Jun 27, 2025
Supreme Court TRAMPLES On The Constitution
The Supreme Court's decision against nationwide injunctions can deliver a fatal blow to birthright citizenship.
- 18 minutes
I really do think
that this court is calling
President Donald J. Trump their daddy.
- I really do.
- Well, this was a big one, wasn't it?
This was a big decision, an amazing
decision, one that we're very happy about.
This morning, the Supreme Court
has delivered a monumental victory
[00:00:17]
for the Constitution,
the separation of powers
and the rule of law in striking down the
excessive use of nationwide injunctions
to interfere with the normal functioning
of the executive branch.
The Supreme Court
has stopped the presidency itself.
[00:00:34]
That's what they've done.
And really, it's been it's been an
amazing period of time this last hour.
Okay, so grandpa's train of thought
fell apart a little bit at the end there.
But it is a big day
not only for President Donald Trump,
[00:00:49]
but any aspiring autocrat who wants the
power to trample not only what Congress
is constitutionally obligated to do, but
the Supreme Court, lower courts as well.
And so they announced earlier today that
what he wants, which is an end to a lower
court ruling that was temporarily blocking
his bid to end birthright citizenship.
[00:01:09]
He got it.
And he got it not only in the birthright
citizenship case, but effectively,
it could be that for all cases in which
lower courts try to even temporarily block
Donald Trump's executive decrees, they
won't be able to do that in the future.
[00:01:25]
And that has only,
like the widest implications.
We're going to get into all of it,
the arguing where we go from here.
But Jake, what do you think?
Yeah. Real quick.
The substance of this decision
is not that bad or important.
In fact, it doesn't even exist.
I'll explain that in a little bit after we
give you all the details of the story.
[00:01:43]
But the process argument
made here is a disaster.
So it's important why? It's a disaster.
And that's what we're going to explain to
you after you get all the details first.
Yeah, I think it's a disaster
on like, seven different levels.
[00:01:59]
And hearing Donald Trump announce it
as a win for the Constitution
and the separation of powers.
I mean, that's that's your Orwellian
bizarro world reversal of the truth.
And Donald Trump here, of course,
as president, not happy that these
nationwide injunctions are happening.
[00:02:15]
And I would love to see one example of him
when he wasn't president,
arguing against a nationwide injunction,
stopping a president if
a nationwide injunction stopped Joe Biden,
did he ever say that that was
a core exceeding its authority?
No, of course they cheered it.
They thought it was the best thing ever.
[00:02:31]
And in this case, they have their
conservative supermajority on the court.
And so most of the time,
the right is going to get what it wants.
And this is what happened here.
Six three ruling.
As we've come to expect
the liberal justices dissenting.
Now, Jake mentioned substance.
This does not actually rule on whether
birthright citizenship will continue to be
[00:02:51]
a constitutionally guaranteed right,
as it has been for over 150 50 years.
They'll get to that. At some point.
I suppose this is just going to allow,
after a 30 day pause, the resumption
of whatever it is that Trump decides to do
when it comes to birthright citizenship.
[00:03:06]
So it is looking like in the majority of
states, it will not be a right for a day
or a month or two years or forever,
however long it takes the Supreme Court
to eventually circle back around
to this crucial topic.
But don't get too down on them.
It does take a lot of time to figure out
whether something that's
[00:03:24]
clearly stipulated in the Constitution
is, in fact, constitutional.
Can you tell
that I'm not happy about this?
So here is what Amy Coney Barrett said,
writing for the majority.
In this case, by the end of the Biden
administration, we had reached a state
of affairs where almost every major
presidential act was immediately frozen
[00:03:40]
by a federal district court.
The trend has continued during the first
100 days of the second Trump
administration, district courts issued
approximately 25 universal injunctions.
As the number of universal
injunctions has increased,
so too has the importance of the issue,
basically saying there that now both sides
are just they're doing too much of this
[00:04:00]
and judges at the lower levels
are allowing it too often.
And then she throws her hands up in
the air and says, it's impossible for us
to quickly adjudicate whether an
executive order or action is, on its face,
explicitly unconstitutional.
[00:04:15]
So rather than engaging on a case by case
basis with something like two dozen lower
court rulings, instead we'll just allow
the president to do whatever he wants.
Seems like a dereliction of their duty.
So that's the majority.
Justice Sotomayor, writing for
the minority in this case, says with
[00:04:33]
the stroke of a pen, the president has
made a solemn mockery of our Constitution.
Rather than stand firm,
the court gives way.
