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Trump vs. The Constitution

2025/2/10
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What A Day

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Jane Koston: 作为主持人,我认为特朗普政府正在引发一场宪法危机。未经选举的亿万富翁如埃隆·马斯克正在影响政府机构的运作,政府试图关闭美国国际开发署并阻止已拨款的资金,这些都严重践踏了宪法和法律。副总统 Vance 甚至声称法院无权控制总统的权力,这令人担忧。 Chris Murphy: 我认为我们正面临自水门事件以来最严重的宪法危机。总统试图为了腐败的目的夺取权力,以便奖励政治盟友并惩罚政治敌人,这是对民主的破坏。总统不应该凌驾于法律之上,权力应该受到制约。 Cory Booker: 我认为特朗普政府的行为是对腐败、滥用职权和侵犯人民隐私的惊人容忍。民主党将竭尽所能保护美国人,降低成本,确保安全。总统的行为与这些目标背道而驰,必须予以制止。 Kate Shaw: 我认为我们确实处于宪法危机之中。即使最高法院不能完全阻止总统,法院仍然可以制造摩擦,减缓事态发展,并阻止损害。总统不应公然蔑视法院的命令,否则将加剧宪法危机。最高法院的保守派大法官可能会支持总统在某些人事任免上的权力,但在涉及实质性政策时,我希望他们能维护权力分立的原则。

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It's Monday, February 10th. I'm Jane Koston, and this is What A Day, the show that is taking it nice and slow today because the Super Bowl was last night and some of us are still running on pure guacamole. On today's show, Project 2025 co-author and new director of the Office of Management and Budget, Russell Vogt, has only been in office a few days and he's already shutting shit down. And Ye is back on his hateful Twitter rants. Can someone just take his phone? But first...

We're three weeks into President Donald Trump's second term, and already Democratic lawmakers are sounding the alarm that we are in a constitutional crisis. They point to the fact that Elon Musk, an unelected billionaire, is getting a major say in which government agencies get to exist.

that the Trump administration has tried to shutter USAID, an independent agency created by Congress without congressional approval. Also, the administration's push to block funding that's already been appropriated and basically run roughshod over laws that were established decades ago.

Here's Connecticut Democratic Senator Chris Murphy speaking on ABC's This Week on Sunday. Yeah, listen, I think this is the most serious constitutional crisis the country has faced, certainly since Watergate. The president is attempting to seize control of power and for corrupt purposes. The president wants to be able to decide how and where money is spent so that he can reward his political friends. He can

punishes political enemies. That is the evisceration of democracy. And New Jersey Democratic Senator Cory Booker echoed the sentiment on CNN's State of the Union.

This is an astonishing allowance of corruption and abuse and violations of people's privacy and other most sacrosanct values. We are in a crisis right now, and Democrats will use every tool possible to protect Americans, to drive down costs, to make us safer. These are the very opposite that Donald Trump is doing to Americans right now.

As if trying to give Democrats' fears some more weight, Vice President J.D. Vance took to Twitter on Sunday to argue that the courts don't have legitimate authority to control the president's power. Guys, that's bad. But let's take a step back for a minute.

As of now, the administration hasn't openly defied the courts and federal judges have handed Democrats, nonprofits and unions some big wins. The courts have put holds on some of the administration's most brazen actions, like trying to end birthright citizenship, pushing millions of federal workers to take a deferred buyout and freezing federal grants and loans.

Here's the thing, though. If we're in a constitutional crisis, what can we do about it? And how should the courts and members of Congress respond? To make sense of all of this, I called up Strict Scrutiny co-host Kate Shaw. Kate, welcome to What Today. Jane, thanks for having me. So some Democrats say we are in a constitutional crisis. Are we? Yeah. Yeah, we are.

And I think we don't need to basically have like a fully developed theory of what a constitutional crisis is to know we're in one right now. So I think it's kind of more obvious that we're in a constitutional crisis if we think about defying court orders, which hasn't happened yet, at least not overtly.

But I think defying Congress in the way this administration has done is contemptuous of the Constitution and is essentially, you know, that's the stuff of constitutional crises in the same way as defying court order. So, you know, long answer, but short one is again, yes.

