Trump reported to be 'threatening to turn the Supreme Court's biggest fear into reality'
Donald Trump is threatening to turn the Supreme Court's biggest fear into a reality, Bloomberg reported on Friday.
Trump and his officials have stirred controversy in recent weeks by flirting with the notion that they might defy lawful court orders, especially as it relates to Elon Musk's authority to make changes to the federal government.
In an article entitled, "Trump Will Force the Supreme Court to Face Its Biggest Fear Throughout US history," reporter Greg Stohr details the historical concerns about Presidents potentially ignoring lawful court orders. The "judiciary has worried that a president might simply ignore its decisions," according to Stohr.
ALSO READ: Elon Musk's DOGE boys think this is a video game as Trump plots his 2nd coup
"That age-old quandary is becoming newly relevant as Donald Trump tries to bulldoze his way through longstanding legal constraints in the opening weeks of his second term as president," Stohr reported. "As lawsuits over birthright citizenship, spending cuts and workforce purges make their way to the Supreme Court, the cases carry the potential for a genuine constitutional crisis. What happens, Chief Justice John Roberts must ask himself, if Trump loses and then defies the court?"
Stohr goes on to explain how Trump didn't defy judges when he was president the first time around, but noted that he appears to be "laying dangerous groundwork."
"Even Trump, for all his bluster, didn’t directly defy the judiciary in his first term. When a federal judge blocked his first travel ban in 2017, Trump blasted the ruling as 'ridiculous' and labeled the jurist a 'so-called judge' — and then complied anyway. His administration went along with Supreme Court rulings that blocked the inclusion of a citizenship question on the census and barred him from ending an Obama-era program shielding hundreds of thousands of young undocumented immigrants from deportation," the reporter wrote Friday. "But danger signs have been growing. Trump kept trying to overturn his 2020 election defeat even after the Supreme Court unanimously turned away a bid he backed to nullify the results in four states. Trump’s recalcitrance created a stark contrast with Vice President Al Gore, who 20 years earlier told the nation he accepted the ruling that ended his presidential bid even as he disagreed with it.