Abstract
The U.S. district courts have emerged as a critical site of contested terrain amid the chaos and controversies consuming American law and politics since the start of the second Trump administration. This article examines these frontline courts through the theoretical lens of populism, arguing that they have become a critical institutional flashpoint in the populist assault on constitutional democracy in the United States. As the courts closest to the people, the district courts occupy a unique structural position: They are the fact-finding courts, the most geographically dispersed and professionally diverse tier of the federal judiciary, and often the first institutional intermediary where the conduct of the executive branch is placed on the legal record. These democracy-supporting features have made these courts targets for executive, legislative, and judicial attempts to strip them of power, yet these same features enable the district courts to function as structural choke points against autocratic capture in ways that other courts and institutions do not. As a result, under pressure from rising threats and increasing caseloads, these courts have become a crucible where new democracy-supporting innovations have begun to emerge. This article identifies some of the innovative ways that the district courts are using their procedural, symbolic, and rhetorical power to raise the alarm about the threats that populist challenges pose to democracy, while connecting the courts more directly with the public they serve.
Recommended Citation
Rana, Shruti
(2026)
"The Courts Closest to the People: The Battle between Populism and Democracy in the U.S. District Courts,"
Midwest Social Sciences Journal: Vol. 28:
Iss.
2, Article 6.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.22543/2766-0796.1232
Available at:
https://scholar.valpo.edu/mssj/vol28/iss2/6
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