The far-right forces behind Trump have been planning their assault on democracy and the rule of law for years. Decades even, if you consider ALEC and other rightwing groups, like the Heritage Foundation. Project 2025 was the plan, and one of its author is now director of the powerful Office of Management and Budget.
A central part of their plan was to overwhelm the public and the media with a flurry of executive orders. They call it “flooding the zone.” It’s nearly impossible to react to three or four outrages a day. Who can even catalogue all of them?
Heather Cox Richardson tries to pull it together for her readers. Yesterday there were multiple court orders, more than she has room to report. And multiple executive orders, including one suspending enforcement of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, which prohibits U.S. firms from bribing foreign officials; Trump thinks it puts American businesses at a disadvantage if they can’t bribe foreign officials as their competitors do. There were multiple DOGE assaults on federal agencies. Even HRC has to be selective. But it’s easy to feel overwhelmed.
That’s exactly what the Trump enablers want. They want the public to feel as though resistance is futile. It’s not. The courts keep telling them “you can’t do that.” So now, through JD Vance, the Trump team is hinting that they might ignore the courts.
Repeat after me. “We will not give up. We will resist. We will work with others. We will join Indivisible or some other resistance group. We will resist.”
She writes:
As soon as President Donald Trump took office, his administration froze great swaths of government funding, apparently to test the theory popular with Project 2025 authors that the 1974 law forbidding the president from “impounding” money Congress had appropriated was unconstitutional. The loss of funding has hurt Americans across the country. Today, Daniel Wu, Gaya Gupta, and Anumita Kaur of the Washington Post reported that farmers who had signed contracts with the U.S. Department of Agriculture to improve infrastructure and who had paid up front to put in fences, plant different crops, and install renewable energy systems with the promise the government would provide financial assistance are now left holding the bag.
With Republicans in Congress largely mum about this and other power grabs by the administration, the courts are holding the line. Chief Judge John McConnell of the U.S. District Court for the District of Rhode Island today found that the Trump administration has refused to disburse federal funding despite the court’s “clear and unambiguous” temporary restraining order saying it must do so. McConnell said the administration “must immediately restore frozen funding” and clear any hurdles to that funding until the court hears arguments about the case. This includes the monies withheld from the farmers.
This evening, Massachusetts U.S. District Judge Angel Kelley blocked the Trump appointees at the National Institutes of Health from implementing the rate change they wanted to apply to NIH grants. But, as legal analyst Joyce White Vance notes, the only relief sought is for the twenty-two Democratic-led states that have sued, keeping Republican-dominated states from freeloading on their Democratic counterparts. As Josh Marshall noted today in Talking Points Memo, it appears a pattern is emerging in which Democratic-led states are suing the administration while officials from Republican-led states, which are even harder hit by Trump’s cuts than their Democratic-led counterparts, are asking Trump directly for help or exceptions.
As soon as he took office, Trump’s director of the Office of Management and Budget, Russell Vought, who was a key author of Project 2025 and who is also acting as the head of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, announced he was shuttering the agency. That closure was a recommendation of Project 2025, which called the consumer protection agency “a shakedown mechanism to provide unaccountable funding to leftist nonprofits.” Immediately, the National Treasury Employees Union sued him, saying that Vought’s directive to employees to stop working “reflects an unlawful attempt to thwart Congress’s decision to create the CFPB to protect American consumers.”
MAGA loyalists, particularly Vice President J.D. Vance, have begun to suggest they will not abide by the rule of law, but before Trump and Vance took office, Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts called out Vance’s hints that he would be willing to defy the rulings of federal courts as “dangerous suggestions” that “must be soundly rejected.”
Today the American Bar Association took a stand against the Trump administration’s “wide-scale affronts to the rule of law itself” as it attacks the Constitution and tries to dismantle departments and agencies created by Congress “without seeking the required congressional approval to change the law.”
