Nationwide Injunctions vs. Nationwide Executive OrdersNew Foto - Nationwide Injunctions vs. Nationwide Executive Orders

To understand the Supreme Court's oral arguments last week inTrump v. CASA, on whether lower courts have the power to issue "nationwide injunctions" blocking President Donald Trump's executive order ending birthright citizenship, it is useful to start with a seemingly mundane case decided almost exactly a decade ago, one that exemplified—and accelerated—the modern era of anti-administration lawsuits. InMichigan v. EPA, a number of states and industry groups challenged the Obama administration's regulations mandating stricter air-quality standards for coal-fired power plants. On its face, it was a garden-variety technical dispute over the Environmental Protection Agency's rulemaking process, the kind of stuff that can easily put law students and young lawyers to sleep. (As an occasional law professor, I know this all too well.) The EPAissued its rules in early 2012and lawsuits were filed immediately, but the lower court needed two years of briefing, oral argument, and further deliberations beforeruling in favor of the EPA. Then the challengers went to the Supreme Court; eventually, in 2015,the Supreme Court ruled against the EPA. None of this was particularly novel—the crucial constitutional moment came next. Immediately after losing, the EPA boasted that the court's decision was actually a moot point. "EPA is disappointed that the court did not uphold the rule,"the agency told Reuters, "but this rule was issued more than three years ago, investments have been made and most plants are already well on their way to compliance." A senior EPA official evenbloggedthat, "the majority of power plants are already in compliance or well on their way to compliance." It was a blunt lesson in executive speed and power: When litigation takes years from start to finish, an administration can impose its will faster than the courts can resolve their cases. It was also, in hindsight, a turning point. When the EPA issued another major rule, the late-2015 "Clean Power Plan" for greenhouse gas regulations, litigants quickly petitioned the courts to "stay" the rule—to freeze it in place—while the litigation was getting underway. The challengerspointedto the EPA's post-Michiganvictory lap as an example of why administrative action needs to be frozen at the outset of litigation. And the Supreme Court got the point,issuing an order in early 2016to block the EPA from implementing the new regulations until the cases could be fully litigated. Since then, the fight over how courts should act at thebeginningof major lawsuits has become a central feature of anti-administration litigation. When plaintiffs file lawsuits against executive orders or agency regulations, they increasingly ask the trial judge to issue a "temporary restraining order" or "preliminary injunction" blocking the administration's action. Then the parties quickly appeal up the judicial chain to higher courts, eventually the Supreme Court. In the federal trial courts, these orders are known as "nationwide injunctions" or "universal injunctions," because they block an administration from imposing its policy against not only the challenger in that given case, but against people everywhere. These universal injunctions have become a central feature of constitutional and regulatory litigation. According totheHarvard Law Review, the Bush and Obama administrations were blocked by only six and 12 nationwide injunctions, respectively, but the first Trump administration received 64. The Biden administration received only 14, butby one countthe new Trump administration has already received40. The fact that a single federal judge can issue a nationwide injunction blocking a president's executive order or regulatory program seems counterintuitive. There are 677 federal district judgeships, and parties trying to oppose the president's latest policy need to find onlyonejudge to stop the administration in its tracks, sometimes just days or even hours after the administration acts. Litigants have significant leeway in choosing which trial court to file their case, so these injunctions can take on an overwhelmingly partisan color. During the previous Trump administration, challengers filed in blue-state federal courthouses. During the Biden administration, litigants favored federal judges in Texas. Now, in the Trump era, it's back to the blue states. According totheHarvard Law Review, 92 percent of nationwide injunctions against the first Trump administration were issued by Democratic-appointed judges, and 100 percent of nationwide injunctions against the Biden administration were issued by Republican-appointed judges. Now that Trump is issuing a tidal wave of executive orders and other actions—to dismantle agencies, defund federal programs, and deport illegal immigrants to El Salvador—the fights over nationwide