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Supreme Court Decision Boosts Trump’s Authority

by Damjan

For years, presidents from both parties have complained about lower courts blocking their actions with sweeping injunctions. These court orders can freeze policies nationwide, often based on lawsuits filed by just a few plaintiffs.

On Friday, the Supreme Court weighed in with a decision that shifts this dynamic in a big way, giving presidents, including Donald Trump and those who follow him, more leeway to implement executive orders before they face broad legal challenges.

Standing at the White House podium, President Trump looked delighted as he spoke to reporters.

“This is a big, amazing decision,” he said, smiling widely. “We’re very happy about it.” He called the ruling a “monumental victory for the Constitution, the separation of powers, and the rule of law.”

At the heart of this case is Trump’s executive order to end birthright citizenship for children born on U.S. soil to undocumented immigrants. The Supreme Court’s decision means this order can take effect in a month, unless someone with standing can convince a lower court to stop it.

While this doesn’t immediately end birthright citizenship across the country, it gives the Trump administration an opening to try. Carrying out this policy won’t be easy. States control the process of issuing birth certificates, and many don’t even note parents’ citizenship.

Democratic-led states are especially unlikely to cooperate quickly with a plan that undermines automatic citizenship for children born in the U.S. As a result, a patchwork of responses is likely to unfold.

Trump calls ruling "monumental" and thanks Supreme Court.

Justice Amy Coney Barrett, writing for the majority, acknowledged that states could still argue for a more comprehensive block of the executive order if they show broader harm.

“As the States see it, their harms - financial injuries and the administrative burdens from citizen-dependent benefits programs - cannot be remedied without a blanket ban on the enforcement of the Executive Order,” Barrett wrote.

She left it to lower courts to decide whether a narrower or broader injunction is warranted. Trump, meanwhile, was quick to frame the ruling as a major step in his immigration agenda.

He told reporters the decision struck a blow against what he called the “birthright citizenship hoax” and claimed it would stop people from “scamming our immigration process.”

Trump’s Attorney General Pam Bondi added that the Supreme Court will revisit the birthright citizenship question during its next session in October, suggesting this legal battle is far from over.

Trump calls ruling commons.wikimedia

Beyond the specifics of birthright citizenship, the ruling has bigger implications for presidential power in general. By restricting lower federal courts from immediately issuing nationwide injunctions, the Supreme Court has made it harder for a single judge to halt presidential policies nationwide.

This change affects presidents from both parties who have seen signature initiatives blocked by lower courts. Since Trump took office in 2017, he’s seen at least 25 instances where lower courts put the brakes on his executive orders.

Policies on foreign aid cuts, changes to diversity programs, limits on terminating federal employees, immigration reforms, and adjustments to election processes have all been held up by district court rulings.

Olga Urbina and her son Ares protest outside the US Supreme Court against Trump’s birthright citizenship plan.

After Friday’s decision, Trump sounded eager to get moving on stalled plans.

“We can now properly file to proceed with policies that have been wrongly enjoined,” he told journalists, signaling that his administration will quickly push ahead on policies that have been tied up in court.

These injunction battles aren’t new. Under President Biden, conservative judges blocked efforts to expand environmental regulations, offer student loan forgiveness, and revise immigration rules. During President Obama’s time in office, courts stopped attempts to normalize immigration status for some undocumented immigrants and halted his plan to expand overtime pay to more white-collar workers.

While the Supreme Court’s decision limits the reach of immediate injunctions, it doesn’t remove the power of courts entirely. Lawsuits challenging presidential actions will still make their way through the legal system, and if actions are found illegal or unconstitutional, judges can strike them down.

The Supreme Court’s opinion reminded lower courts to handle these cases carefully:

“The lower courts shall move expeditiously to ensure that, with respect to each plaintiff, the injunctions comport with this rule and otherwise comply with principles of equity.”Olga Urbina and her son Ares protest outside the US Supreme Court against Trump’s birthright citizenship plan.Getty Images

In the meantime, presidents will have more breathing room to put policies into motion before facing sweeping legal blocks. That shift will affect not just Donald Trump, but any future occupant of the Oval Office, whether they’re a Republican or Democrat.

And with many divisive policies likely to come in the years ahead, the impact of this ruling will be felt well beyond this administration.

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