“The American Bar Association supports the rule of law,” president of the organization William R. Bay said in a statement. “That means holding governments, including our own, accountable.” He cheered on the courts that “are treating these cases with the urgency they require.”
“[R]efusing to spend money appropriated by Congress under the euphemism of a pause is a violation of the rule of law and suggests that the executive branch can overrule the other two co-equal branches of government,” Bay wrote. “This is contrary to the constitutional framework and not the way our democracy works. The money appropriated by Congress must be spent in accordance with what Congress has said. It cannot be changed or paused because a newly elected administration desires it. Our elected representatives know this. The lawyers of this country know this. It must stop.”
He called on “elected representatives to stand with us and to insist upon adherence to the rule of law…. The administration cannot choose which law it will follow or ignore. These are not partisan or political issues. These are rule of law and process issues. We cannot afford to remain silent…. We urge every attorney to join us and insist that our government, a government of the people, follow the law.”
Today, five former Treasury secretaries wrote an op-ed in the New York Times that also reinforced the legal lines of our constitutional system, warning that “our democracy is under siege.” Robert E. Rubin and Lawrence H. Summers, who served under President Bill Clinton; Timothy F. Geithner and Jacob J. Lew, who served under President Barack Obama; and Janet L. Yellen, who served under President Joe Biden, spoke up about the violation of the United States Treasury’s nonpartisan payment system by political actors working in Elon Musk’s “Department of Government Efficiency.”
That DOGE team “lack training and experience to handle private, personal data,” they note, “like Social Security numbers and bank account information.” Their involvement risks exposing highly sensitive information and even risks the failure of critical infrastructure as they muck around with computer codes. The former Treasury secretaries noted that on Saturday morning, a federal judge had temporarily stopped those DOGE workers from accessing the department’s payment and data systems, warning that that access could cause “irreparable harm.”
“While significant data privacy, cybersecurity and national security threats are gravely concerning,” the former secretaries wrote, “the constitutional issues are perhaps even more alarming.” The executive branch must respect that Congress controls the nation’s money, they wrote, reiterating the key principle outlined in the Constitution: “The legislative branch has the sole authority to pass laws that determine where and how federal dollars should be spent.”
The Treasury Department cannot decide “which promises of federal funding made by Congress it will keep, and which it will not,” the letter read. “The Trump administration may seek to change the law and alter what spending Congress appropriates, as administrations before it have done as well. And should the law change, it will be the role of the executive branch to execute those changes. But it is not for the Treasury Department or the administration to decide which of our congressionally approved commitments to fulfill and which to cast aside.”
That warning appears as Trump indicates that he is willing to undermine the credit of the United States. Yesterday, on Air Force One, he told reporters that the members of the administration trying to find wasteful spending have suggested that they have found fraud in Treasury bonds and that the United States might “have less debt than we thought.” The suggestion that the U.S. might not honor its debt is a direct attack on the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution, which says that “[t]he validity of the public debt of the United States, authorized by law, including debts incurred for payment of pensions and bounties for services in suppressing insurrection or rebellion, shall not be questioned.” That amendment was written under similar circumstances, when former Confederates sought to avoid debt payments and undermine the power of the federal government.
Lauren Thomas, Ben Drummett, and Chip Cutter of the Wall Street Journal reported yesterday that “for CEOs and bankers, the Trump euphoria is fading fast.” Consumers are losing confidence in the economy, and observers expect inflation, while business leaders find that trying to navigate Trump’s on-again-off-again tariffs is taking all their attention.
Meanwhile, Trump has continued his purge of government employees he considers insufficiently loyal to him. On Friday he tried to get rid of Ellen Weintraub of the Federal Elections Commission, who contended that her removal was illegal. He also fired Colleen Shogan, the Archivist of the United States, head of the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA), the government agency that handles presidential records. The archivist is the official responsible for receiving and validating the certified electoral ballots for presidential elections—a process Trump’s people tried to corrupt after he lost the 2020 presidential election.
