
Analysis: Initially wary of Trump, Roberts and Barrett offer the president his biggest win of the Supreme Court term
Chief Justice John Roberts chastised President Donald Trump early on in his second term, and Justice Amy Coney Barrett pointedly questioned whether his administration would adhere to court orders.
But their public wariness of Trump was fleeting.
And on Friday, Roberts enlisted Barrett to write the opinion that dissolved one check on the president's executive power, whether to end birthright citizenship or to enforce policies overhauling the federal government and encroaching on individual rights.
The decision, which played out dramatically in the white marble courtroom with dueling statements from Barrett and dissenting Justice Sonia Sotomayor, buttressed a pattern:
The six-justice conservative majority has aligned with Trump's agenda in his second term. That largely arises from the justices' own desire for expansive executive authority, be it over migrant deportations or the firing of the heads of independent agencies.
Moreover, as the high court took up LGBTQ and other social policy dilemmas in the regular session that ended Friday, the majority adopted Trump administration's positions.
By the same 6-3 vote Friday, the justices sided with religious parents in Maryland who sought to keep their elementary school children from reading certain LGBTQ books in public schools. The same six conservatives last week also voted to uphold state bans on gender care for trans youths under age 18.
On the most closely watched cases since Trump retook office, arising as part of the justices' annual session or on its emergency docket, the president's legal team prevailed.
In his press conference on Friday after the ruling on his effort to end birthright citizenship, Trump thanked individual justices in the majority, saying of Barrett, 'I just have great respect for her. I always have. And her decision was brilliantly written today – from all accounts.'
(Trump previously criticized Barrett behind closed doors for not sufficiently supporting his legal positions.)
The high court's embrace of Trump's legal positions contrasts with a general resistance of lower court judges who in the early months of Trump's second presidency have blocked dozens of his executive orders. Some judges have also commented about his larger quest for power.
'An American President is not a king,' one Washington, DC-based US district court judge wrote in an early challenge to Trump.
Friday's ruling, combined with a decision last year that gave the president substantial immunity from prosecution, amplifies the power of the American presidency more than ever.
'The other shoe has dropped on executive immunity,' Sotomayor said as she read excerpts of her dissent from the bench Friday.
When the justices opened their final session at 10 a.m. Friday, they had six cases yet to be resolved in the term that had begun last October. Because the Trump dispute was widely seen as the most significant of the batch, it was easy to presume that Roberts or another senior justice would be the author. And that would mean – because the justices announce their daily decisions in order of reverse seniority – the opinion would come later in the hour.
But that presumption was immediately disproved when Roberts, who controls most assignments, announced at the outset that Barrett was the author of Trump v. CASA.
Trump's third appointee from his first White House term, Barrett is the most junior justice of the six-member right-wing bloc. Rarely would a junior justice gain a case of such import, and the move appeared be a sign of Roberts' confidence in Barrett and likely desire to continue working in tandem with a justice who has at times straddled the middle and controlled the outcome of cases. (The others who voted in the majority on Friday were Justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh.)
Friday's controversy traced to January 20, Trump's first day back in office, as he rejected the entrenched understanding of the citizenship clause and proposed to exclude from automatic citizenship babies born of parents in the country unlawfully or on temporary visas, such as tourists or students.
Several lower court judges blocked enforcement of the order, on preliminary findings that it was unconstitutional, and the Trump administration appealed to the Supreme Court. The administration did not seek a decision on the constitutionality of the order proposing to deny passports and other documents to children born to people without citizenship.
Rather, it wanted the high court to declare that US district court judges lacked the power to issue sweeping 'universal injunctions' against Trump policies as they were litigated. Such injunctions have been invoked to block a challenged policy not just as it would be applied to the parties in a case but to prohibit its enforcement throughout the country.
In recent decades, US district court judges have increasingly applied such injunctions to prevent – on a preliminary basis – arguably unconstitutional policies from being enforced while the merits of legal challenges are resolved.
Seated at her usual place on the bench, to Robert's far right, Barrett said the judges who had imposed the nationwide injunctions in the birthright citizenship cases had exceeded their authority.
Looking to 1789 and the power first conferred on federal courts, she described judges' authority in such disputes over presidential action as 'flexible … not freewheeling.'
'Some say that the universal injunction 'give(s) the Judiciary a powerful tool to check the Executive Branch,'' she elaborated in her written opinion. 'But federal courts do not exercise general oversight of the Executive Branch; they resolve cases and controversies consistent with the authority Congress has given them. When a court concludes that the Executive Branch has acted unlawfully, the answer is not for the court to exceed its power, too.'
As Barrett spoke in the courtroom, detailing arguments in her usual composed, professorial style, most of her colleagues looked out at the hushed spectators and betrayed no reaction.
