Author Topic: Supreme Court Sides With Trump In 8-1 Ruling  (Read 232 times)

Sighlass and 3 Guests are viewing this topic.

Offline 240B

  • Lord of all things Orange!
  • TBR Advisory Committee
  • ***
  • Posts: 21,047
  • I refuse to be obstinate!
    • I try my best ...
Supreme Court Sides With Trump In 8-1 Ruling
« on: July 08, 2025, 05:35:51 pm »

Supreme Court Sides With Trump In 8-1 Ruling

Trending Politics News
By Cullen McCue
July 8, 2025

The U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday sided with President Donald Trump in an 8-1 ruling that will have far-reaching impacts on the president’s ability to staff the executive branch as he see’s fit.

The justices in the majority overrode a lower court ruling that placed a temporary freeze on federal workforce cuts, many of which have been recommended by the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE).  In an unsigned order, the court noted that no specific cuts were presented to justices only an executive order issued by Trump and an administration directive for agencies to trim workforces.

In May, U.S. District Judge Susan Illston found that the Trump Administration needs congressional approval in order to make sizable cuts to the federal workforce. The U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals later refused to block the judge’s order in a 2-1 vote, arguing that downsizing could have far-reaching effects on a number of key sectors in a decision that was criticized for being heavy on ideology rather than legal precedent.

Illston’s decision ordered a number of federal agencies to halt the president’s executive order on downsizing federal workforces, which was signed back in February, as well as a separate memo issued by DOGE and the Office of Personnel Management. Illston was nominated by former President Bill Clinton.

Workforce reductions were planned at the U.S. Departments of Agriculture, Commerce, Health and Human Services, State, Treasury, Veterans Affairs and more than a dozen other agencies.

(more)
https://trendingpoliticsnews.com/just-in-supreme-court-sides-with-trump-in-8-1-ruling-cmc/
You cannot "COEXIST" with people who want to kill you.
If they kill their own with no conscience, there is nothing to stop them from killing you.
Rational fear and anger at vicious murderous Islamic terrorists is the same as irrational antisemitism, according to the Leftists

Offline Wingnut

  • The problem with everything is they try and make it better without realizing the old way is fine.
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 22,172
  • Gender: Male
Re: Supreme Court Sides With Trump In 8-1 Ruling
« Reply #1 on: July 08, 2025, 05:51:33 pm »
Kajenga Brown descent.  Can we see her writings. The last one was masterful.
You don’t become cooler with age but you do care progressively less about being cool, which is the only true way to actually be cool.

Offline IsailedawayfromFR

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 14,252
Re: Supreme Court Sides With Trump In 8-1 Ruling
« Reply #2 on: July 08, 2025, 06:15:34 pm »
Kajenga Brown descent.  Can we see her writings. The last one was masterful.
She is a masterful example of a DEI hire, isn't she?

No one ever endured a tougher fight over getting to be a Supreme Court justice than did Clarence Thomas.  Why is evident:  He was not a DEI hire.

Thomas is a masterful example of what a Supreme Court Justice should be.  Wish we had 9 like him.
“You will never understand bureaucracies until you understand that for bureaucrats procedure is everything and outcomes are nothing.” Thomas Sowell

Offline deb

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 3,010
  • Gender: Female
  • Sinner saved by grace.
Re: Supreme Court Sides With Trump In 8-1 Ruling
« Reply #3 on: July 08, 2025, 06:43:06 pm »
She is a masterful example of a DEI hire, isn't she?

No one ever endured a tougher fight over getting to be a Supreme Court justice than did Clarence Thomas.  Why is evident:  He was not a DEI hire.

Thomas is a masterful example of what a Supreme Court Justice should be.  Wish we had 9 like him.

He will be nearly impossible to replace.
In the morning, when I rise
In the morning, when I rise
In the morning, when I rise, give me Jesus

Give me Jesus
Give me Jesus
You can have all this world
But give me Jesus

Offline Bigun

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 34,845
  • Gender: Male
  • Resistance to Tyrants is Obedience to God
    • The FairTax Plan
Re: Supreme Court Sides With Trump In 8-1 Ruling
« Reply #4 on: July 08, 2025, 06:48:34 pm »
He will be nearly impossible to replace.