The court's decision is nothing less
than an open invitation for the government
to bypass the Constitution.
This is so sudden, Sotomayor goes
on to say, because the administration
[00:04:49]
may be able to enforce a policy
even when it has been challenged and found
to be unconstitutional by a lower court.
And by the way, we've already had
many instances in just the past few months
where the Trump administration
has made very clear that even
when a court order is still standing,
[00:05:04]
they're just not going to abide by it.
We found out that one of his nominees
for, I believe, an appeals court,
a judicial position,
was advising the lawyers in the DOJ.
Just don't pay attention to it.
You don't have to follow
literally any of that.
So we know and the members of the Scotus
know exactly what the Trump regime's
[00:05:22]
approach to the separation of powers
and in particular, the judiciary is.
They know all of that,
and yet they are still delivering.
Not every single time,
but in the vast majority of cases,
more power to the Trump administration.
Perhaps the administration
in American history least qualified
[00:05:39]
or deserving of the increased powers
that are being delegated to them.
So we have more.
We have videos, but we should
probably jump into discussion.
Yeah.
So first thing that I want everybody
to recognize is John mentioned it,
but dear, I want to double down on it
so people don't panic it.
[00:05:55]
This is not to take away
birthright citizenship.
They have not decided anything about that.
They have remanded the it
to the lower courts to go back up.
They do this all the time.
They send it back down
to have it go back up.
Okay.
And so because they're
ruling quickly theoretically.
[00:06:11]
Right.
And and so they have another 30 days here
and then it'll go into effect.
Okay.
So and again the birthright citizenship
ban doesn't is not adjudicated.
Right. They have not made a decision.
Okay. So then what is going to happen.
[00:06:27]
Well this is the like the awful part
of this ruling and it's preposterous.
And I have a couple of theories
as to why they did this.
So let me give you an example.
So they're saying no nationwide injunction
even if the president seems to do
something blatantly unconstitutional.
[00:06:42]
So this is blatantly
and obviously constitutional.
Why birthright citizenship
is in the 14th amendment.
It's been adjudicated
by the court multiple times.
There's massive precedent over it.
There's no question about it.
Right.
So okay, here's another thing that's
been adjudicated a lot, which is torture
[00:06:58]
is a violation of the Eighth Amendment.
Right.
And so if the president says,
you know what,
I'm going to start doing torture now.
You can't do
a nationwide injunction on it.
So what they would have to do is,
according to this ruling, only the people
[00:07:13]
who sued, who had already been tortured,
or the states that say,
hey, I would not like to torture.
It applies to them.
An injunction applies to them.
Okay.
But not to any of the other states
and not to the people
who are about to get tortured.
[00:07:29]
Okay, that makes no sense.
Do we have a constitution
or don't we have a constitution?
You can't say, oh, the Constitution
applies only to people who sue.
Wait, did you get it?
The second problem that means now
there's going to be a flood of lawsuits
because nobody wants to get tortured.
[00:07:44]
Right.
So now that's a comparison and analogy.
But in this case there is already a flood
of lawsuits because people are like,
oh, okay, well, I was born in America,
or my kid's about to be born in America,
I'm pregnant or, you know, you know,
[00:08:00]
or my kid just got born in America,
but I'm not in one of those states.
So now I have to go file a lawsuit
to make sure that my kid's rights
aren't taken away.
We could have a ridiculous,
enormous amount of lawsuits.
By the way, some states have already,
and groups and human rights groups
[00:08:16]
have already started suing.
Right. So what are we doing here?
That's so dumb.
So, look, I think that the right way
to do this is I get the issue
with the nationwide injunction.
I. You know what I always do
shoe on the other foot, right?
So Biden had a lot of his stuff
blocked by, nationwide injunctions.
[00:08:35]
And I didn't like some of the stuff
that was blocked
like I wanted it to go through.
Student debt relief
was one that was blocked.
Right.
And it takes forever
to get out of the block.
So they should have a rule.
This is a fair thing that if.
Hey, if you're going to do a nationwide
injunction on some constitutional issues
that are necessary, then the case gets
significantly expedited, right?
[00:08:55]
Okay, that makes sense because,
hey, is it constitutional or not?
We got to adjudicate that right away.
But and we have to stop the president
from doing unconstitutional things
in the meanwhile.
But if it turns out it's not
unconstitutional, then he can go forward.
So that makes sense.
[00:09:10]
This doesn't they're going
to reverse this at some point.
I don't know how long it will take,
but this will clog up the courts.
It's a super dumb decision.
So why do they do it?
