CNN
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President Donald Trump on Saturday is a mysterious one about what appears to be the leadership philosophy behind the first weeks of his presidency, and his vast and unprecedented efforts to reconstruct the use of executive agencies. It provided some insights.
“The one who saves his country is not violating the law,” Trump claimed in a social media post, which he now pinned on his profile.
Trump dramatically rethinks the scope of his enforcement power at the start of his second term and announced many enforcement actions. As Trump tried to remake the judiciary in his first term, the administration’s tacit trust strengthened the efforts by the administration’s implicit trust in its ability to protect itself from legal agendas.
Still, Trump’s extraordinary attempts to expand the power of the administrative sector have recently hit legal obstacles. Dozens of lawsuits have promptly challenged Trump’s policies, urging judges to hold off some of their implementation to determine whether the move is legal. The lawsuit includes the challenge of halting federal foreign aid, firing federal workers, termination of government programs, and even closures of shutdown agencies completely.
Trump’s Saturday social media post could have an echo in court. And it argues that government lawyers defend policy decisions against more than 60 cases protects and expands enforcement.
So far, court cases have been made to justice department lawyers, and since Trump’s power as president should not be restricted within the administrative department, it is not possible to make decisions on federal labor and federal workers, particularly as it is a matter of federal law. It urges them to insist that they should not be bound by. Expenses. Several lawsuits have established the Trump administration, which attempts to break the authority of Congress, particularly in order to check the administration by entering into past spending and mechanisms.
Some cases have primarily been the Trump administration due to explicit conflicts with Congressional budgetary powers, and often look at the constitutional outline for the presidency.
One notable case of fast, fast, early, is about the president’s power over an independent watchdog for federal workers called the Special Adviser Bureau. Trump fired the formula a few weeks ago, but only allowed the court to quickly recover him. On Sunday, the Trump administration pushed the lawsuit to the Supreme Court for an emergency review. This will be the first debate before justice, where this administration tests the boundaries of its administration.
The rapid fire appears to be designed to force the Supreme Court’s hands. Similarly, Trump appears eager to challenge other long-standing legal norms, such as birthright citizenship and the power to suspend presidential spending.
Acting Attorney General Sarah Harris on Wednesday told Senate Democrats that the Justice Department “will urge the Supreme Court to dismiss it.” In the Trump administration’s view, these protections “prevent the president from properly overseeing the principals of the administrative department that enforces the law on behalf of the president.”
Harris wrote in a letter to Illinois Sen. Dick Durbin, a top Democrat on the Senate Judiciary Committee, and her office is no longer the Federal Trade Commission, the National Labor Relations Commission and the consumer. He wrote that he would not defend the constitutionality of the removal clause for the purposes of the report. Product Safety Committee.
“The department concluded that these tenure protections were unconstitutional,” Harris wrote.
Hampton Dillinger, a special government adviser, is one of several independent officials fighting the White House fire. In a lawsuit filed last week in a federal court in Washington, D.C., Dellinger argued that Humphrey’s Enforcer vs. the United States 1935 decision should ban the president from firing fire. ” pointed out.
Of course, Trump’s recent critical test of enforcement was his criminal on January 6, 2021, where he was exempt from the High Court from the prosecutor for official actions taken during his inauguration. I sought and won.
“The president is not beyond the law,” Supreme Court Justice John Roberts wrote in his decision. “However, Congress may not be able to criminalize the president’s actions in carrying out the responsibility of the constitutional administrative department.”
The quotes posted by Trump are roughly consistent with those featured in the 1970 film about the French emperor and military leader Napoleon Bonaparte. Trump shows his desire to annex Canada and Greenland.
“President Trump raised questions as old as the Republic. Does the President have the power to ignore the law to address the threat to the country’s security when necessary?” Conservative lawyer John Yoo is an advocate for exploring the boundaries of presidential power, told CNN.
“The question is whether today’s situation is disastrous enough to justify its use, even if such a power of privilege exists. I don’t think so, but the president is a massive mass. You have access to more information that is more secret or classified than that. President Trump is raising questions even though he is not going to go this far, as he often does. I tend to think,” he said.
The president’s post urged calm blowbacks from several major Democrats, despite the Democrats struggling to land a unified message in the wake of their 2024 victory in 2024 .
Sen. Adam Schiff of California, a member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, wrote alongside Trump’s post.
Sen. Amy Klobuchar, a Minnesota Democrat who also serves on that committee, has resigned more about the latest actions of the Trump administration, including resigning from resigning the resignation of top Manhattan prosecutors and other senior officials last week. I offered to do so. New York Mayor Eric Adams is charged with corruption.
“This is another day for the Trump administration. It’s costly. The chaos is rising, and yes, the corruption is rising. They literally took the mayor of New York City. He faced it He is facing serious charges of bribery. “Sunday Union.”
John Fritze of CNN contributed to this report.