injunctions and the Supreme Court's emergency orders have become more politically significant than ever. The administration's efforts to impose its will faster than courts can keep up has made the stakes of these procedural fights painfully clear. In the deportation cases, the administration's suggestion that courts are powerless to undo the deportations once prisoners are shipped out of the country has clearly caused the justices to be much more proactive in granting preliminary relief. On Friday, the court issued anorderblocking the administration from deporting more Venezuelan immigrants under the Alien Enemies Act. "District courts should approach requests for preliminary relief with care and consideration," the court explained, "but exigent circumstances may impose practical constraints" when an agency is poised to take actions that may be irreparable by the time the litigation ends. Justice Samuel Alito dissented (with Justice Clarence Thomas joining him), with an opinion raising significant questions over whether the court's intervention was procedurally and factually premature—indeed, whether the court even had jurisdiction at all. But the seven-justice majority clearly believed that even a short delay of judicial relief might leave more immigrants stranded in a far-flung foreign prison—a stark vote of no-confidence in the Trump administration's nominal reassurances to the contrary. In more normal times, the government would have walked into theTrump v. CASAcase with significant judicial wind in its sails. As my colleague Jack Goldsmithobserved recently atExecutive Functions, at least six justices already recognized the practical or constitutional questions surrounding the modern wave of nationwide injunctions. "Five Justices—Thomas,Alito,Gorsuch,Kavanaugh, and Barrett—had embraced various degrees of doubt about universal injunctions prior to oral argument," Goldsmith writes, and "Justice Kagan hadexpressed doubtabout them in off-Court remarks." That is, Justices Neil Gorsuch, Alito, and Thomas haveworriedthat nationwide injunctions, when granted quickly at the front end of litigation, are "almost by design a fast and furious business," which too often "circumvent normal judicial processes and 'tend to force judges into making rushed, high-stakes, low-information decisions.'" Similarly, Justices Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett havewarnedthat the rushed proceedings for nationwide injunctions are "not always optimal for orderly judicial decisionmaking." Justice Elena Kagan,speaking at Northwestern Law in 2022, observed that "it just can't be right that one district judge can stop a nationwide policy in its tracks and leave it stopped for the years that it takes to go through the normal process." And Thomas,in the 2018 case upholding President Trump's travel ban, raised more fundamental concerns: "I am skeptical that district courts have the authority to enter universal injunctions. These injunctions did not emerge until a century and a half after the founding. And they appear to be inconsistent with longstanding limits on equitable relief and the power of Article III courts." That was the crux of the Justice Department's argument inTrump v. CASA.In its briefsandat oral argument, the Justice Department argued that the Constitution's Article III, which defines the powers of federal courts, does not allow those courts to grant relief on behalf of third parties not present in that specific case. Furthermore, the statutes empowering courts to grant "equitable" relief—namely, injunctions—should not be read as allowing granting courts the power to enjoin the government from acting against people who aren't parties to the case. In short, the government argued, nationwide injunctions are a sharp break from the nation's constitutional and jurisprudential traditions, and if litigants want to block the government nationwide then the only possible options are class-action lawsuits (which, the government further argued, might not be allowed in cases like these), or with their own tidal wave of individual lawsuits filed on behalf of every person who wants to be protected against the government's actions. The government further resisted conceding that a negative judicial decision from any court, short of the Supreme Court, could necessarily bind the administration from enforcing a court-blocked policy against parties who weren't in that particular court case. AsSCOTUSblog's Amy Howe explains in her post-argument analysis, virtually all of the justices raised significant doubts about the breadth of the Trump administration's arguments, and the enormous practical problems that the administration's proposal would present for those who face swift executive action and strategic executive tactics to avoid litigation. To be sure, several justices reiterated their previous concerns about the trend in nationwide injunctions against presidential administrations. Alito