There are plenty of suitable replacements for him out there, the question is will any of them agree to endure the storm their nomination would set off.
"I wish it need not have happened in my time," said Frodo.

"So do I," said Gandalf, "and so do all who live to see such times. But that is not for them to decide. All we have to decide is what to do with the time that is given us."
- J. R. R. Tolkien

Offline mystery-ak

  • Owner
  • Administrator
  • ******
  • Posts: 404,162
Re: Supreme Court Sides With Trump In 8-1 Ruling
« Reply #5 on: July 08, 2025, 06:49:54 pm »
Kajenga Brown descent.  Can we see her writings. The last one was masterful.

Her bias is so blatantly obvious...
Proud Supporter of Tunnel to Towers
Support the USO
Democrat Party...the Party of Infanticide

“Therefore do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about itself. Each day has enough trouble of its own.”
-Matthew 6:34

Offline Polly Ticks

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 7,835
  • Gender: Female
Re: Supreme Court Sides With Trump In 8-1 Ruling
« Reply #6 on: July 08, 2025, 06:54:08 pm »
Thomas is a masterful example of what a Supreme Court Justice should be.  Wish we had 9 like him.

Agreed.  And 35 years younger, so they'd be there for a LONG time.
Outside of a dog, a book is a man’s best friend. Inside of a dog it’s too dark to read. -Groucho Marx

Online Hoodat

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 33,911
Re: Supreme Court Sides With Trump In 8-1 Ruling
« Reply #7 on: July 08, 2025, 07:56:39 pm »
Kajenga Brown descent.  Can we see her writings. The last one was masterful.

Ask, and you shall receive.  This may be the most vacuous opinion I have ever had the displeasure of reading.  Justice [sic] Brown actually offers the argument that no lower court ruling should ever be stayed by the Supreme Court because "from its lofty perch far from the facts or the evidence, this Court lacks the capacity to fully evaluate, much less responsibly override, reasoned lower court factfinding".



