
Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson is an embarrassment to the Democrats
The judiciary has not always been so amenable to Trump. In the months after his return to office in January, dozens of Democrat-appointed judges, and some Republican-appointed ones, too, blocked or stayed numerous policies and directives from the executive branch, obstructing much of Trump's agenda and the electoral mandate behind it. Almost all of those rulings, however, were issued by lower-level federal district courts or mid-level circuit courts. At the Supreme Court – America's final court of appeal – matters have been rather different.
Despite much frustration over adverse lower court rulings, Trump's Justice Department has deftly appealed many of them, frequently via the Supreme Court's emergency petition procedure. Emergency rulings are generally handed down without a written justification explaining the Court's legal reasoning and without a statement of how its nine justices voted, though the justices are free to issue such statements and publicly declare how they voted.
This gambit of appealing to the Supreme Court on an emergency basis has paid off. In rapid succession, the court has ruled that Trump can legally deport illegal immigrants en masse, including to places other than their countries of origin. It chose not to immediately quash his inauguration day executive order ending birthright citizenship – a longstanding policy that automatically confers citizenship on all children born on US soil to foreign parents.
The Court has temporarily allowed Trump's Defence Department to ban transgendered individuals from military service. It has permitted the Department of Government Efficiency (Doge) to examine private Social Security records and avoid scrutiny under the Freedom of Information Act. It has upheld Trump's dismissal of appointed officials from independent government boards.
Last week, a hotly contested emergency ruling allowed the president to sack large numbers of federal government employees, whose jobs had been temporarily saved by lower-level court injunctions. Perhaps most significantly, the Supreme Court has limited the ability of lower-level federal courts to issue universal injunctions, a much-needed step towards stopping relatively junior activist judges from assuming the power to effectively dictate national policy.
Even in cases that continue to be adjudicated in the federal court system, which can take years to conclude, an emergency ruling's immediate effect can often render continuing litigation moot. Illegal immigrants who are deported to distant countries are unlikely to return, whether or not they eventually prevail in the US legal system. Sacked federal workers might, even if successful in litigation, find it hard to go back to radically altered workplaces in which their positions might well have been eliminated. Dismissed federal board appointees who prevail in court will almost certainly have been replaced by new officials by the time they theoretically win, leaving them with little more than a moral victory.
Even so, many Democrats are still looking to the Supreme Court for salvation. Divided, demoralised, and unpopular, they seem to believe that they have found an effective leader of the resistance in the one justice who has proved willing to oppose practically everything the president stands for.
Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson was nominated by Joe Biden to fulfil a cynical campaign promise to appoint a black woman to the Supreme Court. The former president made that pledge reportedly because he required the support of South Carolina kingmaker Rep Jim Clyburn to win the decisive South Carolina primary in his 2020 quest for the Democratic presidential nomination. An early sign that she was a poor choice came during her Senate confirmation hearings. She refused to provide a definition of the word 'woman', despite Biden being quite open that she had been chosen in part because of her own sex.
Although Jackson has since reliably turned up among the dissenting faction in many of the recent pro-Trump Supreme Court rulings, even her own judicial colleagues have been unable to hide their disdain for some of her arguments. In the case that reined in the universal applicability of lower federal court decisions, Justice Amy Coney Barrett, writing for the majority of the Court, said she found Jackson's arguments 'extreme' and 'at odds with more than two centuries' worth of precedent, not to mention the Constitution itself'. In the case evaluating whether Trump could dismiss federal employees, in which Jackson cast the only dissenting vote, her Democrat-appointed counterpart Sonia Sotomayor dismissed her argument in short order.