Let's get into some of the cases in front of the courts right now. Today, a Massachusetts judge has scheduled a hearing on Trump's deferred resignation offer to millions of federal workers. That same judge already put a pause on the original deadline last week. What are you going to be watching for in that case? So, you know, I think that maybe to take a step back, we have a few different categories. There's like kind of a personnel category and then the policy category. And so the deferred kind of the buyout individual category.

of officials, both, you know, anonymous officials, at least as of yet, whose names we don't know, but FBI and DOJ officials who worked on the January 6th cases. And also, you know, more high-profile people, commissioner of the Federal Election Commission and the National Labor Relations Board and I guess like the Kennedy Center trustees. So there are a lot of both removals and actions vis-a-vis personnel. And

Those, I think, are in a category where the administration thinks that the Supreme Court has given it a lot of leeway. And it kind of thinks that for good reason, right? John Roberts and the conservative justices on the Supreme Court have issued a series of decisions expressing this, I think, pretty ahistorical conception of the presidency, which is the presidency has...

the president who occupies it, has something approaching plenary complete control over subordinate officials in the executive branch, whether that's, again, people, commissioners on these multi-member boards and commissions or essentially the entirety of the federal workforce, and that where statutes seek to constrain the president's

total control over those subordinates, those statutes are at the least constitutionally suspect, if not outright unconstitutional. So I have a feeling at the end of the day

The federal courts are not going to disable Trump and Musk from doing things like, again, offering deferred buyouts. These outright terminations, I think, can be, are more difficult. And then that's just kind of everything in the personnel domain. There are these, you know, a ton of different cases about substantive policy moves. Happy to talk about those as well. So in

In short, are you saying that because of the conservative majority in the Supreme Court, the plan is to tee up cases to appear in front of that Supreme Court with the hopes that the conservative majority will side with them? I think pretty clearly, yes. I mean, they

They can't – the Supreme Court can't decide all these cases, though, right? So they're doing so much so sloppily and so fast that I think that they're going to get stymied at least in the short term by the lower federal courts that do still believe we kind of function in a system of law. Congress passes statutes. They mean something. You know, presidents and –

special government employees don't get to just dissolve federal agencies and fundamentally change the conditions of federal employment kind of by fiat. And the administration, I think, will appeal much or all of that, ultimately hoping to get before this conservative Supreme Court. And they will with some of these cases and they will win some of them, but they won't get all of them up there. And I think that even if they get a lot of them up there, they're not going to win in all

all of them. And I think that there's a really important point there, which is, you know, the courts actually, even if they're not going to save us, can do a lot to create friction, to slow things down, to actually stem the bleeding that a lot of these moves are causing. And I think that is important and valuable, even if ultimately the Supreme Court does side with the administration in some significant portion of these cases.

But Musk and Vice President Vance are already throwing the authority of the courts into question. On Sunday, J.D. Vance appears to have been overtaken by the spirit of Andrew Jackson when he tweeted, quote, judges aren't allowed to control the executive's legitimate power. I mean, that's bonkers. That's the point of the court. So what's your read on a statement like this? Because it also is telling because I'm pretty sure that he would be pretty into the Supreme Court restraining, say, the Biden administration.

Yeah, I mean, that was a real escalation, right? And so, you know, I think it's deeply concerning. It's not the first time that, you know, Vance has revealed himself to be a little like, you know, Andrew Jackson curious. A couple years ago, right, he gave a couple of interviews in which he explicitly said, you know, fire every mid-level bureaucrat.

I mean, he's like giving advice to a hypothetical future President Trump. And he says, you know, fire every middle-level bureaucrat. And when the courts stop you, stand in front of the country and say, John Roberts has made his ruling. Now, let him enforce it. So, I mean, a couple of things. One, I actually always thought that quote was really revealing because it actually made clear that

When the courts stop you, right, this predictive claim made clear that the things that he was contemplating and advising Trump to do were unlawful under existing law. So that actually seems like a meaningful concession insofar as some parts of their coalition are saying, no, no, the law actually is on our side or at least, you know, the Supreme Court, when it gets these questions, has put in place the foundations that like make this thing we're doing lawful even if it's not lawful at this present moment under existing law. Yeah.

But, yeah, I mean, it is – the suggestion of defiance of courts is deeply concerning. We haven't actually seen it yet. So I don't – unless and until we are actually in a position where we are seeing something more concrete than this kind of saber-rattling on social media, I don't want to assume that we're there. But certainly the constitutional crisis you started by asking about is a –

a much more serious one if, in fact, we are looking a week from now or even days from now at this administration outright defying federal court orders. Now, somehow, we are only three weeks into Trump's term, which is insane. But where do you think Democrats could find success and where might courts side with Trump potentially shattering precedent? So I think that some of these removals, right, like the firing of FEC commissioner and NLRB commissioner, I think there's a very good chance that

Trump wins those court cases and the Supreme Court overturns this 1935 precedent called Humphrey's Executor that said statutes can limit the president's ability to fire individuals who sit on these independent boards and commissions. And that's not to say the president can never remove somebody in one of those positions, but the president has to provide reasons. They can't just do it, you know, just because they've decided they want to replace that person with someone else.