noted the palpable "practical problem" that is created "when there are 680 district court judges," any one of whom can issue an injunction instantly blocking an administration's program nationwide—a problem exacerbated by litigants' ability to choose where they file their cases. Kagan echoed those concerns, noting that "because of the forum selection process, a party goes to one place. You know, in the first Trump administration, it was all done in San Francisco, and then, in the next administration, it was all done in Texas." Meanwhile, several justices raised concerns about the administration's preferred approach—requiring challengers either to file class-action lawsuits or to file dozens or hundreds (or even thousands) of individual cases on behalf of every affected person willing to personally litigate against the president's administration. Many cases simply will not be fit for class-action certification, because the factual differences among plaintiffs would prevent class-action procedures for the shared legal issue. And the case-by-case approach would present a "'catch me if you can' kind of regime from the standpoint of the executive," as Justice Jackson put it, "where everybody has to have a lawyer and file a lawsuit in order for the government to stop violating people's rights." That point seemed particularly troubling to several of the justices, and all the more so as Solicitor General John Sauer spelled out the administration's position in greater detail. As Howe reports at SCOTUSblog, "Sauer ran into hot water with Barrett … when she pressed him on whether the Trump administration would follow a ruling by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit in the case of an individual plaintiff when it came to others challenging the executive order. Sauer responded that the Department of Justice would 'generally'—but not always—follow the court of appeals' decision." That line of argument also fell flat with Kagan—herself a former solicitor general: "you're going to be saying, no you know, we only commit to saying it's illegal to this one guy who brought the suit," she quipped. According to Sauer, the only judicial decision that would command the administration's complete adherence would be the Supreme Court's own decision, "a nationwide precedent that the government would respect." That is a remarkable statement, given that the entire underlying case—a challenge to President Trump's executive order ending birthright citizenship—is a direct challenge to the court's long-settled precedent,United States v. Wong Kim Ark(1898), which for more than a century has been the authoritative interpretation of the 14thAmendment's citizenship clause. But the administration's argument also made plain the choice before the justices, at least as the administration frames it. Either the court will channel future constitutional and regulatory litigation into a scattered galaxy of individual lawsuits, a dispersion that will give presidents and their agencies maximum opportunities for gamesmanship, or the court would allow nationwide injunctions to remain an option for many future cases. Given that choice, perhaps the most likely outcome is one that rejects the administration's sweeping argument against nationwide injunctions yet also tries to mitigate the practical problems of nationwide injunctions by emphasizing that lower courts must not grant such injunctions willy-nilly. It is not hard to imagine the court, perhaps in an opinion by Chief Justice John Roberts, issuing a decision that rejects the administration's core argument but also reminds the lower courts that nationwide injunctions are not to be given out haphazardly. Such an opinion might tell district courts to be mindful of their obligation to tailor their injunctions narrowly to grant relief that is necessary but no more than that; that sometimes class-action litigation or case-specific remedies are, in fact, appropriate alternatives to nationwide relief; that the frantic process around preliminary injunctions creates a real risk of judicial error; and that forum-shopping creates a real risk that the public will start to see the entire practice as less judicial than political. Unless the Trump administration has convinced five justices that the Constitution and statutes clearly prohibit the use of nationwide injunctions—and that seems unlikely, at least based on the oral arguments—then this kind of mend-it-but-don't-end-it opinion might be the most likely outcome, and rightly so. It bears emphasizing that while the logical and practical ramifications of the administration's position is jarring, the argument starts from a reasonable and important premise: It takes only one district judge among nearly 700 to shut down an executive order or agency regulation. To sustain an executive order or new regulatory program, the government needs to run the judicial table. As Sauer stressed in his