The Supreme Court ruled that even a court with three of President Trump's own appointees (Neil Gorsuch and Amy Coney Barrett) would not uphold his expansive economic authority, demonstrating that judicial independence means justices vote based on constitutional interpretation rather than political loyalty. The 6-3 decision struck down Trump's use of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) to impose sweeping tariffs, establishing that presidents cannot declare national security emergencies to justify unlimited economic actions without clear congressional authorization. This ruling reveals that constitutional checks on executive power remain effective regardless of how a president attempts to influence the judiciary through appointments.
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Trump PANICS as Supreme Court Drops A MIDNIGHT BOMBSHELL本站添加:
Court has ruled that Donald Trump has some immunity [music] from prosecution for official actions taken while he was in the White House.
The landmark decision is likely to delay his trial for interfering in the 2020 election. The former president described the decision as a big win. Our North America editor Sarah Smith reports. It's going to have to be argued out in a lower court, which of his actions were official presidential acts and have immunity and which were not, meaning he can still be prosecuted for them.
Trump is also facing charges in the state of Georgia for trying to overturn the election result there.
He phoned a local official and asked him to find more Through endless rallies and speeches and social media posts, Trump has bragged about one thing above almost everything else when it comes to the Supreme Court. He built it. He picked three justices. He reshuffled the ideological balance of the most powerful court in the country. He said it explicitly and repeatedly, "This is my court. These are my people and they are going to protect what I am doing." And for a while, that narrative held up reasonably well. The court handed him significant wins on immigration. It granted him broad presidential immunity that even his most optimistic supporters had not anticipated. It moved in directions that aligned with his agenda on enough issues that the claim of a Trump-built, Trump-friendly Supreme Court had at least enough truth in it to be politically useful. And then, in a 6-3 decision that landed like a grenade inside the White House, two of the three justices he personally put on that court voted to gut his tariff regime. Neil Gorsuch, Amy Coney Barrett, his picks, his people, joining the three liberal justices and Chief Justice Roberts to strike down the sweeping emergency tariff authority Trump had been using as his signature economic weapon, the thing he called the most beautiful word in the dictionary, as an unconstitutional overreach.
>> Supreme Court has the final say on what presidents can and cannot do.
Today's historic ruling means a president can never be prosecuted for anything that's part of their official duties, but they do not have immunity for non-official acts.
So, what does claiming victory saying that this is a big win for him. And Democrats are absolutely furious. They say that this ruling will further delay the trial against Donald Trump for trying to overturn the 2020 election results and the January the 6th riot.
But they're also warning about what the consequences could be if Donald Trump is reelected to power and is in the White House knowing that he has the unconstitutional overreach of presidential power. The ruling effectively nullified major portions of his second term tariff strategy and forced a reckoning with what Trump claims is $159 billion in potential repayments to affected companies and countries. In Trump's response, he went to a press conference and spent 45 minutes raising He called the justices fools. He called them lapdogs. He named Gorsuch and Barrett directly on Truth Social and said their votes showed so little respect to our country. He accused them of being influenced by foreign interests. He suggested they had betrayed America. And then, in the kind of closing line that tells you everything about how a person thinks when they are truly rattled, he said he was going to find slower, more laborious ways to reimpose the tariffs anyway. Are you kidding me? The president of the United States just called his own Supreme Court picks disloyal traitors to their country because they ruled against him in a constitutional case about his own economic authority. This is wild.
And this story has layers that go way beyond the tariff ruling itself. So, let us get into all of it. But before we go any further, real quick, let's be honest. You can't really trust mainstream media anymore. That's why we built Punk Politics to bring you real stories, real context, and no corporate spin. If you want to stay ahead of the headlines, join our free newsletter.