And the fact that Trump didn't try to supply reasons for those firings suggests to me that they are very interested in taking the fight directly to the Supreme Court and trying to get this 1935 precedent overruled. So those are cases where I think the administration is going to very likely prevail. And I don't exactly know what the consequences will be, but I think they could be, you know,

seismic. On the kind of substantive policy fight, like does the president have the ability to just ignore money that Congress has appropriated for spending? I think that the arguments in defense of what the administration seems to be doing with places like USAID are weak. And I have a sliver of hope that even, you know, John Roberts and Brett Kavanaugh, you really just have to pick off those two, or John Roberts and Amy Coney Barrett would have some...

kind of awareness of what it would do to the kind of separation of powers to, you know, to co-sign the president's having basically unilateral authority over spending, which is basically unilateral authority over lawmaking, right? Like the Constitution sets forth a process with like real roles for Congress, the courts, the president, and it would essentially collapse all that kind of into executive power. Kate, thank you so much for being here. Thank you so much, Shane.

That was my conversation with Strict Scrutiny co-host Kate Shaw. We'll get to more of the news in a moment, but if you like the show, make sure to subscribe, leave a five-star review on Apple Podcasts, watch us on YouTube, and share with your friends. More to come after some ads. What a Day is brought to you by Delete Me. Ever wonder how much of your personal data is out there on the internet for anyone to see? Way more than you think. Your name, your contact information, social security number and home address, even information about your family members—

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Here's what else we're following today. Headlines.

And I've had a great help with Elon Musk, who's been terrific. Bottom line, you say you trust him. Trust Elon? Oh, he's not gaining anything. In fact, I wonder how he can devote the time to it. He's so into it.

I wonder that too, Mr. President. I wonder that too. The long-held tradition of the presidential Super Bowl pregame interview continued on Sunday with President Trump. Fox News host Brett Baier sat down with Trump at Mar-a-Lago ahead of the game to discuss the president's first weeks in office. The network aired part of the pre-taped interview right before the big game. Baier asked Trump about his relationship with Elon Musk, head of the Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE. And the president said Musk is doing great work finding ways to cut federal spending. The

Then I'm going to tell him very soon, like maybe in 24 hours, to go check the Department of Education. He's going to find the same thing. Then I'm going to go to the military. Let's check the military. We're going to find billions, hundreds of billions of dollars of fraud and abuse. Bayer also asked the president about one of his key campaign promises, bringing down the price of groceries. Bayer asked Trump when Americans will finally feel that sweet, sweet economic relief.

To which he said this. No, I think we're going to become a rich. Look, we're not that rich right now. We owe $36 trillion. That's because we let all these nations take advantage of us. So we're too poor now. But when we're rich, we won't care about grocery prices.

Fox will air the full interview tonight on The Special Report with Brett Baier. Also on Sunday, Trump became the first sitting president to attend the Super Bowl. He greeted the Kansas City Chiefs on the field when he arrived in New Orleans with some of his children. Trump also brought along some of his Republican colleagues, including Speaker of the House Mike Johnson and Senator Lindsey Graham. Prince Albert II of Monaco was also seen in the president's suite.

The ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas continued to hold over the weekend. Hamas released three more Israeli hostages on Saturday in exchange for nearly 200 Palestinian prisoners. And on Sunday, Israel's military withdrew more troops from northern Gaza.

This is all in accordance with the first phase of the ceasefire deal, which ends in three weeks. The next phase calls for a complete withdrawal of Israeli troops and the releasing of all of the remaining Israeli hostages. But nothing is guaranteed. Officials from Israel and Hamas are still negotiating whether or not to extend the ceasefire. And those negotiations could get even more complicated.

Egypt announced on Sunday that it will host a summit of Arab leaders later this month to discuss the, quote, new and dangerous developments in the Palestinian issue, a.k.a. President Trump's big idea for the U.S. to take over Gaza and make it the, quote, Riviera of the Middle East, and his proposal that Egypt and Jordan take in the roughly two million Palestinians living there. The Trump administration is working to shut down the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau with an order to halt nearly all of its work.

In a notice confirmed by the AP over the weekend, Russell Vogt, the new director of the Office of Management and Budget, ordered the CFPB to, quote, Since its creation, the CFPB says it's delivered around $20 billion in consumer relief for people across the U.S. through canceled debts, compensation, and reduced loans.

And because the CFPB is a creation of Congress, it would need a separate act to officially shut it down. But that has yet to stop the Trump administration from steamrolling all over the federal government and its independent agencies. According to an email sent Sunday by administration officials, the agency's headquarters in D.C. are also set to be closed this week. Employees and contractors were asked to work remotely, something I thought Trump fans hated.

Coincidentally, Elon Musk posted on Twitter Friday, quote, CFPB RIP with a tombstone emoji. Professional. The online homepage for the agency was also down on Sunday. This is so 2022.

