Good morning readers. I’ll take member questions in comments and during this afternoon’s live chat. Subscribers can expect an invitation later today. On my mind today: It seems as though the story of the illegal capturing of the U.S. government will break one way or another in March. If you’re a regular reader, you know I have my eyes on the March 14 deadline to fund the government, and whether Democrats will provide votes to do so without securing any mechanism to assure Donald Trump’s compliance with the law—effectively sanctioning his criminality. But we’ll also soon learn a lot about the judiciary’s posture toward all this lawbreaking. Short version: Wednesday night was supposed to be the drop-dead date for the Trump administration to disburse the foreign aid it had frozen, or to send officials to testify under oath about their failure to do so. The administration had, for almost two weeks, failed to comply in good faith with a restraining order requiring disbursement of the funds. So this week the judge in the case granted a request to enforce the order—deadline midnight last night. The Trump administration scrambled all day to pause that enforcement order. The circuit court declined the request, but Chief Justice Roberts obliged—for a few days at least. Naturally I suspect Roberts, out of cowardice or partisanship, gave Trump special treatment—e.g. that if the Biden administration had flouted a TRO and sought relief from enforcement, Roberts would have offered no stay at all. But he ordered the parties to brief him on the matter by noon tomorrow. I suspect if Roberts exempts Trump from enforcement of this order altogether, Trump will never willingly comply with one again. By contrast, if SCOTUS says comply, Trump will have to decide whether to comply, or to assert the dictatorial power to ignore the entire judiciary, and see what happens. There may be middle ways for Roberts to rule between that binary, but in either case this is coming to a head quickly. So will the Trump administration be hemmed in by Congress, the courts, or both? We’ll find out very soon. Then, in no particular order:
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