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Supreme Court hits Trump with delay as president attempts to fire legislative officer

The U.S. Supreme Court declined to immediately permit President Donald Trump to fire Register of Copyrights Shira Perlmutter from her post inside the Library of Congress.

Earlier this year, Trump removed Carla Hayden, the Librarian of Congress appointed by President Joe Biden, and replaced her with his former personal attorney, Todd Blanche. Blanche then tried to remove Perlmutter, who reports to the Librarian of Congress.

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'Whoa': MSNBC host reacts to Neil Gorsuch's 'stunning' comments against Trump's power grab

"Whoa," a MSNBC host said on Sunday as a public defender described Supreme Court Justice Judge Neil Gorsuch apparently criticizing a power grab by Donald Trump.
Liz Oyer, a former pardon attorney, appeared on MSNBC over the weekend, and was asked about the issue of tariffs. She noted that there was "a really interesting argument at the Supreme Court this week that suggested that a couple of conservative justices may join the liberals in striking down Donald Trump's tariffs."
She continued, specifically noting comments made by Gorsuch.
"I mean, we won't know until we actually see the ruling, but the arguments certainly suggested that a couple of judges are very interested in potentially striking this down," she said. "And the most stunning comments came from Neil Gorsuch, who is a strong conservative member of the court, who made a comment indicating that he believes that the Trump presidency has been gradually but steadily taking too much power away from the legislature. Congress."
That led host Jonathan Capehart to blurt out, "Whoa."
Oyer further added, "So the Supreme Court is sort of telegraphing that congress has the responsibility for taxation. Tariffs are a tax. And if we need to tariff other countries, it should be congress doing it, not the president."

'Strap in': Economist predicts mass 'mayhem' over Supreme Court's next Trump order

Australian economist and professor Justin Wolfers issued a dire warning this weekend that however the Supreme Court ends up ruling on the White House’s tariff policy, mass “mayhem” was likely to follow.

“If – as I expect – the Trump tariffs are ruled illegal, we're going to move from eight months of unconstitutional illegal tariff turmoil to a whole new set of tariff turmoil,” Wolfers said, appearing on journalist Molly Jong-Fast’s show “Fast Politics” on Saturday.

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'Trump is panican': Critics ridicule president over new 'flailing' attack on Supreme Court

President Donald Trump was dragged through the mud Sunday for his panicked attack on the Supreme Court as his authority to impose sweeping tariffs may be on the verge of being struck down.

In an online post on his social media platform Truth Social, Trump erupted at the Supreme Court over its growing skepticism of his authority to impose tariffs, implying that the court was uneducated on the intent of the Founding Fathers as it relates to his authority to impose tariffs.

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'Mic drop': Right-wing justice's statement might have killed Trump's Supreme Court hopes

In a "mic drop" moment this week, a right-wing justice's comment might have killed President Donald Trump's Supreme Court hopes.

Justice Neil Gorsuch’s closing remarks and questioning Wednesday in the case challenging Trump's tariffs "was damaging for the administration's case," according to a New York Times opinion conversation published Thursday between writer Emily Bazelon and columnist David French.

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Expert predicts 'easy way' Supreme Court will shut down Trump's main priority

The Supreme Court appeared very hostile to President Donald Trump's emergency tariff system during oral argument this week, but it's unlikely they'll delve that deeply into the issue of what constitutes an emergency, legal expert Lisa Rubin told MSNBC's Joe Scarborough on Thursday.

That's because, she argued, there's a much easier and less politically fraught way they can strike down the tariffs.

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'Major questions': Conservative Supreme Court justice warns of Trump's unchecked power

Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch Wednesday warned of President Donald Trump's unchecked power, saying there are "major questions."

The conservative justice and Trump appointee pressed lawyers to define the limits of executive power and expressed concern over giving the president unlimited authority as the Supreme Court started hearing arguments on Trump's tariffs, according to Newsweek.

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'That's exactly what they are': Sotomayor schools lawyer claiming tariffs aren't taxes

Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor clashed with Solicitor General John Sauer, President Donald Trump's former personal lawyer, after he claimed that tariffs were not a tax burden on the American people.

During oral arguments about Trump's global tariff agenda, Sotomayor said she didn't buy the government's argument that the president had the power to enact tariffs.

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'Epic clash': Brett Kavanaugh considered a loose cannon threatening Trump's Supreme Court

The U.S. Supreme Court case on President Donald Trump's tariffs will set up what's being described as an "epic clash" between two factions in the conservative legal movement.

Politico reported the case will pit one camp, which believes that presidents are entitled to extreme deference on national security and foreign policy, against another that mistrusts government interference in the free market.

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Ginni Thomas ally suggests 'dangerous' Trump move that could threaten 2026 elections

A Republican election lawyer flagged a "dangerous comment" by one of Ginni Thomas' election denier allies heading into next year's midterm voting.

Conservative attorney Cleta Mitchell, who has been involved in political efforts with Thomas, the wife of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, has expanded her efforts to change election rules and challenge individual voters she believes are ineligible, and Republican election lawyer Ben Ginsberg told CNN that she's part of a broad network of election conspiracists gathering power around the country.

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Trump goes on spree over 'most important' Supreme Court case after 'main priority' outrage

President Donald Trump spent Friday morning posting about the economy in an apparent effort to push back on a widely criticized remark by White House press secretary Katherine Leavitt.

A reporter asked Leavitt whether the president had any other renovations in mind at the White House after ordering the swift demolition of the East Wing, and the press secretary said Trump's mind was "always churning" about improvements to the official presidential home and workplace but for now "the ballroom is really the president’s main priority."

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'Fully MAGA now': Latest case has experts finally writing off 'arrogant' Supreme Court

When law professor Seth Chandler asked artificial intelligence to predict how the Supreme Court would rule in Trump v. CASA this summer, he won a $1 bet with a colleague. The AI-generated draft opinion proved “exactly right” about the 6-3 conservative majority ruling that limited universal injunctions in response to President Donald Trump's executive order curtailing birthright citizenship.

That might not seem too surprising — the court to which Trump appointed three justices has generally proved favorable to the president’s draconian policies, after all. Nonetheless, when the court heard oral arguments in Louisiana v. Callais last week, Chandler, who specializes in constitutional law and computer science at the University of Houston, turned to AI again.

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Justice Brown Jackson flattens Louisiana lawyer in major Supreme Court redistricting trial

Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson clashed with a Louisiana lawyer during oral arguments on Wednesday when the court heard Louisiana v. Callais, a case on whether a majority-minority district in Louisiana discriminated against white people.

Those advocating against the district frequently argued that the plaintiffs in the case demanded a second majority-minority district, but Jackson explained that this is not the case's focus and does not constitute a retrial.

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