JUSTICE JACKSON, dissenting from the grant of application for stay.  Under our Constitution, Congress has the power to establish administrative agencies and detail their functions.  Thus, over the past century, Presidents who have attempted to reorganize the Federal Government have first obtained authorization from Congress to do so. The President sharply departed from that settled practice on February 11, 2025, however, by allegedly arrogating this power to himself.  With no mention of congressional buy-in, the President’s Executive Order No. 14210 mandates a “critical transformation” of the Federal Government, to be accomplished by “eliminat[ing] or consolidat[ing]” existing agencies and ordering agency heads to “promptly undertake preparations to initiate large-scale reductions in force.” 90Fed. Reg. 9669, 9670.  This unilateral decision to “transfor[m]” the Federal Government was quickly challenged in federal court. As relevant here, the District Judge thoroughly examined the evidence, considered applicable law, and made a reasoned determination that Executive Branch officials should be enjoined from implementing the mandated restructuring until this legal challenge to the President’s authority to undertake such action could be litigated. But that temporary, practical, harm-reducing preservation of the status quo was no match for this Court’s demonstrated enthusiasm for greenlighting this President’s legally dubious actions in an emergency posture.  The Court has now stayed the District Court’s preliminary injunction — authorizing implementation of Executive Order No. 14210, and all the harmful upheaval that edict entails, while the lower courts evaluate its lawfulness. In my view, this was the wrong decision at the wrong moment, especially given what little this Court knows about what is actually happening on the ground.  To be specific: What is at issue here is whether Executive Order No. 14210 effects a massive restructuring of the Federal Government (the likes of which have historically required Congress’s approval), on the one hand, or minor workforce reductions consistent with existing law, on the other. One needs facts to answer that critical question, and the District Court not only issued such preliminary findings based on actual evidence, it is also the tribunal best positioned to make that determination, at least initially.  Put differently, from its lofty perch far from the facts or the evidence, this Court lacks the capacity to fully evaluate, much less responsibly override, reasoned lower court factfinding about what this challenged executive action actually entails.  I respectfully dissent because, in addition to the Government’s failure to show the exigency or irreparable harm that is required for emergency relief, this Court could not possibly know in this posture whether the Government is likely to succeed on the merits with respect to such a fact-dependent dispute.  So it should have left well enough alone.  This is not the first time that a President has wanted to restructure the Federal Government. Even the most cursory examination of history readily reveals that, over the past century, Presidents have worked with Congress — rather than around it — when seeking to significantly reorganize the agencies that comprise the Executive Branch.  Aside from prior wartime-specific grants of reorganization authority, Congress first gave general reorganization authority to President Hoover in the 1930s. S. Rep. No.115–381, p. 4 (2018) (detailing history of interactions between Congress and the President concerning reorganizations).  At that time, Congress delegated specific authority to the President to transfer agencies between departments, consolidate agencies, and change the functions of agencies. Ibid., and n. 18 (citing Legislative Appropriations Act for Fiscal Year 1933, §§401, 403, 47 Stat. 413).  Since then, Congress has considered similar requests for reorganization authority, and it has granted such authority (for limited time periods) to eight more Presidents, including Presidents Franklin D. Roosevelt, Eisenhower, Kennedy, Nixon, Carter, and Reagan.  S. Rep. No. 115–381, at4.  Far from fully ceding to Presidents unfettered discretion to reorganize the Executive Branch, Congress has, in fact, “amended, extended, narrowed, or reactivated [its] government reorganization authority 16 times under both Republican and Democratic administrations.” Ibid.  The many reorganization acts that Congress has passed since 1932 vary in the degree of discretion conferred.  But all have given Congress a say before the President has implemented any proposed plans to reorganize agencies’ structures. Ibid. Pursuant to that process, as of the last time Congress expressly granted this reorganization authority, “presidents [had] submitted 126 reorganization proposals to Congress, of which 93 were implemented and33 were affirmatively rejected by Congress.” Id., at 5.To understand the nature of these reorganization acts, consider the last one Congress enacted. The Reorganization Act of 1984 allowed President Reagan to make significant changes to the structure of agencies based upon a finding that such changes were necessary to carry out specified policies. 5 U. S. C. §901(a).  Congress defined “reorganization” to include (1) “the transfer of the whole or a part of an agency,” (2) “the abolition of all or a part of the functions of an agency,” (3) “the consolidation or coordination of the whole or a part of an agency, or of the whole or a part of the functions thereof, with the whole or a part of another agency or the functions thereof,” (4) “the consolidation or coordination of part of an agency or the functions thereof with another part of the same agency or the functions thereof,” (5) “the authorization of an officer to delegate any of his functions,” and (6) “the abolition of the whole or a part of an agency.” §903(a). Under the 1984 law, President Reagan was required to submit his reorganization plans to Congress, which could request further information about those plans. §903(b). This latest reorganization act expired in 1984, and Congress has not renewed it since. §905(b).Congress has not only granted presidential requests for reorganization authority; it has also rejected such requests at times. For instance, in 2012, President Obama asked Congress to reauthorize a modified version of the 1984 Re-organization Act for two years. S. Rep. No. 115–381, at 6.President Obama indicated that he planned to consolidate several business and trade agencies. Ibid.  