Home » Federal judges on the left are determined to stop Trump

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Federal judges on the left are determined to stop Trump — 10 Comments

  1. There’s plenty that can be done about it. Here’s one course being taken by Senator Josh Hawley of Missouri.

    “ Today, U.S. Senator Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) announced he will introduce legislation to restrict local district court judges’ ability to issue nationwide injunctions and therefore stymie President Donald Trump’s agenda.”

    https://www.hawley.senate.gov/hawley-to-introduce-legislation-restricting-lower-court-judges-from-issuing-nationwide-injunctions/

  2. It may well be up to the legislature. I have no faith anymore that squish CJ Roberts will take any of this on, and if he does he will vote with the libs.

  3. Trump can continue to let judges thwart his promises that got him elected, then use that sense of betrayal to win control of Congress in the midterms, and then impeach the hell out of them – making sure the electorate knows that if he loses Congress, the Dems will impeach him again!!

  4. Sen. Hawley’s bill sounds promising, assuming Congress can do this. I do not see why a single federal judge should be able to issue injunctions or restraining orders outside the immediate jurisdiction over which he has authority.

  5. Here are some of Glenn Reynolds’ ideas from his Substack. See link quoted by Kate

    “ Impeachment is a symbolic and probably self-destructive gesture. Those are for Democrats, not fo Republicans who want to Make America Great Again.

    But here are some things that could be done, lower profile but more effective.

    First, expand the courts. No, no, not “court packing,” nothing like that. The National Judicial Council just recommended adding 66 District Judges and two Court of Appeals judges to remedy the “crisis of undermanned federal courts.” Republicans should do at least that, though I would add at least two new Court of Appeals judges to each circuit. And I might increase the number of district judges appointed to the District for the District of Columbia, and perhaps the Southern District of New York, beyond the Council’s recomendations on the ground that those districts seem to be getting busier.

    This wouldn’t be court-packing, since it’s simply following the recommendations of a non-partisan commission. (And in truth, it’s been widely agreed for many years that the federal courts are understaffed).

    Now for the Supreme Court. Again, no partisan court-packing. Instead, in a spirit of bipartisanship, the GOP should enact the Democrats’ bill from 2021, which would have expanded the Supreme Court from 9 to 13. Although perhaps, in a spirit of generosity, they might increase the number to 15.

    Okay, this is good clean fun, and letting it be known that these changes are on the table would probably be an inducement to better behavior — and in particular an inducement to the Supreme Court to begin supervising lower courts more vigorously. And you could do this with simple majorities of the House and Senate.

    With simple majoritis you could, as I’ve previously suggested, bring back the requirement for three-judge district courts when the legality of federal statutes is challenged, and expand that requirement to include challenges to executive orders.

    Another thing you could do with simple majorities, as Ron DeSantis has noted, is to strip federal courts of jurisdiction to issue Temporary Restraining Orders and Preliminary Injunctions in the class of cases that we’ve been seeing. Or, indeed, to strip them of jurisdiction to hear any complaints regarding the internal administration of the Executive. Or stripping courts of jurisdiction to issue any order in such cases until an appeals bond has actually been posted by the moving party.

    Congress could also provide that lawsuits challenging changes to federal programs or agencies be assigned to randomly-selected district courts from around the nation, rather than the District for the District of Columbia. (It could possibly even go further and simply abolish the District for the District of Columbia, and do this with all cases. In 2025, there’s no real reason for all such cases to be heard in DC; it’s not the horse-and-buggy era anymore. Going further still, they could simply abolish the District of Columbia itself, which is permitted by not required to exist by the Constitution.)

    Congress could also require that all proceedings in federal courts be televised. Federal Judges have resisted that, but ultimately it’s not their call. Many lawyers involved in the January 6 proceedings have said that if video of what judges were doing there had been made public, there would have been a revolution. At least the prospect of public scrutiny might make judges more cautious, and less imperious.”

  6. Wasnt the supreme court the prime instigator of lawfare in israel

    Back at the ranch julie kelly has pointed ouf that procurator boasberg demands info he already has

    Congress could do many things but they seem exceedingly lethargic

  7. Miguel cervantes:

    The Supreme Court in Israel has different and much greater powers than the US Supreme Court.

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