It was NARA that first discovered Trump’s retention of classified documents and demanded their return, although Shogan was not the archivist in charge at the time.
The courts happened to weigh in on the case of the retained classified documents today, when U.S. District Judge Beryl Howell ruled that the FBI must search its records in response to a Freedom of Information Act request from journalist Jason Leopold after Leopold learned that Trump had allegedly flushed presidential records down the toilet when he was president, and later brought classified documents to Florida. The judge noted that the Supreme Court ruling in Trump v. United States that the president cannot be prosecuted for crimes committed as part of his official duties and is “at least presumptive[ly] immune from criminal prosecution for…acts within the outer perimeter of his official responsibility” means that there is no reason to hold back information to shield him from prosecution. Indeed, Howell notes, that decision means that the FOIA request is now the only way for the American public to “know what its government is up to.”
Howell highlighted that the three Supreme Court justices who dissented from the Trump v. United States decision described it as “mak[ing] a mockery of the principle, foundational to our Constitution and system of Government, that no man is above the law.” In a footnote, Howell also called attention to the fact that presumptive immunity for the president does not “extend to those who aid, abet and execute criminal acts on behalf of a criminally immune president. The excuse offered after World War II by enablers of the fascist Nazi regime of ‘just following orders’ has long been rejected in this country’s jurisprudence.”
Today, Trump fired David Huitema, director of the Office of Government Ethics, the department that oversees political appointments and helps nominees avoid conflicts of interest.
On Friday, Trump fired the head of the Office of Special Counsel, U.S. Special Counsel Hampton Dellinger. That office enforces federal whistleblower laws as well as the law that prohibits federal employees from engaging in most political activity: the Hatch Act. Congress provided that the special counsel can be removed only for “inefficiency, neglect of duty, or malfeasance in office,” and today Dellinger sued, calling his removal illegal.
Tonight, Judge Amy Berman Jackson blocked Dellinger’s firing through Thursday as she hears arguments in the case.
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I just asked Google who has the power to enforce court decisions.
Here’s the answer:
“Federal laws, for example, are passed by Congress and signed by the President. The judicial branch, in turn, has the authority to decide the constitutionality of federal laws and resolve other cases involving federal laws. But judges depend upon the executive branch to enforce court decisions.”
Who will the courts turn to now that they cannot depend on the January 6, 2021, Traitor’s fascist regime that controls every facet of the executive branch except may one?
It doesn’t look like Congress is going to step in.
Who can the courts turn to?
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You boiled all this down to the crux of our dilemma, or should I say, catastrophe, Lloyd.
I guess the court of public opinion remains. When things really fall apart (as they inevitably will, perhaps sooner than later) I expect more of the public will come around. And, hopefully boycotts and protests will pick up some steam.
And, federalism leaves individual states to try and chart different courses, though tRump seems intent on punishing entire populations he views as disloyal to him. California comes foremost to mind.
A Pew Research poll recently found that 45% of the Republicans surveyed are okay with the fact that violent January 6 insurgents were pardoned. I’m not sure what we can do about that number. If it was 10% I’d be shocked. And, depressed for our country. Though I try to keep in mind the moderate Republicans I know and respect who tell me they’re also disgusted with tRump.
I intend to keep plugging away with my nascent town Democratic Committee. (I’m it’s chair….I’m also it’s only member right now, ha, ha.) I just bought an ad in the local paper announcing my intentions. Democrats I talk to have been surprised to hear that, yes, hundreds of people in this largely conservative town did vote for Kamala. The truth is, we’re not alone, if just for the fact that we’re on the right side of history.
So, yeah, it’s time people start bending that arc of the universe again, to use Dr. King’s words. This is what we do.
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Resistance is never futile. But part of what we are resisting has nothing to do with Rule of Law or court orders. It is just good old fashioned thieving. Musk has a looney puppet that he enjoys playing with because Elon’s game is all about money for Elon.