opening statement, this system forces "the government to win everywhere while the plaintiffs can win anywhere." His recent predecessors surely felt the same frustrations. Solicitor General Elizbeth Prelogar raised similar legal and practical concerns ina Biden administration briefasking the court to consider ending nationwide injunctions. (Full disclosure: That brief was filed inlitigationbrought by the Center for Individual Rights, whose board I now chair.) But Sauer put the point much more colorfully: The district courts' assertion of power to block an administration policy nationwide "yields all these sort of pathologies, so to speak, of the current practice of issuing them very, very easily." But that argument is darkly ironic. District courts surely have issued some nationwide injunctions too easily. But they pale in comparison to the ease with which modern presidents—especially Trump 2.0—issue executive orders and other edicts purporting to singlehandedly remake the global economy through new tariffs, or to dismantle entire federal agencies, or to punish people or institutions or universities for perceived offenses. Or, for that matter, to end birthright citizenship for millions of people. If anything has caused "pathologies" in our modern government, it isthat—the executive branch's assertion of enormous unilateral control over American laws and lives, a trend thatthe Trump administration's approach to governance so far is exacerbating. Sauer is surely right that the Founders would be surprised by a future in which individual trial judges have become so important. But more importantly,Roberts was surely rightthat "the Framers could hardly have envisioned today's 'vast and varied federal bureaucracy' and the authority administrative agencies now hold over our economic, social, and political activities." And the rise of nationwide injunctions is simply an echo of the rise of presidential and administrative policymaking power. Justice Kavanaugh put this point well, midway through theTrump v. CASAarguments, during his questions to the solicitor general: You mentioned before this has come up in the last four or five administrations primarily. You know, I guess I've thought about that a lot too. Why? … [I]t's harder to get legislation through Congress, particularly with the filibuster rule. Presidents want to get things done with good intentions. The executive branches that work or those presidents push hard to—when they can't get new authority—to stretch or use existing authority, and they've been pushing, understandably, all with good intentions. All the presidents, both parties, right, with good intentions, pushing. … [T]he underlying point is that these district judges are not just doing universal injunctions; they're finding these [administrative] actions illegal because they're exceeding existing authority, and oftentimes we are too when it gets to us, finding the actions of presidents of both parties unlawful because they exceeded existing authority. That is the real problem underlyingallof this. Congress has delegated virtually its entire legislative power to the executive branch, over the course of the last century and a half. Congress spent a century encouraging presidents to act as the nation's lawmaker-in-chief, and now presidents routinely make executive-branch laws affecting thousands or millions of Americans in one fell swoop. And when those instant edicts spur instant litigation, federal trial judges are left to decide whether a ruling against the administration's seemingly unlawful action should bind the president completely, or only as to the plaintiffs at hand. This creates problems for government, and judges exacerbate the problem when they make incorrect decisions. Butjudgesdid not create the problem.Presidentscreated this problem through unrestrained assertions of power. More fundamentally,Congresscreated this problem by largely freeing presidents from legislative restraints. As it happens, Congress could fix the specific problems that arise when litigants are largely free to pick the trial courts that would adjudicate their cases and grant their nationwide injunction requests. I've long called for Congress tolegislate a lottery system for such cases, so that a litigant who wants a nationwide preliminary injunction would be sent to a randomly determined judge. Or, to further mitigate the dangers of letting one judge decide such momentous issues, the cases could be sent to random three-judge panels. But most importantly, Congress needs to reclaim its legislative power and reform the laws that turned the presidency into a one-man national legislature. Until then, we will face an endless choice between powerful judges and all-powerful presidents. Read more at The Dispatch The Dispatch is a new digital media company providing engaged citizens with fact-based reporting and commentary, informed by conservative principles. Sign up for free.

