Menu
Sign In Pricing Add Podcast
Podcast Image

Consider This from NPR

Is Trump defying the courts?

Mon, 17 Mar 2025

Description

"Oopsie, too late. "That post on X from the President of El Salvador got retweeted by Secretary of State Marco Rubio over the weekend with a laugh-crying emoji over a headline about a judge's ruling. The judge ordered the Trump Administration not to deport Venezuelans to El Salvador. That came after a Brown University physician in the United States on an H1-B visa from Lebanon was sent back. Even though a federal judge issued an order that she appear at an in-person hearing on Monday.In a court filing today, lawyers for the government said US Customs and Border Patrol officers said they didn't learn of the order until after the doctor was sent back.The administration insists it is not defying court orders. Trump hasn't yet openly and explicitly defied the courts. Can he undermine them just by flirting with defiance?For sponsor-free episodes of Consider This, sign up for Consider This+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org.Email us at [email protected] more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy

Audio
Transcription

Chapter 1: What constitutes a constitutional crisis with court orders?

0.68 - 15.377 Ari Shapiro

By almost any measure, a president openly defying a court order would represent a constitutional crisis, a tectonic event in American history. And yet when President Trump was asked on Sunday whether he had defied a federal judge's order, he said he wasn't sure.

0

15.817 - 18.638 Donald Trump

I don't know. You have to speak to the lawyers.

0

19.038 - 37.564 Ari Shapiro

The order in question came from a federal judge in Washington, D.C. on Saturday. He told the administration not to deport Venezuelans to El Salvador. Trump had just invoked the Alien Enemies Act to remove people he said were members of a gang. And the judge ordered the government to turn around any planes already in the air.

0

38.305 - 45.167 Ari Shapiro

At a press briefing Monday, White House Press Secretary Caroline Leavitt offered slightly more clarity on the administration's actions.

0

45.607 - 61.24 Donald Trump

All of the planes subject to the written order of this judge departed U.S. soil, U.S. territory before the judge's written order. But what about the verbal order, which of course carries the same legal weight as a written order, and said for the planes to turn around if they were in the air?

61.26 - 69.026 Donald Trump

Well, there's actually questions about whether a verbal order carries the same weight as a written order, and our lawyers are determined to ask and answer those questions in court.

69.684 - 94.844 Ari Shapiro

Here's what's not in dispute. More than 250 Venezuelans, some of whom the Trump administration says are members of a criminal gang, were ultimately taken to El Salvador on Saturday. El Salvador is holding them in the country's terrorism confinement center. The Salvadoran president posted a headline about the judicial order on X with the caption, Oopsie, too late, and a laugh-crying emoji.

95.405 - 115.732 Ari Shapiro

Secretary of State Marco Rubio retweeted it. That whole episode came after a Brown University physician in the United States on a special work visa from Lebanon was sent back, even though a federal judge issued an order that she appear at an in-person hearing on Monday. In a court filing today, lawyers for the government said U.S.

115.792 - 139.094 Ari Shapiro

Customs and Border Patrol officers said they didn't learn of the judge's order until after the doctor was sent back. Members of the administration have attacked federal judges for blocking Trump's actions. They've even suggested courts don't always have the authority to overrule the executive branch. Levitt was asked about that directly on Monday, and her answer was less direct.

Chapter 2: Did Trump defy a federal judge's order?

217.938 - 240.082 Amanda Frost

I would say that we are dangerously close to crossing that line that we discussed about a month ago. The administration continues to say that it is not refusing to comply with court orders, but we have seen it behave in disingenuous ways in terms of ignoring what courts have told it to do, and so I'm extremely worried.

0

240.7 - 259.126 Ari Shapiro

I want to dig into that behaving disingenuously, because not to make light of a serious situation, but I think about like two kids in the backseat of a car and one kid says, I am not putting my hand over the line that you told me not to cross. And if any reasonable observer would say, actually, you are, does it matter that the annoying brother is saying, no, I'm not?

0

259.786 - 279.253 Amanda Frost

Well, I think it does matter in this context, because I think There is a difference in kind if an administration says we no longer have to do what a court tells us to do. And this administration has yet to say that. Nonetheless, I think it is extremely disturbing that this administration is playing so fast and loose with the courts.

0

279.933 - 297.208 Ari Shapiro

I keep thinking about that oopsie too late post on X, which suggests that perhaps deliberately the administration is operating in a way that is hard for courts to keep up with. And there are other examples. Last week, there was a hearing before a federal judge in Maryland about layoffs of government workers.

0

297.829 - 321.478 Ari Shapiro

And a government lawyer said he didn't know whether anyone in government could say how many probationary workers had been fired. In this Venezuelan case, Trump invoked the Alien Enemies Act without providing the courts much time at all to stop these planes of migrants that were heading for El Salvador. How do behaviors, how do actions like that impact the judicial branch's ability to do its job?

322.11 - 339.677 Amanda Frost

Well, there's no question but that the courts are extremely busy at the moment. But courts are used to dealing with issues on emergency bases. And I would say the branch of government that is most suffering from the flood the zone approach is the executive branch itself. Its filings are sloppy, filled with inaccuracies.

339.897 - 348.981 Amanda Frost

It doesn't have the information it needs to inform judges about what's happening. It is failing in its role before the courts. And we're seeing the result, which is they're losing most of these cases.

349.401 - 354.786 Ari Shapiro

And so if that's the case, do you think it's just a matter of time until all this gets sorted out and everyone is back in their proper lane?

356.411 - 372.819 Amanda Frost

When I'm feeling optimistic, what I hope will happen is what's intended, which is that the courts, together with the executive, hash out what the law requires. The executive complies, even when it doesn't like the result. And the end result is a win for the rule of law.

Comments

There are no comments yet.

Please log in to write the first comment.