But Congress never passed the proposed legislation. Ibid. President George W. Bush and President Trump (in his first term) also unsuccessfully sought reorganization authority from Congress. H. Hogue, Congressional Research Service Re-port to Congress, Presidential Reorganization Authority32–33 (2012); H. R. 6787, 115th Cong., 2d Sess. (2018); S.3137, 115th Cong., 2d Sess. (2018).To be sure, historical precedent exists for a President to direct smaller-scale workforce reductions without first obtaining congressional authorization. In 1993, for example, President Clinton issued an executive order to reduce the size of the federal workforce by requiring agencies to eliminate four percent of their full-time positions over three years. Exec. Order No. 12839, 58 Fed. Reg. 8515 (1993).  That order did not mandate reductions in force or reorganizations, however. Instead, the workforce reduction was tobe achieved “through attrition or early out programs established at the discretion of the department and agency heads.” Ibid. And President Clinton also later obtained congressional authorization for his plans. See Federal Workforce Restructuring Act of 1994, 108 Stat. 111.Historical practice thus confirms that, while Presidents possess some discretion to reduce federal employment, they may not fundamentally restructure the Federal Government all on their own. Administrative agencies are created by statute and funded by Congress; therefore, Presidents have traditionally worked with Congress to effect significant alterations of those statutory structures. This history is crucial to understand, because it establishes the “status quo” when it comes to the relative roles of Congress and the President in reorganizing the Federal Government. Given this background, one might have expected this President, like his predecessors, to obtain congressional authorization before launching the dramatic structural over-haul that Executive Order No. 14210 directs. That order mandates that nearly all federal agencies “promptly under-take preparations to initiate large-scale reductions in force(RIFs)” and agency reorganizations. 90 Fed. Reg. 9670.And, as I previously noted, the order does not mandate pre-implementation authorization by Congress. Instead, it re-quires agencies to submit “RIF and Reorganization Plans” to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). Ibid. The Directors of OMB and the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) have issued a Memorandum (Feb. 26, 2025) pursuant to Executive Order No. 14210 instructing department and agency heads to submit reorganization plans for review by OMB, OPM, and the Department of Government Efficiency. As justification for this directive, the Memorandum points to the President’s promise “to sweepingly re-form the federal government.” App. to Application for Stay 4a (App.). The Memorandum also directs agency heads to prioritize reducing full-time employment positions, so as to achieve “maximum elimination of functions that are not statutorily mandated,” and to cut “components and positions that are non-critical.” Id., at 5a. And while the Memorandum does require agencies to consider planning for some degree of eventual congressional engagement, the executive action itself does not rest on any grant of reorganization authority by Congress. Nor could it, as Congress has not granted such authority to the President. Unions, nonprofits, and local governments filed this lawsuit challenging what they allege to be a dramatic plan to dismantle the Federal Government without congressional authorization.  At the preliminary-relief stage, the District Court’s task was to focus on how “to preserve the relative positions of the parties until a trial on the merits can beheld, and to balance the equities as the litigation moves for-ward.” Lackey v. Stinnie, 604 U. S. ___, ___ (2025) (slip op.,——————1 As I understand the present situation, a specific proposal to extend reorganization authority to this President exists, see Reorganizing Government Act of 2025, H. R. 1295, 119th Cong., 1st Sess. (2025), but it has yet to be enacted. Some members of Congress also proposed extending reorganization authority to the President through the recently passed domestic policy bill, but the final legislation did not do so. Compare Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, Draft Reconciliation Bill Text §90107 (June 12, 2025), https://www.paul.senate.gov/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/MDM25B50.pdf (proposing ex-tension of explicit reorganization authority), with H. R. 1, 119th Cong.,1st Sess. §90103 (2025) (appropriating funds for “finding budget and ac-counting efficiencies in the executive branch” but making no reference to reorganization authority). at 6) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).Moreover, and notably, the central question the District Court faced was primarily one of fact: Was the President actually engaging in mere reductions in force consistent with existing law, as the Government asserted? Or were the plaintiffs right that the President was really attempting to fundamentally reorganize the structure of the Government? If the latter, historical precedent confirms that pre-serving the status quo would mean temporarily preventing the President from unilaterally doing what his predecessors only did after receiving specific authorization from Congress.  