Princeton professor Robert P. George mentioned Sunday he does “not expect” President Trump “to defy a direct order of the Supreme Court.”
“I do not expect, as some people expect, President Trump, to defy a direct order of the Supreme Court. He may defy the district judge on the grounds that the district judge is now trenching upon executive power under the Constitution, getting out of his own lane, usurping the authority of the president,” George advised NewsNation’s Chris Stirewalt on “The Hill Sunday,” referencing a decide on an immigration case the White Home has not too long ago been battling.
President Trump’s administration has not too long ago spent weeks going after U.S. District Courtroom Decide James Boasberg. Slightly greater than every week in the past, administration officers rebuffed Boasberg’s oral order to carry again or cease Venezuelan migrant flights on their technique to a Salvadoran jail.
Administration officers have gone after Boasberg each out and in of courtroom, minimizing his authority on the matter and on a number of events refusing to present info that was requested in courtroom.
Final week, Supreme Courtroom Chief Justice John Roberts pushed again in a uncommon public assertion after a name from Trump to question Boasberg.
“For more than two centuries, it has been established that impeachment is not an appropriate response to disagreement concerning a judicial decision. The normal appellate review process exists for that purpose,” Roberts mentioned within the earlier assertion.