Here's my very generous theory, and you
feel free to totally not believe it.
And we'll see how it actually plays out.
[00:09:28]
Is that since what Trump is doing
is so obviously unconstitutional, they're
going to have to rule against it when it
comes back up to the Supreme Court.
Otherwise, they're just throwing out
a huge chunk of precedent.
And and how we interpret
the Constitution in America.
[00:09:45]
It'll have enormous ramifications
on the substance.
Right. No, I hear you, I hear you.
That's why I say everyone's free
to totally not believe me on this one.
Okay. You're all released.
Okay.
No, seriously, I think
that they have to rule against them.
[00:10:01]
So part of what I think Roberts is doing
here, in my opinion, is splitting the baby
and going, oh, on the procedural stuff.
Oh, Donald Trump is so right.
So right now don't get mad at us later
when we tell you that he doesn't know
what the hell he's talking about
when it comes to the Constitution.
So that feels like a Roberts type of,
you know, compromise.
[00:10:20]
But that had the good part
hasn't happened yet.
Only the bad part has happened.
So, Nina, what do you think?
Well, Jake,
I hope you're right about that.
I it's hard for me to put faith
in Roberts, but what you're saying,
you know, it makes sense.
It makes too much sense.
So I hope that you're right.
[00:10:36]
But on the face of what is
happening right now,
you know, the point that John was making.
The court totally abdicated
its responsibility,
cut the legs out from under other courts.
And, you know, I really do think
that this court is calling
President Donald J. Trump their daddy.
I really do.
[00:10:54]
I mean, it's as sick as all of this is
with the daddy stuff,
the t shirts and all of that.
But it just it just feels like this.
And this man is celebrating, you know,
you got people who are hungry,
you know, people who need health care.
[00:11:10]
You know, all the things that this
president could be doing with his power.
But he steps up to a mic in the press room
to celebrate a so-called victory,
which is really no victory at all for the
vast majority of people in this country,
[00:11:25]
because they come for immigrants.
Eventually they're coming
for everybody else.
I mean, there is no red line
for Donald J. Trump.
This this is not good.
By the way, I have been dreading later
in the show when I have to present the
daddy story and ask Senator Nina Turner
to talk about it,
[00:11:43]
and she actually brought it up first.
So now I feel a little bit better
about that whole thing.
Yeah.
So look, my concern is that,
like Amy Coney Barrett's like, yeah,
the Republicans did this a lot to Biden.
Yeah, but, like,
can the Supreme Court not tell
the difference between a frivolous attempt
[00:12:01]
to block something that is definitely
within the power of the executive branch
and something that seems intentionally
designed to violate the Constitution?
And it's not even just this.
It's not even just like they found
the birthright citizenship.
And they were like, yeah, you know what?
Some of the white supremacists
have voted for us don't like this,
so we're gonna get rid of this.
[00:12:17]
I mean, they're dispatching
the military to US citizens.
They've they've now taken over 250 miles
of the southern border and said, yeah,
that's actually all of a military base.
So the military can arrest migrants
in their their case after case.
They are just trying to find
the few remaining limitations
[00:12:35]
on executive power and knock them down.
This is where the Supreme Court
has to act expeditiously,
particularly in cases of life and death.
I mean, maybe it's the case that
they do end up ruling on this in a month
and it never goes into effect
or very soon after that.
[00:12:50]
But when you combine the willingness
of Donald Trump to now start choosing
who gets to be a citizen and who doesn't
scary in the first place with his
nonstop horniness to deport people,
you could have kids that are born
that should, by rights, be citizens,
but won't be the only possible protection
they have under this lawless regime to not
[00:13:10]
be sent to El Salvador or South Sudan
or Alligator, Alcatraz or Guantanamo.
And then he deports them
and the Supreme Court.
We're just waiting around.
I hope they get back in session
and pick this up.
But maybe the kid is now in South Sudan.
So what's going to happen once they get
their citizenship retroactively reapplied?
[00:13:28]
The Trump administration
is going to fly him back over.
Boy, I hope they weren't assaulted
or robbed or sexually abused
or murdered in the mean time.
Like if there's any time
where the Supreme Court has to act,
it's the easiest thing in the world.
If in four years, President Alexandria
Ocasio-Cortez signs an executive order
[00:13:45]
that just says, oh, by the way,
y'all can't own guns anymore.
Do you think the Supreme Court is going
to be like, well, let's not be hasty.
No nationwide injunctions,
and we'll think about it.
We'll get back to you in two years.