The District Court received extensive evidence from the plaintiffs and scant submissions from the Government, and it carefully reviewed everything before it, as I describe in Part III–A, infra. In a detailed 55-page opinion that focuses on the standard factors for preliminary injunctive relief, the court then explained its fact-based conclusion: “[T]he role of a district court is to examine the evidence, and at this stage of the case the evidence discredits the executive’s position and persuades the Court that plaintiffs are likely to succeed on the merits of their suit.” App. 12a.Notably, based on the evidence presented, the District Court specifically found that several federal agencies were in the process of rapidly implementing reorganizations and large-scale reductions in force. Ibid. It also found that pro-posed changes appeared to “intentionally or negligently flout the tasks Congress has assigned” to the agencies at issue. Ibid. And the District Court further determined that if it did not pause this restructuring in the interim (whilethe litigation is ongoing), then many “agencies will not be able to do what Congress has directed them to do.” Ibid.To forestall this significant harm, the court enjoined the President’s restructuring mandate for the duration of the lawsuit “[t]o preserve the status quo and protect the power of the legislative branch.” Id., at 14a. The Ninth Circuit then declined to upset that temporary injunction during the appeal. Id., at 69a.IIIInstead of directing its attention and resources to fully litigating the merits of the challenge to its authority in the courts below, the Government rushed up the chain of re-view, seeking an emergency stay of the District Court’s pre-liminary injunction from us. We thus faced the question whether to override the judgments of the two courts below by allowing the President to proceed immediately with implementing his restructuring plans. To answer “no” to that question is simply to preserve the status quo while the lower courts expeditiously decide the lawfulness of the President’s order. To answer “yes”—as the Court now does — is to allow an apparently unprecedented and congressionally unsanctioned dismantling of the Federal Government to continue apace, causing irreparable harm be-fore courts can determine whether the President has the authority to engage in the actions he proposes.  As I see the choice before us, the Court’s merits-focused approach to granting this stay is particularly problematic because the District Court’s decision to issue an injunction was based on findings of fact. It is not this Court’s role to swoop in and second-guess a lower court’s factual findings, especially when that court has made well reasoned, preliminary judgments on a developing record. But that is precisely what the majority does in granting this stay.  As I previewed above, the District Court extensively examined the evidence the parties presented, which included68 sworn declarations from plaintiffs (totaling more than1,400 pages) and a single declaration from the Government.  Id., at 13a, 88a. The court also completed an in camera re-view of several proposed agency reorganization plans (plans that the Government did not submit in its application to this Court). Based on its review of all of this evidence, the District Court found that the plaintiffs were likely to succeed in showing that the challenged Executive Order and Memorandum seek to effect a fundamental transformation of the Federal Government, rather than mere reductions in force consistent with existing statutory authority. Still, de-spite this fact bound determination and the extensive fact-finding that supports it, the Court now cavalierly concludes(in just one line) that “the Government is likely to succeed on its argument that the Executive Order and Memorandum are lawful.” Ante, at 1.To be clear: Today’s merits dispute is not about the Pres-ident’s ability to unilaterally restructure the Federal Government — no one argues that it is lawful for him to do so.  Instead, the President insists that his Administration’s actions in carrying out the Executive Order and Memorandum are an exercise of existing executive-branch authority to make staffing decisions, not a fundamental reorganization of the Federal Government. Application for Stay 5–6.So, the merits question for purposes of interim relief is whether that is likely true.  The District Court considered that issue and found the consistent-with-law language in the Executive Order and Memorandum to be inconsistent with the factual record.  App. 49a–51a; see also supra, at 7–8, and n. 2, infra. For instance, the court highlighted plans to terminate more than half of many agencies’ staff and to “practically wipeout” entire agencies. App. 50a. And those plans were not outliers; rather, according to the District Court, they ap-pear to reflect the whole point of this executive action.2 The District Court’s preliminary factfinding was vital to its conclusion that plaintiffs are likely to succeed in showing that the challenged executive action amounts to a wholesale government reorganization. Thus, the majority’s rejection of that determination—i.e., its passing reference to the law-fulness of the Executive Order and Memorandum — must rest on a conclusion that the District Court was wrong about the facts of what is really happening to agencies and their employees pursuant to this executive action.  That approach is plainly inconsistent with this Court’s traditional role. District courts are far better suited than appellate courts (this one especially) to evaluate facts on the ground. See Anderson v. Bessemer City, 470 U. S. 564,574–575 (1985) (explaining that trial judges’ expertise in making factual determinations warrants deference on ap-peal). Accordingly, Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 52(a)(6)establishes that a trial court’s factual findings “must not beset aside unless clearly erroneous.” And this Court has, historically, acknowledged its own limitations, citing the “well-settled rule” that “factual findings are reviewable only for clear error,” “with a serious thumb on the scale” supporting the district court’s evaluation of evidence. U. S. Bank N. A. v. Village at Lakeridge, LLC, 583 U. S. 387, 394 (2018).What is more, deference toward lower court factfinding should be at its peak at this extremely early stage of the litigation process—when what we are considering is an application for an emergency stay of a preliminary injunction.  Even when deciding the actual appeal of a preliminary in-junction (still down the road), “this Court may only consider whether issuance of the injunction constituted an abuse of discretion.” Brown v. Chote, 411 U. S. 452, 457 (1973).The clear-error review that governs factual findings, (see Fed. Rules Civ. Proc. 52(a)(2), (6)), and the deference owed to a district court’s issuance of preliminary relief weigh heavily against intervening to override the reasoned, fact-based judgments of the lower courts. Add to that the requirement that an applicant for emergency relief make not just a showing, but a “ ‘strong’ ” one, “ ‘that he is likely to succeed on the merits,’ ” Nken v. Holder, 556 U. S. 418, 434(2009) (emphasis added), and it is no wonder that this Court has long considered stays to be “extraordinary” relief. Cf. Graves v. Barnes, 405 U. S. 1201, 1203 (1972) (Powell, J., in chambers) (explaining that this Court grants stays pending appeal “only in extraordinary circumstances” because a “lower court judgment, entered by a tribunal that was closer to the facts . . . is entitled to a presumption of validity”). Together, these deferential standards should make it the truly rare occasion that this Court uses its emergency docket to overrule district courts’ fact-based, preliminary determinations on the merits. That also makes perfect sense in light of quickly developing records and lower courts that are far better acquainted with those facts.  