Nationwide Injunctions vs. Nationwide Executive Orders

Nationwide Injunctions vs. Nationwide Executive Orders To understand the Supreme Court's oral arguments last week inTrump v. CASA, on wh...
Delayed ReckoningNew Foto - Delayed Reckoning

Where does Robert Hur go to get his reputation back? The former federal prosecutor and special counsel investigating Joe Biden's retention of classified documents had been a target of vitriol from Democrats after the Justice Departmentreleased his reportin February 2024. While Hur had recommended against the DOJ bringing criminal charges against Biden once he was out of office, his report describes the then-president coming across "as a sympathetic, well-meaning, elderly man with a poor memory" during his interview with Hur's team. At the time, theWhite HouseandDemocratsaccused Hur of engaging in politics, assisting Republicans who had been trying to make Biden's age an issue in the presidential campaign.Even Biden himselfexpressed his anger at Hur during a press conference hours after the report was made public. We all know what happened next. On June 27,on a debate stage in Atlanta, the whole world would see Biden as an aging president who frequently failed to speak audibly or coherently. Within a month, Biden haddropped out of the race, unable to gloss over what happened at the debate or ignore the increasing number of Democrats declaring publicly he was unfit to run again. Hur's description, once derided as unfair and partisan, had become impossible to deny. Hur was further validated last Friday whenAxiospublishedclips of the audio recordings from the interview. Listen to the clips to judge for yourself, but the audio strikingly captures Biden struggling to answer questions, leaving long gaps between words, searching for facts and dates, and otherwise sounding exactly as Hur described him. These new audio clips come after weeks of promotion of a new book out today fromAxiosreporter Alex Thompson and CNN anchor Jake Tapper,Original Sin, that offers new reporting about what the authors describe as a "cover-up" of Biden's cognitive decline by Democratic Party figures and Biden's inner circle. The book has prompted discussion and some soul-searching from Democrats about everything from Biden's decision to run for reelection in the first place to his reluctant choice to withdraw. One Democrat is even reconsidering how he treated the sober and publicity-shy prosecutor who merely reported what he saw. (Hur, by the way, declined to answer questions for this column.) Tommy Vietor, a popular progressive podcast host who was once a trusted White House aide to Barack Obama,admitted in a post on Xon Saturday that he had reevaluatedhis initial attackon Hur. "I found the context about the Hur report to be some of the most interesting/revelatory information in ORIGINAL SIN," Vietor posted. "At the time, Hur's comments about Biden being an 'elderly man with a poor memory' seemed like Jim Comey-style inappropriate editorializing about a non-charging decision. However, the book made me realize how important that context was for Hur in explaining his decision NOT to charge Biden, and I now feel that many of the attacks on Hur, including by me, weren't totally fair." As my colleague Sarah Isgur and Iwrote at the time, Hur was obligated to explain to the attorney general in his report why he would not recommend charging Biden. Hur himselftestified on Capitol Hillin March 2024 that he based part of this recommendation on the concerns he had that Biden's memory issues would make it difficult for the Department of Justice to win a criminal case. "My assessment in the report about the relevance of the president's memory was necessary and accurate and fair," Hur said in his testimony. "Most importantly, what I wrote is what I believe the evidence shows, and what I expect jurors would perceive and believe. I did not sanitize my explanation. Nor did I disparage the president unfairly. I explained to the attorney general my decision and the reasons for it. That's what I was required to do." This aspect of the report was not merely the fulfillment of the special prosecutor's duty but a red flag for anyone still in denial about the bigger truth: Biden was an octogenarian who had clearly declined while holding one of the most stressful and high-pressure jobs in the world. Democrats' dismissal of Hur's report as partisan agitprop delayed the reckoning the party needed to have. And by noting these uncomfortable facts about Biden, Hur and the Justice Department incurred the wrath of many liberals who were simultaneously seeking from the same justice system some form of deliverance from Donald Trump. Of course, Trump had done so much in both his first term and four-year interregnum toundercut faithin the institutions of criminal justice, infecting wide swaths of the Republican Party and conservative media. Meanwhile,overreachandmalfeasanceon the part of some liberal prosecutors have further eroded public trust wherever the law and politics come into contact. It's too much to hope that in this current moment of self-reflection by Democrats that partisans on both sides will recognize the cautionary tale in the panic over Hur's report. But they should. Read more at The Dispatch The Dispatch is a new digital media company providing engaged citizens with fact-based reporting and commentary, informed by conservative principles. Sign up for free.

Delayed Reckoning

Delayed Reckoning Where does Robert Hur go to get his reputation back? The former federal prosecutor and special counsel investigating Joe B...
The Fiscal-Cliff Urgency Behind the 'Big, Beautiful Bill'New Foto - The Fiscal-Cliff Urgency Behind the 'Big, Beautiful Bill'