You know, damn sure
they're not going to do that.
They acted quicker on student debt relief
than something that seems designed
[00:14:02]
to give the double middle finger
to the Constitution.
Yeah, you're stealing my thunder.
And you're stealing the thunder
of one of the members that I was about to.
- Oh, really?
- Okay.
What's that?
So on twitch drenched wildfire said
seems like a really bad precedent for the
GOP's agenda to set for president and AOC.
Okay, so.
[00:14:21]
And the reason I wanted to read that
is similar to what you said, John,
but I'll make a prediction on it.
I know procedurally
that this will lead to a giant mess.
It's totally untenable.
They'll have to reverse themselves
on this decision.
- Right?
- Just in time for the progressive.
So as I was, you were talking John, and
I'm reading drenched wildfires comment.
[00:14:39]
I thought, oh, I know when they're going
to reverse it as soon as there's
a Democratic president and they need
a nationwide injunction on something.
They're like, well, it turns out
this is a procedural mess.
Jake was right. We're reversing it.
I'm sure they'll throw that in.
And then I'm going to do one
last member for me, at least.
[00:14:55]
John Bongino on Titcomb,
right, wrote in already.
Funny, if we get rid of birthright
citizenship, what claim do any of us have
to being an American?
Well, so that leads to two points.
I'm going to feel really good about this
because I feel like naturalized citizens.
You know, should have the same rights
to everyone else,
[00:15:12]
including the right to run for president.
But it turns out now we have more rights
than you guys
because none of you are citizens anymore.
If this the substance of this stays by
definition, you all kind of have to prove
that you had American parents
or some other documentation.
[00:15:30]
Whereas naturalized citizens
by definition are naturalized.
We already proved it.
We have the documentation.
So I'm going to need
to see all your papers.
Okay.
And think about how ridiculous that is.
Because in the states that didn't sue
right now they have to start asking
[00:15:48]
the parents, are you American or not?
And there's no way to verify.
So and there's no system for the doctors
or nurses or the hospital to verify.
So they don't know what to write
on the birth certificate.
So monumentally dumb.
[00:16:05]
So there's going to be potentially
thousands and thousands of kids
that have birth certificates that are
unclear as to whether they're U.S.
Citizens or not.
And then what are you going to do
with all those cases?
This is so dumb,
it hurts the mind to think about it.
[00:16:21]
All right. Last word goes to Nina.
Thanks.
I was thinking about
the administrative nightmare.
You know, it is a nightmare,
but you think about the amount of money
that hospitals are going to have to spend,
states will have to spend, or counties
will have to spend to create a system
[00:16:36]
to to be in line with this dumbness.
And then another point I want to make.
What good is a lifetime appointment?
You're supposed to have courage, right?
I thought, have a little extra courage
because I think if you run for office,
you should have courage.
Anyway.
Don't worry so much
about the next election.
[00:16:52]
Do all that you can
in the one that you just won.
But especially when you have
a lifetime appointment, you're supposed
to be able to do more of the right thing.
But this particular Supreme Court
has shown time and time again
that it is not willing to do so.
I mean, they act like they their names
are on the ballot or something.
[00:17:09]
Am I missing something?
Do they still have lifetime appointments?
It feels like it feels like longer
than one lifetime.
Yeah.
They always they like whenever there's
a Republican president,
they're always like feeling out
public opinion and stuff like that.
- Yes.
- Yeah.
But whenever it's, you know,
anything related to corporations,
[00:17:26]
money and politics, they're like,
who cares about public opinion.
No, you guys don't have
a democracy anymore.
Corporations.
You're now human beings, and you can spend
unlimited money bribing our politicians.
Go ahead. Okay, then.
They never checked the polls because
that polls at 7% in popularity, but.
Oh, well.
[00:17:41]
Yeah, well, we're gonna we're going
to take a break as we go to the break.
I want to give the conservatives
an additional thing to think about,
not only the precedent this is setting for
President Buttigieg or whatever, who will
not be bound by lower court decisions.
But also, Donald Trump announced
in his victory speech today that one
[00:17:56]
of the reasons he's right about birthright
citizenship is because it was only
intended to apply to newly freed slaves.
Now, obviously it doesn't say that in
the Constitution, but he's saying ignore
the literal text of the Constitution
and add whatever context you want.
[00:18:12]
That is the official position
of your dear leader.
I think that we can run
with that in the future.
- Especially for the Second Amendment.
- Exactly.
Lot's changed since then.
Every time you ring the bell below,
an angel gets its wings.
Totally not true, but it does
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