But as Barrett finished her announcement, Sotomayor voiced her objections – and passionately. As she began to read excerpts from her dissent, the senior-most liberal justice pulled her chair up closer at the mahogany bench and leaned forward.
She spoke for 20 minutes, twice as long as Barrett. (Dissenting justices typically leave their protest to their written statements; an oral dissent from the bench is used to convey a more urgent opposition to the majority's position.)
Normally, Justice Gorsuch is in the seat between Barrett and Sotomayor, but he was not on the bench Friday. So, as Sotomayor spoke, she was in Barrett's direct line of sight. Barrett's jaw was set as she listened intently to the dissenting justice condemn the majority for a decision that 'kneecaps the judiciary's authority' to stop the president from acting unconstitutionally.
And as Barrett asserted that the justices were not addressing the merits of Trump's ability to outright lift birthright citizenship, Sotomayor deliberately put the focus on that drive to undo a principle dating to America's founding.
Sotomayor referred to the notorious 1857 case of Dred Scott v. Sandford, in which the Supreme Court had held that Black people could not be citizens, and noted that the 14th Amendment, ratified in 1868, remedied that court action. (The citizenship clause of the amendment says, 'all persons born or naturalized in the United States and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and the State wherein they reside.')
Speaking broadly about the new unchecked freedom a president would now experience, Sotomayor declared, 'No right is safe in the new legal regime the Court creates.'
Barrett and the other justices in the majority were plainly unmoved by arguments from the dissent. In fact, the liberal justices made few inroads in major cases in the recent session, especially when they involved Trump policies.
Sotomayor, joined by liberal Justices Elena Kagan and Ketanji Brown Jackson, have been blunt in their disdain not only of the administration but their conservative colleagues who've enabled it.
They contend the majority's decisions have encouraged the administration to defy lower court orders, as in last Monday's case siding with the Trump administration as it rushes to deport certain migrants to countries other than their homeland, including places like South Sudan.
'This is not the first time the Court closes its eyes to noncompliance, nor, I fear, will it be the last,' dissenting Sotomayor wrote, joined by the two other liberals. 'Yet each time this Court rewards noncompliance with discretionary relief, it further erodes respect for courts and for the rule of law.'
There were some early signs of compromise on Trump's aggressive immigration policy, notably under the wartime Alien Enemies Act. And even some conservatives questioned whether the administration would abide by mounting lower court orders.
In May 15 oral arguments over enforcement of the Trump birthright order, Barrett queried US Solicitor General D. John Sauer, Trump's top lawyer before the Supreme Court, regarding his suggestion that the administration might not be bound by all court orders.
'There are circumstances when it is not a categorical practice,' he said, referring to lower court rulings.
'Really?' Barrett said but then, seemingly trying to win assurance of regard for judicial orders, pivoted to a hypothetical scenario involving the high court itself.
'You would respect the opinions and judgment of the Supreme Court,' she asked. 'You're not hedging at all with respect to the precedent of this court?'
'That is correct,' Sauer said.
For his part, Roberts, who has long championed an expansive theory of executive authority, has given the administration positions the benefit of the doubt – even as he has seemed apprehensive of the chief executive himself.
But that that was three months and many court decisions ago. And in the meantime, a 6-3 split, with the chief justice leading and Barrett at his side, has taken hold, exemplified in Friday's decision.
At his press conference afterward, Trump was bursting with praise.
He recognized each justice in the majority by name: 'I want to thank Justice Barrett, who wrote the opinion brilliantly, as well as Chief Justice Roberts and Justices Alito, Gorsuch, Kavanaugh and Thomas – great people.'
