 'will make it very hard for us to make a Trade Deal with them.' For South Korea, the 15% includes autos, as well as a $350 billion South Korean fund for US investments including energy and shipbuilding. As with Japan, the US investments would be directed by Trump, the president said. And for both funds, 90% of the profits would flow back to the US, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said in a post on X. For India, Trump threatened a still-undefined additional penalty over its purchases of Russian energy, on top of a 25% tariff on imports from the nation. Any move on Russian oil may come up in talks with China, given that Beijing also takes substantial volumes of Moscow's crude, which the US has targeted since its 2022 invasion of Ukraine. Oil was holding Thursday near the highest in almost six months. Russia Builds a New Web Around Kremlin's Handpicked Super App Burning Man Is Burning Through Cash It's Not Just Tokyo and Kyoto: Tourists Descend on Rural Japan Everyone Loves to Hate Wind Power. Scotland Found a Way to Make It Pay Off Cage-Free Eggs Are Booming in the US, Despite Cost and Trump's Efforts ©2025 Bloomberg L.P.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store