Supreme Court

It has been a long two days as the site was attacked by various outside influences. I know how to write with WP and add pics and other things. The foundation of Angry Bear is foreign to me. Asking me to do something on the programing side is risky. I probably could do it if I had someone who could check my work. Fortunately, we have Ben who is steeped in programming.

The Supreme Court as Enabler of Dictatorship

Using a backdoor procedure, the court allows Trump to get rid of civil service employees at will.

The Supreme Court issues another extreme ruling. This time it upholds President Trump’s right to order mass firings of government employees which is in plain violation of Congress’s authority. And once again, the Court relies on the so-called shadow docket, issuing an emergency procedure staying lower-court injunctions, and allowing the justices to duck coming to terms with the underlying constitutional question of separation of powers.

“As history demonstrates, the President may broadly restructure federal agencies only when authorized by Congress.”

Immediately the administration appeals. On June 2, a three-judge panel from the Ninth Circuit upheld Judge Illston’s ruling. The administration quickly moves to seek an emergency stay from the Supreme Court.

Tuesday’s SCOTUS ruling lifts the lower-court injunctions. A logical corollary to the high court’s June 27 procedural ruling in Trump v. CASA. The court holds district court injunctions may not be applied nationwide. Again that case like this one, continues the Supreme Court’s cowardly gambit of using emergency stays and procedural gimmicks to duck addressing the underlying constitutional issues.

In Trump v. CASA, the deeper issue the Court sidestepped was birthright citizenship. As Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote in dissent, joined by Justices Elena Kagan and Ketanji Brown Jackson:

“The gamesmanship in this request is apparent and the Government makes no attempt to hide it. Yet, shamefully, this Court plays along.”

So while the Supreme Court kicks the constitutional can down the road, Trump’s slide to full-on dictatorship intensifies. This consequence cannot elude the Court majority.

Except for emergency stays, the Court is out of session for the summer and will not issue definitive rulings until fall (if then). So the Court keeps the appearance of its virtue, a sham that everyone else sees through.

Once Trump v. CASA was the law of the land, Justices Sotomayor and Kagan, as good proceduralists and respecters of precedent, fell in line on the latest case. They voted with the Trump majority to overturn lower-court injunctions against Trump’s plainly illegal firings. The decision was 8-1.

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 President’s wrecking ball at the outset of this litigation. In my view, this decision is not only truly unfortunate but also hubristic and senseless.