But, today, this Court once again ignores all of this while casually discarding 55 pages of evidence-based lower court reasoning. On what grounds does the majority deviate fromthe District Court’s fact-based findings here? Has it found that the court below clearly erred with respect to its assessment of the evidence? Has it opted to simply ignore thewell-settled deferential standards of review? Has it made its own factual findings about the nature, scope, and extent of the Government’s reorganization activities?  All of these possibilities are problematic. And because the Court provides no explanation for its likelihood-of-success conclusion, the answers to these crucial questions are also anyone’sguess.3BThe Court’s disregard for the District Court’s factfinding (and also, apparently, for the applicable standards of re-view) would be troubling enough when viewed through a mere procedural lens. But it is all the more puzzling, and ultimately disheartening, given the extraordinary risk of harm that today’s ruling immediately unleashes.  No one seriously disputes that, if implemented, Executive Order No. 14210 will lead to enormous real-world consequences. This executive action promises mass employee terminations, widespread cancellation of federal programs and services, and the dismantling of much of the Federal Government as Congress has created it. As the Ninth Circuit concluded, the statutory shortfalls likely to result from implementation of this Executive Order will be immensely painful to the general public, and the plaintiffs, in the interim, causing harm that includes “proliferat[ing] food-borne disease,” perpetuating “hazardous environmental conditions,” “eviscerat[ing] disaster loan services for local businesses,” and “drastically reduc[ing] the provision of
healthcare and other services to our nation’s veterans.”  App. 94a. Preventing those kinds of calamities is just a small slice of the work that federal employees do to carryout Congress’s statutory mandates—work that the Executive Order immediately imperils if implemented.  Consider the harms to democracy, too, if it turns out that the plaintiffs and the lower courts are right that the President is unilaterally changing the structure of the Federal Government. What one person (or President) might call bureaucratic bloat is a farmer’s prospect for a healthy crop, a coal miner’s chance to breathe free from black lung, or a preschooler’s opportunity to learn in a safe environment.  The details of the programs that this executive action tar-gets are the product of policy choices that Congress has made—a representative democracy at work. While the President no doubt has the authority to manage the Executive Branch, our system does not allow the President to re-write laws on his own under the guise of that authority.  “The President’s power, if any, to issue [an executive] order must stem either from an act of Congress or from the Constitution itself.” Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. v. Sawyer, 343 U. S. 579, 585 (1952). This constraint on the Pres-ident is protective of democracy, not an impediment to it.  That is, although the President is an elected representative with a claim on the popular will, so too are the People’s representatives in Congress—and our Constitution gives them the power to make laws. If a President runs roughshod over the carefully crafted statutes that authorize and animate the Federal Government (as the District Court’s preliminary findings show to be likely happening here), he discards and disables the democratic system that created those laws.  It is the duty of judges to safeguard that system. Particularly when a President “takes measures incompatible with the expressed or implied will of Congress,” his claim to power “must be scrutinized with caution, for what is at stake is the equilibrium established by our constitutional system.” Id., at 637–638 (R. Jackson, J., concurring). But, today, the Court exercises neither caution nor scrutiny, especially compared to the reasoned decisions issued by the courts below. With scant justification, the majority permits the immediate and potentially devastating aggrandizement of one branch (the Executive) at the expense of another(Congress), and once again leaves the People paying the price for its reckless emergency-docket determinations. * * * Given the fact-based nature of the issue in this case and the many serious harms that result from allowing the President to dramatically reconfigure the Federal Government, it was eminently reasonable for the District Court to maintain the status quo while the courts evaluate the lawfulness of the President’s executive action. At bottom, this case is about whether that action amounts to a structural overhaul that usurps Congress’s policymaking prerogatives — and it is hard to imagine deciding that question in any meaningful way after those changes have happened. Yet, for some reason, this Court sees fit to step in now and release the Pres-ident’s wrecking ball at the outset of this litigation.  In my view, this decision is not only truly unfortunate but also hubristic and senseless. Lower court judges have their fingers on the pulse of what is happening on the ground and are indisputably best positioned to determine the relevant facts — including those that underlie fair assessments of the merits, harms, and equities. I see no basis to conclude that the District Court erred — let alone clearly so — in finding that the President is attempting to fundamentally restructure the Federal Government. Therefore, I would not disrupt the lower courts’ preservation of the status quo. Instead, I would leave intact their protection of the historical relationship between Congress and the President, preventing irreparable harm to the plaintiffs and the public while the Judiciary does the critical work of evaluating this exercise of power.