Even Jackson doesn't seem to claim any particular interest in trenchant legal analysis. 'I just feel that I have a wonderful opportunity to tell people in my opinions how I feel about the issues. And that's what I try to do', she bizarrely told ABC News in a recent interview. If Democrats 'feel' she can lead any form of opposition, they would do well to remember that their last presidential candidate largely based her campaign on 'joy' – and lost.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
7 minutes ago
- The Independent
Trump posts AI video of Obama being arrested after Gabbard's coup claims: ‘No one is above the law'
Donald Trump has posted a bizarre AI video of former president Barack Obama being arrested and thrown in jail. Trump, still mired in controversy over his administration's handling of the Jeffrey Epstein files, posted the TikTok clip on his Truth Social platform on Sunday in which the Democrat is seen declaring in a rally speech that 'no one is above the law.' He is then seen being handcuffed by law enforcement during an Oval Office sitdown with a grinning Trump, created using real footage of the two men meeting at the White House in November 2016 when the Republican was president-elect and Obama about to leave office. The Democrat is then led away and subsequently seen wearing an orange jumpsuit in a federal prison, all of which is soundtracked by The Village People's 1970s disco anthem 'YMCA,' which has become the Republican's personal theme tune. Trump appears to have been responding to comments made by Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, who appeared on Maria Bartiromo 's Fox News show Sunday Morning Futures over the weekend and accused Obama of orchestrating a 'years-long coup' to keep Trump from the White House. Gabbard had announced on Friday that she was referring Obama administration officials, including ex-FBI director James Comey and her predecessor James Clapper, to the Justice Department for prosecution over allegations they had 'manufactured' intelligence to substantiate the idea that Russia meddled in the 2016 presidential election to help Trump beat Hillary Clinton. The president posted about Gabbard's claim 17 times over the weekend, drawing accusations that he was attempting to shift the national conversation away from his past relationship with Epstein, the billionaire pedophile and sex trafficker who died in jail in August 2019. Trump's administration caused uproar two weeks ago by announcing that no Epstein 'client list' existed and that the financier had died by his own hand in a New York penitentiary, a verdict that incensed the president's own supporters demanding justice for Epstein's victims and punishment for his enablers. Speaking to Bartiromo about the Obama administration on Sunday, Gabbard alleged: 'Their goal was to subvert the will of the American people and enact what was essentially a years-long coup with the objective of trying to usurp the president from fulfilling the mandate bestowed upon him by the American people.' Her claims have been attacked as baseless by Democrats, among them Virginia Sen. Mark Warner, the ranking member on the Senate Intelligence Committee, who called her announcement 'one more example of the director of national intelligence trying to cook the books.' 'It is sadly not surprising that DNI Gabbard, who promised to depoliticize the intelligence community, is once again weaponizing her position to amplify the president's election conspiracy theories,' Warner wrote on X. 'It is appalling to hear DNI Gabbard accuse her own IC workforce of committing a 'treasonous conspiracy' when she was unwilling to label Edward Snowden a traitor.' Obama has yet to respond to Trump's taunts but the president, himself a convicted felon, has kept at it on Truth Social, also posting mocked-up prison mugshots of Obama cabinet members and a call for California Democrat Sen. Adam Schiff to be arrested.