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Senate Republicans advance Trump's tax and spending cuts bill after dramatic late-night vote
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Trump's Deportation Goals Are Unrealistic
The Atlantic Daily, a newsletter that guides you through the biggest stories of the day, helps you discover new ideas, and recommends the best in culture. Sign up for it here. This is an edition of The Atlantic Daily, a newsletter that guides you through the biggest stories of the day, helps you discover new ideas, and recommends the best in culture. Sign up for it here. In March, President Donald Trump was preparing to invoke the Alien Enemies Act to deport noncitizens. This use of the law, which was passed in 1798 and previously used to intern Japanese Americans during World War II, was unprecedented, and Emil Bove III, a top Justice Department official, was concerned that it was illegal. To be clear, Bove wasn't troubled that the administration might be breaking the law; rather, according to a new whistleblower complaint, he was concerned that the courts might try to block removals. 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If Zohran Mamdani is the future of the Democrats, they're doomed
It would be easy to call San Francisco mayor Daniel Lurie the 'anti-Zohran Mamandi,' but that would fail to do the first-term leader justice. Sworn into office this past January, Lurie – like Mamdani – hails from a storied family, in this case the founders of the Levi Strauss denim dynasty. But that is where the similarities end. Lurie was elected to City Hall last November following nearly a decade of decay across San Francisco. Fuelled by the soft-on-crime policies of former district attorney Chesa Boudin, San Francisco – an urban jewel of technology and wealth – was close to becoming a failed state. Violent crime, open-air drug camps, hundreds of annual drug overdose deaths, a declining population base and desolate downtown plagued the city where I was born and raised. San Francisco's ills were akin to many large American urban centres: Philadelphia with its gruesome 'Tranq' crisis; the epidemic of deadly violent crime devastating Chicago. And, of course, Los Angeles – similarly battling an inhospitable mix of homelessness, drugs and criminality. But sized a mere 49 square miles (one-tenth that of Los Angeles), San Francisco's blight has felt uniquely acute and everywhere – all at the same time. Back in 2022, fed up voters ousted district attorney Boudin, whose laissez-faire prosecutorial approach directly led to the city's spiralling quality of life. Former San Francisco mayor London Breed attempted, honourably, to steer San Francisco back to sanity. But with a record 806 drug-related deaths in 2023 alone – and San Francisco's abandoned business core dubbed a 'ghost town' by major media – Breed lost to Lurie last November. Despite a lack of formal political experience, Lurie is hardly new to politics. His career has been shaped by public service, mostly leading large non-profits focused on tackling urban ills – often in association with scions of other local family dynasties. Lurie's flagship $500 million Tipping Point Community organisation, for instance, was established alongside the daughter of Financial Services billionaire Charles Schwab. The reliance on – rather than rejection of – the private sector for public good has been a key Lurie manoeuvre and stands in sharp contrast to Mamdani's platform. Indeed, much like former New York City mayor Michael Bloomberg a decade ago, Lurie has tapped major corporations and philanthropists to fund ambitious city programs hit hard by San Francisco's $800 million budget deficit. Earlier this month, for instance, he set up an entire department, the San Francisco Downtown Development Corporation, to steer private funding to city projects. Lurie has also heavily leaned into San Francisco's abundance of visionary innovators, most notably – and understandably – in the tech world. OpenAI head Sam Altman helped lead Lurie's transition team after his election last year. Such schemes – and there are many – stand in sharp contrast to the economic expansion plan touted by Mamdani, which mostly relies on added taxes levied on New York's wealthiest residents and corporations. And not just any wealthy residents and corporations: Mamdani's own website describes his strategy as shifting 'the tax burden from overtaxed homeowners in the outer boroughs to more expensive homes in richer and whiter neighbourhoods.' Such taxes would then be used to pay for low cost basic services including housing, transport and child care, even groceries. In other words – DEI meets Socialism. If this is the future of the Democrats, they are doomed. The problem with Mamdani's plans is that they rarely benefit – or are even desired – by those for whom they are designed. How else to explain the mostly white, mostly affluent New Yorkers who voted for Mamdani this week. Poor people don't need cheap housing – they need quality housing. They don't want free subway services, but reliable – and never more so – safe public transport. This requires funding, which taxes would supply, but also know-how, supply chains, available workforces and long-term commitments. And these are best delivered by partnering with the private sector. Earlier this month, for instance, crypto billionaire Chris Larsen gave $9.4 million to fund a Real Time Investigation Centre for the SFPD. Investment in law enforcement is another key area where Mamdani could learn from Lurie. Last month the mayor announced that the SFPD would be spared the 15 per cent budget cut he's implementing across city departments. Lurie has also signed an executive order to add 500 police officers to the department by, among other strategies, re-hiring recently retired officers. Lurie's law-and-order focus appears to be working: this week the SFPD made 97 arrests in a single day in San Francisco drug dens – 'the largest one-day fugitive-focused enforcement in recent history,' according to the city. While Lurie boosts officer numbers in San Francisco, Mandani has pledged to slash them. In their place, he will create a Department of Community Safety that relies on social-service schemes – 'evidence-based strategies that prevent violence and crime before they occur,' as he has described it – to maintain public order. This is a city that has finally seen a decrease in spiralling violent crime numbers – precisely because of an increase in police patrols. In 2023, for instance, New York City experienced a 20 per cent rise in arrests, a five-year record according to NYPD Chief John Chell. San Francisco may be far smaller than New York City, but its challenges – rising costs, a decreasing tax base, middle- and upper-class population declines – are eerily similar. Five years after Covid decimated both cities' business bases, mayor Lurie appears to understand that fixing San Francisco requires, above all else, public safety and a robust private-sector. Zohran Mandani should pay attention. Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.