https://apnews.com/article/supreme-court-trump-mass-firings-151e14da3186d34eab1923c45831c1b6
If a political party does not have its foundation in the determination to advance a cause that is right and that is moral, then it is not a political party; it is merely a conspiracy to seize power.     -Dwight Eisenhower-

"The [U.S.] Constitution is a limitation on the government, not on private individuals ... it does not prescribe the conduct of private individuals, only the conduct of the government ... it is not a charter for government power, but a charter of the citizen's protection against the government."     -Ayn Rand-

Offline Wingnut

  • The problem with everything is they try and make it better without realizing the old way is fine.
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 22,172
  • Gender: Male
Re: Supreme Court Sides With Trump In 8-1 Ruling
« Reply #8 on: July 08, 2025, 08:20:31 pm »
Ask, and you shall receive.  This may be the most vacuous opinion I have ever had the displeasure of reading.  Justice [sic] Brown actually offers the argument that no lower court ruling should ever be stayed by the Supreme Court because "from its lofty perch far from the facts or the evidence, this Court lacks the capacity to fully evaluate, much less responsibly override, reasoned lower court factfinding".





https://apnews.com/article/supreme-court-trump-mass-firings-151e14da3186d34eab1923c45831c1b6


No way she could have written all that.  I bet she used AI to do it.

You don’t become cooler with age but you do care progressively less about being cool, which is the only true way to actually be cool.

Online Texas Yellow Rose

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 1,106
  • Gender: Female
  • Native Texan
Re: Supreme Court Sides With Trump In 8-1 Ruling
« Reply #9 on: July 08, 2025, 08:44:49 pm »


No way she could have written all that.  I bet she used AI to do it.

Does she even know the meaning of the word "Supreme".