We'll send the news straight to your inbox every day. Just click the link in the description to join. And if you just want to support what we're doing, join us. Be part of the community that actually cares about the truth. All right, let's get back to the video. Let us start with what the ruling actually says because this is a constitutional decision with real consequences and you deserve to understand what happened beyond just the political fireworks. The tariffs that were struck down were imposed under a law called the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, IEEPA. This is a law that gives presidents significant authority to regulate commerce with foreign countries in the context of a declared national emergency. Trump used it aggressively in his second term, declaring national security emergencies, and then using those declarations as the legal basis for sweeping tariffs against a wide range of countries. Not targeted tariffs against specific goods or specific countries based on specific trade disputes, but broad, comprehensive tariffs justified by the emergency declaration as a unilateral executive action that did not require congressional approval. And the six-justice majority said, "No. The law does not give you that kind of unchecked authority. Presidents do not have inherent power to impose sweeping tariffs on any nation simply by declaring that a security emergency exists. The emergency powers granted under IEEPA have limits. And what Trump was doing with them went beyond those limits in ways the Constitution and the statute cannot support. That is the legal ruling." And the practical consequence of it is that a cornerstone of Trump's second term economic strategy, the tool he was using to project toughness on trade and to create leverage with foreign governments in negotiations about Iran, about the Strait of Hormuz, about China, was just declared unconstitutional by a majority that included his own appointees. That is not a minor setback. That is a structural blow to the way he has been governing economically. Now, here is the part that makes this story genuinely extraordinary and why the political fallout goes so far beyond what the legal ruling itself requires. Trump has spent years telling his supporters that the Supreme Court is one of the most important reasons to back him, that getting the right justices on the bench is the whole ball game, that his three picks represent a generational transformation of the court's direction.
And in building that narrative, he created a very specific expectation in the minds of his supporters that those justices owe him something, that because he elevated them, because he chose them over other candidates, because he fought through the political battles of three separate confirmation processes to get them confirmed, they should govern with his interests in mind. That is not how the judiciary is supposed to work.
Justice is served for life precisely so they do not have to govern with any president's interests in mind. Their independence from political accountability is the whole point. But Trump's public rhetoric has consistently treated his judicial picks as personal loyalty relationships rather than as independent constitutional officers.
And so when Gorsuch and Barrett voted with the majority to strike down his tariffs, doing exactly what independent judges with constitutional obligations are supposed to do, Trump processed it not as a legal disagreement, but as a personal betrayal, as disloyalty. And he said so publicly, on the record, in terms that were blunt enough to shock even some of his allies. Because attacking your own Supreme Court picks by name for being insufficiently loyal to you is not a normal thing for a president to do. It is the kind of thing that reveals how someone actually thinks about the relationship between political power and legal institutions. And what Trump revealed in those 45 minutes of raging is not reassuring. So why does this moment matter so much beyond the specifics of tariff policy and constitutional law? Here is the answer.
This ruling exposed something that Trump supporters and critics alike need to take seriously.
There are still things that even a court that includes three of his own picks will not do for him. There are still legal lines that the institution as a whole, despite everything, is not willing to cross on behalf of a specific president's political agenda. And the fact that Trump's response to discovering that was to immediately attack the institution and the individuals involved in the decision tells you something very important about what his relationship with legal constraints actually looks like when those constraints actually bite. Let us go deeper. All right. Let us get into the full picture here because the Supreme Court tariff ruling connects to several bigger stories that are all worth understanding in real detail. The legal significance of the ruling, the political consequences of Trump publicly attacking his own justices, the broader pattern of how Trump relates to institutions, including ones he helped shape, when they do not give him what he wants, and what it means for his ability to govern economically going forward without the tool he has been treating as his primary economic lever. So, let us go through each of these carefully.
Start with the legal significance because this ruling is more consequential than it might initially appear if you are looking at it just as a trade policy story. The IEEPA authority that Trump was using to impose tariffs is the same kind of emergency power authority that presidents have increasingly relied on to take unilateral action across a wide range of policy areas, not just trade. The theory behind Trump's expansive use of it goes to a broader claim about executive power that his legal team and his allies in the conservative legal movement have been advancing for years. The argument is essentially that in areas where the president has constitutional authority, foreign affairs, national security, trade, the executive has very broad discretion to act without specific congressional authorization as long as there is some statutory basis that can be pointed to. And IEEPA, with its broad emergency powers language, was being used as exactly that kind of statutory hook. A law expansive enough to justify almost anything if you frame it as a national security emergency. The court's 6-3 ruling cuts against that theory directly and specifically in the trade context. It says the emergency power authority has real limits and that those limits mean something. That a president cannot simply declare an emergency and then use that declaration to do whatever he wants with tariffs regardless of whether Congress specifically authorized that kind of action. That is a meaningful limitation on executive power and it is being imposed by a majority that includes three justices who are generally regarded as skeptical of government overreach, protective of broad constitutional structure. The fact that Gorsuch, in particular, one of the most committed originalists on the court, someone whose entire judicial philosophy is built around limiting government power and reading statutes narrowly, voted with the majority against Trump's expansive tariff authority is legally significant in ways that go beyond this specific case because it suggests that even the most conservative members of the court have limits on how far they are willing to stretch statutory authority to accommodate presidential power claims with statutory basis for those claims is genuinely thin. Now let us talk about the 6-3 split in detail because the coalition that produced this ruling is itself a significant story. On one side you have the three dissenters, Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, and Brett Kavanaugh who argued that using IEEPA for tariffs was constitutional and aligned with Trump's expansive view of presidential economic powers. On the other side you have Chief Justice Roberts, Gorsuch, Barrett, and the three liberal justices Sotomayor, Kagan, and Jackson forming a majority around the position that IEEPA does not give the president unlimited tariff authority.