There is no official deadline for congressional Republicans to pass their budget reconciliation bill to put in place President Donald Trump's legislative agenda, but they've imposed one on themselves by including a debt-ceiling provision in the tax-and-spending legislation. Despite the Treasury Department's "extraordinary measures" to avoid a default on the United States'$36.22 trillionin debt, Congress must once again raise the statutory debt ceiling. The last deadline, known as the "X date," came in June 2023, when Democrats held the White House and the Senate but Republicans controlled the House. The divided government enabled Republicans to extract concessions from President Joe Biden in exchange for a suspension of the debt limit. Democrats in the Senate could do the same thing this year and threaten to filibuster a measure raising the ceiling for political leverage. To avoid that situation, Republicans included a provision in the reconciliation bill increasing the limit, which means they would not need to haggle with Democrats to raise the debt ceiling. But putting the debt limit in the reconciliation bill also carries its own risk. Republicans need to hammer out the president's "big, beautiful bill," pass it through the House and Senate, and get the legislation to Trump's desk before the X date to avoid having to make a deal with their opponents. Exactly when the government will hit the limit is unclear. It depends on several variables, such as the Treasury's cash balance and revenues the government collects from taxes, so estimates vary. Congressional Budget Office Director Phillip Swagelsaidearlier this month that his scorekeeping agency placed the X date in August or September. Days later, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent stated in aletter to Congressthat it could come in August, when both chambers are scheduled to be in recess for almost the whole month. "Therefore, I respectfully urge Congress to increase or suspend the debt limit by mid-July, before its scheduled break," he wrote. The House and Senate each have different instructions in last month's compromise budget resolution for increasing the debt limit in reconciliation, a discrepancy that will have to be resolved at some point. The resolution instructs the House Ways and Means Committee to raise it by $4 trillion to $40.1 trillion—which it hasincludedin its preliminary bill text. Those same instructions tell the Senate Finance Committee to increase it by $5 trillion, though there is no bill text from the Senate yet. Members of the House Freedom Caucus of fiscal hardliners often balk at increasing the debt limit without serious offsets. The group earlier in the yearproposedraising it by $4 trillion in reconciliation so long as congressional leadership committed to "dollar-for-dollar savings over 10 years across both reconciliation bills and appropriations bills." The debt ceiling issue essentially gives Republicans a deadline to get their bill done. The tentative goal is for Trump to sign it by the Fourth of July, which would meet Bessent's time frame. Still, things have a way of getting delayed in Congress. House Speaker Mike Johnson'soriginal planwas to pass the bill through the House by Easter and have Trump sign it by Memorial Day. Now, his goal is for the House to pass the bill by Memorial Day, and even that prospect looks far from certain. Nevertheless, Republicans in Congress last week did not project worry that the country would hit the debt limit before Trump signs the bill. For Sen. John Cornyn of Texas, a member of the Senate Finance Committee, the urgency of the debt ceiling provision could speed up the passage of the legislation. "I think that is what's driving the train," he toldThe Dispatch. "And what I would worry about if we didn't have the debt ceiling as part of [the reconciliation bill] is we'd kick it down the road, and we'd be [in] September, October, and then we'd find ourselves up against a wall in December, so I think this is going to be a July exercise. I don't know what the leadership is planning, but it seemed to me that if you back this up against the August recess, that's an ideal time to get it all done." Republicans in the House are battling over what measures to put into the reconciliation bill,  such as Medicaid reforms and an increase to the state and local tax deduction, which has delayed progress on its passage. Those struggles came to a head Friday when deficit hawks on the Budget Committee voted with Democrats to tank it and stop the panel from advancing it to the whole chamber. The committee eventually approved the bill Sunday evening but only because those previous Republican dissenters switched their "no" votes to "present." Leading up to the Friday vote, some House GOP leadersreportedlyargued to holdouts that they would need to strike a deal with Democrats if they did not raise the debt ceiling in a party-line bill. Prior to the vote, Rep. Ralph Norman of South Carolina, a holdout on the committee, said he had not discussed the debt ceiling but said the X date is "a consideration" regarding his vote on the bill. "We want to give the president what he needs, and I trust him on it, but the devil is in the details on this stuff," he toldThe Dispatch. Norman was one of about three dozen Republican House members whovotedagainst a continuing resolution that raised the debt limit without significant cuts toward the end of last year. Once again, House Republicans must take into account the demands of spending hawks and others as they try to craft their reconciliation bill while the country hurdles toward its debt ceiling. The GOP conference already has to "thread a very careful needle," in thewordsof tax committee chairman Rep. Jason Smith of Missouri, between the factions—hence the delay. Change something to satisfy the fiscal hardliners, and you'll displease the moderates. But the Senate also will have a say in the final version of the bill. Even now, multiple Republican senators have pledged to vote against the bill in its current form. As Friday'sMorning Dispatchdetailed, Sen. Josh Hawley of Missouri objected to some of the Medicaid provisions, while Sen. Ron Johnson of Wisconsin said it did not cut enough spending. That will require an entirely new song and dance as the Senate makes changes that the House will need to approve. Whether they can do it all before the August recess—and the looming X date—is an open question. Sen. Johnson noted that he has never voted to raise the debt ceiling but supports it now to avoid a default while Republicans enact their tax priorities and "get spending down to reasonable, pre-pandemic levels." Asked about the timing of the X date, Johnson toldThe Dispatchhe still favored splitting the package into multiple bills, something that GOP senators hadadvocatedearlier in the process. "We're going to have to do it through reconciliation," he said of raising the debt ceiling, "so that's why I've always thought I'd like to decouple the big, beautiful bill into three separate—and I'm still recommending it. I'm pushing it right now." Read more at The Dispatch The Dispatch is a new digital media company providing engaged citizens with fact-based reporting and commentary, informed by conservative principles. Sign up for free.