They Are Pretending To Tariff While Elon Opens His $200 MILLION Megapack Battery Plant in Shanghai China!
Elon Musk’s Tesla opened an enormous $200 million battery plant in Shanghai on Tuesday 2/11/25. Near China’s car-making Gigafactory. Deepening the Tesla company’s investment in China even as its CEO serves in an DJT administration picking a trade war with Beijing.
The Tesla energy storage factory that was officially opened Tuesday is set to churn out 10,000 batteries every year. Tesla calls the batteries Megapacks and the Tesla facility was built in only 7 months! It required only one month of negotiation with the government of Lingang, a manufacturing zone in Shanghai.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2025/02/11/tesla-china-battery-factory/
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Great information, Kathy.
Musk is a hypocrite.
His greed is insatiable.
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If you ever saw the movie Gremlins, you can recognize what the Trump “Administration” actually is. It is all destruction, all the time.
It requires full time vigilance to call these loons out for the anti-American traitors they are.
The hogs are feeding, while the gremlins provide the fuel: our government. They were elected to run it, not run it into the ground while looting its assets which, in fact belong to the citizens, not this pack of jackals.
If there is any hope, it comes from the fact that this is happening in plain view. Every member of this administration should be charged criminally. Ever wonder what RICO really is? You’re looking at it. A criminal enterprise run by theft. The only hope is that they’re so obvious about their greed and hatred of the people that people will start demanding action. Arrests, trials, convictions.
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Great story in The Washington Post yesterday, “Hegseth’s visit to U.S. base in Germany met with student walkout”.
The protest was a led by an eighth grader “…who is not yet 14 years old…”
“The civil disobedience by dozens of middle-schoolers — and some adults who booed the defense secretary — was aimed at the Trump administration’s rollback of DEI initiatives.”
This is how it starts, folks. People we’ve never heard of, places we’ll never visit.
To quote that brave 8th grader, “”There was this great sense of community and belonging,” the student said. “Like we’re not alone, because so many kids came out.’”
Yes, we are NOT alone.
I tried to link the WaPo story but WordPress went bananas on me.
BTW I like the idea of a “24 Hour Economic Blackout” on February 28. I’ve seen that plan floating around the internet.
History teacher that I am, I’d love to see that boycott extended to one day each week. Just like they had Meatless Mondays and Wheatless Wednesdays in World War I.
How about Muskless Mondays. Or, perhaps, Trumpless Tuesdays?
Avoid the corporations that are attacking our republic on a specific day each week. And, do whatever else you can do on that day, too. Hold up a sign, bang some pans, phone a friend, have a good laugh. I could do that.
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Great story in The Washington Post yesterday, “Hegseth’s visit to U.S. base in Germany met with student walkout”.
The protest was a led by an eighth grader “…who is not yet 14 years old…”
“The civil disobedience by dozens of middle-schoolers — and some adults who booed the defense secretary — was aimed at the Trump administration’s rollback of DEI initiatives.”
This is how it starts, folks. People we’ve never heard of, places we’ll never visit.
To quote that brave 8th grader, “”There was this great sense of community and belonging,” the student said. “Like we’re not alone, because so many kids came out.’”
Yes, we are NOT alone.
I tried to link the WaPo story but WordPress went bananas on me.
BTW I like the idea of a “24 Hour Economic Blackout” on February 28. I’ve seen that plan floating around the internet.
History teacher that I am, I’d love to see that boycott extended to one day each week. Just like they had Meatless Mondays and Wheatless Wednesdays in World War I.
How about Muskless Mondays. Or, perhaps, Trumpless Tuesdays?
Avoid the corporations that are attacking our republic on a specific day each week. And, do whatever else you can do on that day, too. Hold up a sign, bang some pans, phone a friend, have a good laugh. I could do that.
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Try GoodsUniteUs to see what you’re supporting when you shop.
https://www.goodsuniteus.com
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That’s a cool site. Thanks!
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