Offline mystery-ak

  • Owner
  • Administrator
  • ******
  • Posts: 404,162
Re: Supreme Court Sides With Trump In 8-1 Ruling
« Reply #10 on: July 08, 2025, 08:47:59 pm »
Does she even know the meaning of the word "Supreme".

Sure she does

Proud Supporter of Tunnel to Towers
Support the USO
Democrat Party...the Party of Infanticide

“Therefore do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about itself. Each day has enough trouble of its own.”
-Matthew 6:34

Offline rustynail

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 4,982
Re: Supreme Court Sides With Trump In 8-1 Ruling
« Reply #11 on: July 08, 2025, 08:58:22 pm »
She wrote that without paragraphs?

Online Hoodat

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 33,911
Re: Supreme Court Sides With Trump In 8-1 Ruling
« Reply #12 on: July 08, 2025, 09:08:59 pm »
She wrote that without paragraphs?

Copying that from the source was a huge PITA.  Yes, there were paragraphs.  They got lost in the text formatting.  And so did line breaks.  You're lucky I added those back in while deleting the footnotes.

Go to the link if you want to read it for yourself.
If a political party does not have its foundation in the determination to advance a cause that is right and that is moral, then it is not a political party; it is merely a conspiracy to seize power.     -Dwight Eisenhower-

"The [U.S.] Constitution is a limitation on the government, not on private individuals ... it does not prescribe the conduct of private individuals, only the conduct of the government ... it is not a charter for government power, but a charter of the citizen's protection against the government."     -Ayn Rand-

Offline Timber Rattler

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 4,182
  • Conservative Purist and Patriot
Re: Supreme Court Sides With Trump In 8-1 Ruling
« Reply #13 on: July 08, 2025, 09:11:51 pm »
Her bias is so blatantly obvious...

Jackson's dissents are getting increasingly shrill and obnoxious.  I bet she's pissing them all off behind the scenes...I'd love to be a fly on the wall during their conferences. 
aka "nasty degenerate SOB," "worst of the worst at Free Republic," "Garbage Troll," "Neocon Warmonger," "Filthy Piece of Trash," "damn $#%$#@!," "Silly f'er," "POS," "war pig," "neocon scumbag," "insignificant little ankle nipper," "@ss-clown," "neocuck," "termite," "Uniparty Deep stater," "Never Trump sack of dog feces," "avid Bidenista," "filthy Ukrainian," "war whore," "fricking chump," "psychopathic POS," "depraved SOB," "Never Trump Moron," "Lazarus," and "sock puppet."

"In a time of universal deceit - telling the truth is a revolutionary act."  ---George Orwell

Online Hoodat

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 33,911
Re: Supreme Court Sides With Trump In 8-1 Ruling
« Reply #14 on: July 08, 2025, 10:02:46 pm »
If a political party does not have its foundation in the determination to advance a cause that is right and that is moral, then it is not a political party; it is merely a conspiracy to seize power.     -Dwight Eisenhower-

"The [U.S.] Constitution is a limitation on the government, not on private individuals ... it does not prescribe the conduct of private individuals, only the conduct of the government ... it is not a charter for government power, but a charter of the citizen's protection against the government."     -Ayn Rand-

Online Smokin Joe

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 62,221
  • I was a "conspiracy theorist". Now I'm just right.
Re: Supreme Court Sides With Trump In 8-1 Ruling
« Reply #15 on: Today at 01:05:12 am »
She is a masterful example of a DEI hire, isn't she?

No one ever endured a tougher fight over getting to be a Supreme Court justice than did Clarence Thomas.  Why is evident:  He was not a DEI hire.

Thomas is a masterful example of what a Supreme Court Justice should be.  Wish we had 9 like him.
:beer: :yowsa:
How God must weep at humans' folly! Stand fast! God knows what he is doing!
Seventeen Techniques for Truth Suppression

Of all tyrannies, a tyranny sincerely exercised for the good of its victims may be the most oppressive. It would be better to live under robber barons than under omnipotent moral busybodies. The robber baron's cruelty may sometimes sleep, his cupidity may at some point be satiated; but those who torment us for our own good will torment us without end for they do so with the approval of their own conscience.

C S Lewis