That coalition is unusual. It puts Roberts who has historically been cautious about allowing executive power expansions that could destabilize institutional norms in alignment with the liberal block and two of the most prominent conservative originalists on the court. And what makes it particularly significant politically is that it demonstrates something that Trump's rhetoric about owning the court was always obscuring. The three justices he appointed are not a unified block that votes as a team to protect his agenda. Gorsuch has consistently voted in ways that reflect his legal philosophy rather than his political patron's preferences. Barrett has done the same. They are independent jurists doing independent legal analysis. And when that analysis leads them to conclude that a president's claim of authority goes beyond what the law actually permits, they vote accordingly.
That is how the judiciary is supposed to work. But it is emphatically not how Trump described it working when he was campaigning on his judicial picks. And the distance between his description and the reality is now documented in a 6-3 opinion with his own nominees names in the majority column. Here is the economic dimension that needs to be spelled out clearly because the practical consequences of this ruling are enormous and they are not abstract.
Trump's tariff strategy in his second term has been one of the most aggressive and far-reaching uses of trade barriers in modern American history.
He used the emergency declaration authority to impose tariffs across a huge range of countries and products, using the threat and the reality of those tariffs as leverage in negotiations about everything from trade deficits to foreign policy cooperation on Iran to China's economic behavior.
The tariffs were not just an economic tool, they were a diplomatic weapon, a way of creating pressure on foreign governments that did not require congressional approval or the slow machinery of traditional trade negotiation. And Trump claimed repeatedly that they were working, that they were bringing countries to the table, that the revenue they generated was paying down the national debt and funding American priorities. Now the court has said that the legal authority Trump was using to impose those tariffs in this sweeping way was unconstitutional, which means the companies and countries that paid tariffs under that authority have legal grounds to seek refunds or adjustments, which is where Trump's claim of a $159 billion repayment figure comes from. His calculation or his team's calculation of what unwinding the illegally imposed tariff regime would cost.
Whether that number is precisely accurate or significantly inflated for political effect, the underlying reality is real. Striking down a major tariff program creates financial consequences that have to be addressed, and it forces the administration to find alternative legal mechanisms to re-impose something like the same economic pressure if it wants to maintain the leverage it has been using in ongoing negotiations.
Trump said he would find more laborious ways to do that, which tells you something important. He is not accepting the ruling as the final word on his tariff authority. He is planning to find workarounds, and that sets up another round of legal fights over whatever new mechanisms he tries to use to replicate what the court just told him he cannot do. Now let us talk about what Trump's public meltdown against Gorsuch and Barrett actually cost him politically, because this is a dimension of the story that has been under reported relative to the legal economic analysis. Trump attacking Supreme Court justices by name for ruling against him is not just rhetorically unusual. It creates real political problems in specific communities that have historically been among his most reliable constituencies.
Conservative legal circles, the Federalist Society network, the law professors and attorneys and judges who have spent decades building the intellectual infrastructure for originalist jurisprudence, care deeply about the independence of the judiciary as an institution. They believe that courts should be isolated from political pressure. They believe that justices should rule according to their legal philosophy, rather than their political relationships. And many of them spent years defending Trump's judicial picks against accusations that they were political selections who would simply do Trump's bidding, arguing that Gorsuch, Barrett, and Kavanaugh were serious independent legal thinkers who would apply the law as they understood it, regardless of who appointed them.
Trump's public attack on Gorsuch and Barrett for voting their honest legal judgment, calling them disloyal, suggesting they were influenced by foreign interests, implying they owed him deference because he appointed them, is the exact behavior that conservative legal intellectuals spent years insisting Trump would never engage in toward his own picks. He proved them wrong, and that has consequences for the credibility of people who vouched for him in that community, and for the broader conservative project of rebuilding the court as an institution of principled constitutional interpretation, rather than political loyalty. Let us also connect this to the broader pattern of Trump turning on institutions and individuals when they fail to serve his personal interests, because the tariff ruling is the latest, but far from the only example of this pattern playing out in real time during his second term. We have seen it with his attacks on the FBI under his own appointee Kash Patel when hearings did not go the way he wanted. We have seen it with his public criticism of Republican senators who voted against his priorities. We have seen it with the MAGA media figures who broke with him over the Iran war, and who were immediately targeted with his displeasure. And now we are seeing it with the Supreme Court, the institution he has bragged about shaping more than almost any other achievement of his political career. The pattern is consistent across all of these cases.