The Fiscal-Cliff Urgency Behind the ‘Big, Beautiful Bill’

The Fiscal-Cliff Urgency Behind the 'Big, Beautiful Bill' There is no official deadline for congressional Republicans to pass their ...
How uproar over a Māori haka, beloved in New Zealand life, sowed chaos and gridlock in ParliamentNew Foto - How uproar over a Māori haka, beloved in New Zealand life, sowed chaos and gridlock in Parliament

WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) — The haka, a chanting dance of challenge, is sacred to New Zealand's Māori people but it's become a beloved cultural institution among New Zealanders of all races. Spine-tingling performances at sports events, funerals and graduations often go viral online, a non-partisan point of pride for the country abroad. But one hakaperformed in protestin New Zealand's Parliament by three legislators last November has provoked fierce division among lawmakers about whether it was an act of peaceful dissent, or disruptive and even intimidating to their opponents. A vote to approveunprecedented, lengthy bansfrom Parliament for the Māori party lawmakers who enacted the protest was unexpectedly suspended on Tuesday. Debate will resume in June, when it threatens to gridlock the legislative agenda until politicians from all parties reach consensus on what the punishment should be. Hundreds of protesters against the sanctions waited outside Parliament's front doors in New Zealand's capital, Wellington, on Tuesday to greet the Māori party lawmakers with a haka when they emerged. What is the haka? The haka was once viewed as a war dance, but that understanding has changed in New Zealand as it has been embraced in a range of celebratory, somber and ceremonial settings. It's an expression of Māori identity and while sacred, it can be performed by people of any race who are educated by Māori in the words, movements and cultural protocols. Emotional haka have generated news headlines in the past year when performed by soldiers farewelling a New Zealander who died fighting in Ukraine, and in Paris by athletes from New Zealand's Olympic team. While the best-known haka is "ka mate," the chant often performed by the All Blacks rugby team before games, there are many variants. Why was this one controversial? Last November's protest wasn't the first time a haka has rung out in Parliament. Performances regularly follow the passage of laws important to Māori. But some lawmakers decried this one for two reasons: because the legislators from Te Pāti Māori, the Māori Party, left their seats and strode across the floor toward government politicians while performing it, and because it disrupted the vote on a proposed law. When asked how the Māori party would vote on a bill they said would dismantle Indigenous rights, Hana-Rāwhiti Maipi-Clarke – New Zealand's youngest parliamentarian, at 22 – tore up a copy of the law and began the haka, joined by two of her colleagues. The law, an attempt to rewrite New Zealand's founding treaty between Māori tribal leaders and the British crown, waswidely unpopularand hassince been defeated. But for six months, a committee of the lawmakers' peers have fought furiously about how — or whether — their protest of it should be punished. Why is debate about it still going? Usually there's agreement among parliamentarians about penalties for errant behavior. But this episode polarized the committee considering the lawmakers' actions. Its report recommended Maipi-Clarke, who the committee said showed contrition in a letter, be suspended for seven days and her colleagues for 21 days. That's the harshest penalty ever assigned to New Zealand lawmakers; the previous record was three days. Parliament Speaker Gerry Brownlee this month scheduled a rare, unlimited debate in Parliament until all parties could find consensus on the penalty, citing the severity of the proposed bans. But minutes after the debate began Tuesday, it was adjourned at the government's behest after they allowed the Māori party lawmakers to stay until after Thursday's budget was delivered. It permitted the government their budget week agenda and meant the Māori lawmakers — opponents of the government — wouldn't miss one of Parliament's most significant dates. But the debate about the bans will then resume. Opposition leader Chris Hipkins, the only opponent of the sanctions to speak before debate was suspended, cited episodes where lawmakers have brawled in Parliament and driven a tractor up the building's steps, but were not suspended, as evidence that the bans weren't fair. But Judith Collins, the chair of the committee that produced the sanctions, said the penalties were "not about the haka." Collins said the lawmakers' behavior was the most egregious she'd ever witnessed. What happens next? The debate will resume on June 5, when it threatens to stall usual government business once more. The government said Tuesday that it would not back down from the punishments suggested and opposition parties said they couldn't be swayed from disputing them. Outside Parliament, activist Eru Kapa-Kingi told the assembled crowd that the haka was "a source of fear" in Parliament. "Even though when the All Blacks do it it's a good thing," he added.

