4.6 • 2K Ratings
🗓️ 24 March 2025
⏱️ 89 minutes
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0:00.0 | You're listening to the Judicial Watch weekly update with Tom Fitton. |
0:07.4 | Hey, everyone. Judicial Watch, President Tom Fitten here with our weekly update on social media. |
0:13.2 | So much happening. I don't know if we'll be able to track it all this week, but we've got two new election law, election integrity victories, a big lawsuit over Trump's assassination, a lawsuit over lawfare, plus updates for you on the impeachment issue related to judges, the lawfare against President Trump, and a wave of violent terrorism targeting |
0:39.6 | conservatives, namely Elon Musk, and just generally Americans that we've never really seen |
0:48.7 | before in recent American history. |
0:50.5 | So very troubling developments in that regard. First up, though, is the big debate |
0:56.3 | about the role of the judiciary in the fights about what President Trump is able to do or should |
1:06.5 | be able to do under his constitutional authority. And what the left has done is they've gone to court after court in well over 150 cases, |
1:16.6 | seeking almost emergency-style relief to stop Trump from engaging in government reform, |
1:25.6 | firing people, |
1:28.3 | protecting the military from transgender extremism, |
1:32.3 | engaging in analysis of data for evidence of waste, fraud, and abuse, |
1:39.3 | protecting the sovereignty and national security of the United States |
1:42.3 | by expelling aliens who are here in violation |
1:45.8 | of law, all of which has been challenged to successfully to a large extent by the radical left, |
1:53.0 | which is fine, you know, the left is going to go to court and they're going to do what they can. |
1:56.8 | That's an opportunity or an option that they have. The question is, should the courts buy into it? |
2:03.2 | And too many courts have bought into this unprecedented relief that they've been seeking |
2:09.0 | that has effectively turned the judges into co-presidents of the United States, something that's |
2:15.9 | contrary, in my view, to the rule of law and to |
2:20.3 | the U.S. Constitution as delineated in it related to the separation of powers. The judicial |
2:29.3 | branch is supposed to be judicial, and they're not supposed to be exercising legislative or executive powers. |
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