Scottish Sun
7 minutes ago
- Scottish Sun
Trump calls for Obama to be arrested as he posts AI video of former president being cuffed by FBI in the Oval Office
Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) DONALD Trump has shared an AI-generated video of Barack Obama being arrested in the Oval Office and locked up in a jail cell. The bizarre clip shows Obama being dragged to his knees by the FBI and placed in handcuffs as a beaming Trump watches on. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 6 Donald Trump has shared a AI-generated video of Barack Obama being arrested in the Oval Office by the FBI Credit: Truth Social 6 The TikTok, which was later shared by the President onto his Truth Social account, shows Obama in an orange prison outfit standing behind bars Credit: Truth Social 6 Trump has shared dozens of interview clips, news articles and statements in recent days, reigniting a long-standing feud between himself and Obama Credit: Getty The TikTok, which was later shared by the President onto his Truth Social account, then shows Obama in an orange prison outfit standing behind bars. Trump's now iconic anthem, YMCA by the Village People, can be heard playing throughout the AI clip. The video is captioned: "No one is above the law!" The line directly references a clip which is shown at the very start of the video of a genuine Obama speech where he tells a crowd at a Biden/Harris rally: "No one, especially the President, is above the law." read more in Donald Trump ALL THE FIZZ Trump confirms Coca Cola is CHANGING recipe as he assures: 'It's just better!' The clip also featured a series of Democratic politicians such as Joe Biden and Nancy Pelosi making the same statement. Trump has shared dozens of interview clips, news articles and statements in recent days, reigniting a long-standing feud between himself and Obama. The latest controversy stems from an interview from spy chief Tulsi Gabbard where she claims Obama was behind a "years-long coup" against Trump. Gabbard, the Director of National Intelligence, declassified hundreds of documents and emails on Friday over alleged Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election. One of the most damning allegations pointed towards Obama trying to subvert Trump's historic win through "manufactured and politicized intelligence". Gabbard claims the 44th US President was likely trying to make it seem as if foreign bad actors influenced the result. Trump ally calls for RELEASE of Epstein files but Don insists 'it's boring stuff' amid whirlwind of murder conspiracies She said in a heated statement alongside the released documents: "Their egregious abuse of power and blatant rejection of our Constitution threatens the very foundation and integrity of our democratic republic. "No matter how powerful, every person involved in this conspiracy must be investigated and prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law, to ensure nothing like this ever happens again." Trump has posted at least 17 times about Gabbard's announcement over the weekend. It follows years of speculation over potential Russian interference in US elections. In 2021, it was even said that Vladimir Putin "authorized" and oversaw covert operations aimed at "denigrating Biden's candidacy", according to a bombshell declassified report from the Office of the Director of National Intelligence. The 114-page documents instead found there was "no indication of a Russian threat to directly manipulate the actual vote count through cyber means". Putin has previously denied ever favouring Trump by trying to influence the US election. Democrats have since claimed the report has only been released to deflect from the growing Jeffrey Epstein client list scandal. 6 Gabbard, the Director of National Intelligence, declassified hundreds of documents and emails on Friday over alleged Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election Credit: Getty 6 The 114-page documents instead found there was 'no indication of a Russian threat to directly manipulate the actual vote count through cyber means' Credit: Since Epstein's death by suicide in 2019, people have speculated that the convicted pedophile blackmailed prominent figures involved with his sick crimes. The FBI has announced in recent weeks that any such "client list" showing who may have been implicated doesn't actually exist. But this claim directly goes against what administration officials have previously said. In an interview on Fox News back in February, close Trump aide Pam Bondi said the client list was "sitting on my desk right now to review." She addressed the comment during a cabinet meeting recently and explained she meant the Epstein file as a whole rather than any list. And despite further evidence - including video of Epstein's prison cell on the day of his death - being released, many are still calling for the entire case to be made public. Many within Trump's own MAGA movement allege the files may have been withheld to protect big names. Trump has been adamant that the documents don't need to be released as the relevant information is already clear. He has called the files "made up" by his Democratic predecessors and reporters in the White House: "I don't understand why the Jeffrey Epstein case would be of interest to anybody. "It's pretty boring stuff." Trump has also unleashed a scathing rant on Truth Social, taking aim at those who he says are responsible for the ongoing issues. The President hit out at "radical left democrats", who he claims peddled the theories about Epstein's death and the so-called client list. He also fumed that his past MAGA supporters had "bought into this 'bulls***,' hook, line, and sinker".


Economist
8 minutes ago
- Economist
U-turn: Donald Trump changes his position on Ukraine once again
A handpicked article read aloud from the latest issue of The Economist. After making bold claims of being able to broker an end to the conflict between Russia and Ukraine, Donald Trump failed to deliver. His back-and-forth on continuing American support for Ukraine has been cynical but his renewed backing should be embraced.