How uproar over a Māori haka, beloved in New Zealand life, sowed chaos and gridlock in Parliament

How uproar over a Māori haka, beloved in New Zealand life, sowed chaos and gridlock in Parliament WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) — The haka, a...
SALT Caucus, GOP leaders emerge from late-night meeting without crucial dealNew Foto - SALT Caucus, GOP leaders emerge from late-night meeting without crucial deal

A late-night meeting between Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) and moderate Republicans fighting for an obscure tax break ended with no deal on Monday, prolonging the fight over an issue that's emerged as one of the major barriers to a final agreement on President Trump's domestic agenda. "We had some questions, they have to wait for some more scores now," Rep. Andrew Garbarino (R-N.Y.) said. "They're hoping to have some numbers back to us by morning." The moderate lawmakers are seeking a significant hike to the ceiling on the state and local tax (SALT) deduction, which was capped at $10,000 as part of the Republicans' 2017 tax law. The cap was designed to prevent wealthy taxpayers from getting a huge break, but the critics say it's also hitting middle-class taxpayers in high-income, high-tax states like New York, New Jersey and California. The high-tax state moderates oppose the $30,000 cap included in the Republicans' initial package, which passed through the Budget Committee on Sunday night. They're pressing Johnson to increase the figure as part of changes expected to be taken up by the Rules Committee at 1 a.m. on Wednesday. Emerging from the meeting in Johnson's office, which began at 10 p.m., SALT Caucus members said leadership has offered them several proposals, and now they're waiting on several scorekeepers — the Congressional Budget Office and Joint Committee on Taxation — to provide estimates. Complicating the decision for Johnson are conservative spending hawks who are threatening to oppose any hike in the SALT cap that isn't completely offset by changes elsewhere in the budget — pressure the moderates are quick to acknowledge. "The Speaker's doing everything he can to try to get us to yes," Garbarino said. "There's a lot of pressure coming to him from the other side." One idea that has been floated throughout talks — according to two sources familiar with the deliberations — is a two-part plan that would increase the deduction cap from the current $30,000 proposal to a higher number for a shorter period of time, then decrease the deduction cap after that window expires. The strategy is designed to appease conservative spending hawks seeking to lower the cost of the package, while also providing SALT Caucus members a political win for their districts with a higher — albeit temporary — deduction cap. It remains unclear what the deduction caps and timeline would be, how seriously leadership is considering such a proposal, or if members of the SALT Caucus would accept the framework. Both sides said the talks will continue Tuesday as GOP leaders race for an agreement on President Trump's domestic agenda. Trump will also enter the fray on Tuesday when he visits the Capitol to huddle with the House GOP conference, where he's expected to urge the holdouts to drop their reservations and rally behind the bill. Leaving Monday's meeting, Johnson offered no details about the leadership offers. But he said the House remains on track to pass the legislation before Memorial Day. "Lots of progress," Johnson said. The SALT debate has become one of the thorniest sticking points gumming up progress on the GOP's "big, beautiful bill," as moderate Republicans from high-tax blue states push for a higher deduction cap, and hardline conservatives demand any increase be paid for. Leadership initially proposed a $30,000 deduction cap — up from the current $10,000 cap — for individuals making $400,000 or less, a number that key stakeholders rejected. Instead, members of the SALT Caucus floated a $62,000 deduction cap for single filers and a $124,000 cap for joint filers — highlighting the gulf between the two camps. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. For the latest news, weather, sports, and streaming video, head to The Hill.

SALT Caucus, GOP leaders emerge from late-night meeting without crucial deal

SALT Caucus, GOP leaders emerge from late-night meeting without crucial deal A late-night meeting between Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) and m...

 

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