Can you guess what David Schwimmer was referencing when he wrote that on Instagram? Will Smith slapping Chris Rock at the Oscars? J-Lo and Ben Affleck getting married? Beyonce's Renaissance album? No, no, and sadly, no. Over the weekend, the Friends star called out Ye, the artist formerly known as Kanye West, for his anti-Semitic comments on Twitter, and Elon Musk for allowing Ye to post those anti-Semitic comments on Twitter. Ye posted a series of disturbing tweets, including anti-quotes.

I'm a Nazi. Hitler was so fresh. And Elon stole my Nazi swag at the inauguration. The list goes on and on and on and on. There's a lot to be concerned about here. In response, Schwimmer wrote on Instagram, quote, We can't stop a deranged bigot from spewing hate-filled, ignorant bile, but we can stop giving him a megaphone. Mr. Musk, Kanye West has 32.7 million followers on your platform, X.

That is twice as many people than the number of Jews in existence. His sick hate speech results in real-life violence against Jews.

But the actor's direct message to Musk, a man who prides himself over his platform's free speech policies, may be moot. Musk said last year in reference to Twitter ads, quote, If it's a choice between censorship and money and free speech and losing money, we're going to pick the second. Though he has absolutely no problem booting people from the platform because he doesn't like them personally or they post things he doesn't like. And that's the news. One more thing.

For reasons beyond my understanding, Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem likes to go on Sunday morning news shows and talk. And Super Bowl Sunday was no exception. She went on CNN's State of the Union and spoke to Dana Bash. And what she said was interesting.

remember a time when republicans were very careful about and worried about the government particularly unelected people we can't trust having government and having access that's our personal data yeah oh absolutely you are the government yes christie you are the government the so-called deep state lady you now run a government department set up after 9 11 that once put anti-war activists in a federal terrorism database

I have been mad for three straight weeks, with occasional breaks to watch sports or old episodes of Law & Order. I'm not scared, not chastened, just mad. And I think I'm mad in part because of the exact phenomenon illustrated so beautifully by our puppy killer Secretary of Homeland Security. For pretty much my entire life, the Republican Party has operated not as a political party with its own ideas, but as an opposition party.

There are a lot of moving parts within the GOP. A lot of actors who don't get along and don't agree. Seriously, what do Senators Tom Cotton and Rand Paul even talk about? But they can agree on what they don't want. And that's whatever Democrats or liberals want. They were and are the party of no.

But that has also meant that they are almost fundamentally allergic to the responsibilities that holding power requires. There is always a scapegoat, always a reason why they should get all of the power, but none of the blame for problems. Look, if you have a political belief, it is imperative that you think to yourself, what is the worst possible outcome if I got everything I ever wanted? But the American right just doesn't do that. Instead,

Instead, you get excuses. You've all heard them. If it just weren't for those activist judges. If it just weren't for the Hollywood elite. When women bled out in their cars because of bans on abortion after the Dobbs decision, some conservatives responded that it wasn't their fault. It was the fault of those hospitals for fearing litigation. The litigation based on laws Republicans wanted in the first place. You bought the ticket. Take the fucking ride.

Seriously, there are people within the Trump administration with power over the lives of millions of people who seem to think that they should get to do whatever they want because Kathy Griffin posed with a fake severed Trump head once. Having power is fun and cool. Responsibility is hard. So the GOP has decided they'll take one and not the other. So I am not surprised that Kristi Noem seems unaware that she is now really and truly the government. Because honestly, I don't know.

I think she kind of wishes she wasn't. After all, it's pretty hard to complain about bad governance when you're the one doing it.

Before we go, the Democratic Party is the most unpopular it's been in polling dating back to 2008, according to a new survey from Quinnipiac University. On the latest episode of Polar Coaster, Dan unpacks what the results mean and answers listener questions. Get access to this exclusive series, ad-free episodes of Pod Save America, and more by signing up at crooked.com slash friends or subscribing directly on the Pod Save America Apple podcast feed. For a limited time, enjoy a seven-day free trial.

That's all for today. If you like the show, make sure you subscribe, leave a review, shudder in horror at what the Super Bowl halftime show used to be like, and tell your friends to listen. And if you're into reading, and not just about how before Michael Jackson performed at the 1993 Super Bowl,

Previous themed halftime shows were entitled Winter Magic and Bebop Bamboozled and featured some of the worst marching bands you have ever seen in your life. Like me, Water Day is also a nightly newsletter. Check it out and subscribe at crooked.com slash subscribe. I'm Jane Koston and thank you, Kendrick Lamar.

Water Day is a production of Crooked Media. It's recorded and mixed by Desmond Taylor. Our associate producers are Raven Yamamoto and Emily Fore. Our producer is Michelle Alloy. We had production help today from Johanna Case, Joseph Dutra, Greg Walters, and Julia Clare. Our senior producer is Erica Morrison, and our executive producer is Adrienne Hill. Our theme music is by Colin Gillyard and Kashaka. Our production staff is proudly unionized with the Writers Guild of America East.

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