When a federal judge shot down a Trump administration policy of holding immigrants without bond last December, it seemed like a serious blow to the president’s mass deportation effort, reported The Associated Press.
Instead, a
top Justice Department official insisted the ruling wasn’t binding, and the
administration continued denying detainees around the country a chance for
release.
By
February, the district court judge, Sunshine Sykes, was fed up. Sykes, a
nominee of President Joe Biden, accused
Trump officials in a ruling that month of seeking “to erode any
semblance of separation of powers,” adding that they could “only do so in a
world where the Constitution does not exist.”
Hardly
isolated, the case illustrates a broader pattern of defiance of lower court
decisions in President Donald Trump’s second term.
The
failure of Trump officials to follow court orders has been highlighted
most notably in individual immigration cases. But a review of hundreds
of pages of court records by The Associated Press also shows an extraordinary
record of violations in lawsuits over policy changes and other moves.
In the
second Trump administration’s first 15 months in office, district court judges
ruled it was violating an order in at least 31 lawsuits over a wide range of
issues, including mass layoffs, deportations, spending cuts and immigration
practices, the AP’s review of court records found. That’s about one out of
every eight lawsuits in which courts have at least temporarily blocked the
administration’s actions.
The
Republican administration’s power struggle with federal courts — which is
testing basic
tenets of U.S. democracy — reflects an expansive view of executive
authority that has also challenged the independence of federal agencies, a
president’s ethical
obligations, and the U.S.’s role in the international order.
President
Donald Trump walks from Marine One to board Air Force One at Ocala
International Airport, in Ocala Fla., Friday, May 1, 2026, after speaking at an
event in The Villages, Fla. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)
Judges
find widespread noncompliance
The
violations in the 31 lawsuits are in addition to more than 250 instances of
noncompliance judges
have recently highlighted in individual immigration petitions — from
failing to return property to keeping immigrants locked up past court-ordered
release dates.
Legal
scholars and former federal judges said they could recall at most a few
violations of court rulings over the full four-year terms of other recent
presidential administrations, including Trump’s first time in office. They also
noted previous administrations were generally apologetic when confronted by
judges; the Trump administration’s Justice Department has been outright
combative in some cases.
“What the
court system is experiencing in the last year and a half is just qualitatively
completely different from anything that’s preceded it,” said Ryan Goodman, a
law professor at New York University who studies federal courts and is tracking litigation against the Trump administration.
Though
Trump officials eventually backed down in about a third of the 31 lawsuits,
legal experts say their treatment of court orders poses serious dangers.
“The
federal government should be the institution most devoted to the rule of law in
this country,” said David Super, a constitutional law scholar at Georgetown
University. “When it ceases to feel itself bound, respect for the rule of law
is likely to break down across the country.”
To read more CLICK HERE

No comments:
Post a Comment