When an institution or an individual serves Trump's interest, they are celebrated, defended, and held up as evidence of his power and judgment. When they make an independent decision that crosses him, regardless of whether that decision is legally sound, ethically required, or constitutionally mandated, they become enemies, fools, lapdogs, disloyal. The vocabulary shifts instantly and completely. And what that pattern reveals, across enough examples and enough institutions, is a president who understands loyalty as a one-way street. He expects it without offering it in return. And every time a court, an official, or an ally makes an independent choice that goes against him, he confirms for anyone paying attention that his promises of loyalty and support are entirely contingent on the other party doing exactly what he wants. Okay. Let us bring this all the way home and make sure you are walking away understanding not just what happened with this tariff ruling, but what it reveals and what comes next.
Because the implications of this decision go significantly beyond trade policy, and they are going to shape the political and legal environment for the rest of Trump's term. The first thing you need to understand is what it means that even a Supreme Court with three of Trump's own picks just told him no, and why that matters more than any specific economic consequence of the ruling itself. The story Trump has been telling for years about the Supreme Court, that it is his court, that his picks are reliable conservative votes, that he built something that will protect and extend his agenda. That story just got significantly complicated in a very public and very documented way. And that complication is not going to go away just because he is angry about it. Six justices, including two of his three picks, looked at his tariff authority claim, applied the law as they understood it, and said the claim went too far. That is a legal check working as it was designed to work. And the political consequence of it is that Trump can no longer credibly claim that his judicial legacy gives him carte blanche to do whatever he wants economically and have the court back him up. There are limits. The court just said so. And the six-to-three majority that said so is large enough and and ideologically diverse enough that it cannot be easily dismissed as a partisan outcome or one-time aberration. It is a statement of constitutional principle by majority that spans the ideological spectrum of the current court. And that statement is going to be cited in every future case involving executive overreach in economic policy for as long as that precedent holds. The second thing to understand is what Trump's attack on Gorsuch and Barrett by name actually does to the Supreme Court as an institution going forward and why this is a genuinely serious problem that goes beyond the immediate political drama of an angry president posting on Truth Social. The independence of the judiciary depends not just on legal structures like lifetime appointments and constitutional protections. It also depends on a political culture in which the independence of judges is respected and which presidents, even when they disagree strongly with a decision, accept that the courts are a separate branch of government operating under different obligations and different authority than the executive. When a president publicly accuses his own Supreme Court picks of disloyalty, suggests they were influenced by foreign interests, and implies they owe him deference because he appointed them, he is actively working to erode that political culture. He is telling his supporters that judges who rule against him are not exercising independent legal judgment, but are instead betraying their patron. And that framing, applied consistently enough and loudly enough, creates a political environment where the legitimacy of judicial decisions becomes contingent on whether the president endorses them. That is a corrosive development for constitutional government regardless of which party benefits from it in any specific case.
And the fact that Trump went there publicly, specifically, by name against his own picks is something that legal scholars and constitutional experts are going to be writing about for a very long time. The third thing, and this is the one that matters most practically for what happens over the next several months, is what Trump actually does now that his primary economic weapon has been struck down and he has promised to find workarounds. He said he would use more laborious means to re-impose tariffs.
He has not said what those means are, but the options are limited. He could try to work with Congress to pass explicit statutory authorization for the tariffs he wants, but that require a congressional majorities he does not have in a legislative process that is slow, unpredictable, and full of compromises he may not accept. He could try to find different emergency power authority or different statutory hooks that have not already been tested and struck down, but any new authority he invokes will be immediately challenged in court. But in this ruling has made it harder for lower courts to defer to expansive presidential economic power claims without a clear statutory basis.
He could try to re-impose some version of the tariffs under existing trade statutes that have clear authorization, but those statutes have their own limits and their own procedural requirements that make sweeping unilateral action harder to execute as quickly. In short, the tariff tool that Trump was using as his primary economic lever in diplomacy and trade negotiations has been significantly constrained. He still has options, but they are slower, messier, and more politically costly than the emergency authority he was using before the court took it away. And the fact that he is already telegraphing his intention to find workarounds tells you that another round of legal fights over this is coming. The court just drew a line and Trump's response to lines has always been the same, to look for another way around them. What happens when he tries is a story that is already starting to write itself, and you are going to want to be paying attention when the next chapter lands.
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