As judges say ‘stop,’ the question is whether Trump will comply

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Eight years ago, a newly elected President Donald Trump issued a sweeping executive order that, in the eyes of detractors, flew in the face of bedrock American principles. The order, which critics called a “Muslim ban,” barred people from certain countries from coming to the U.S.

Opponents immediately brought lawsuits, essentially asking courts: Could a president unilaterally do this? The answer, from a series of lower federal judges, was “no.”

While Mr. Trump expressed anger about the rulings, his administration complied with them, vowing to take its case for broader executive power to higher courts. After the administration revised the order twice, the U.S. Supreme Court ultimately upheld it.

Why We Wrote This

Congress and federal courts provide a check on presidential power. The Trump administration’s early actions and words are challenging that balance.

Three weeks into his second term, lower federal courts have again been blocking a swath of executive actions by President Trump. In response, the Trump administration has been striking a different tone this time around – one crystallized on Sunday by Mr. Trump’s second-in-command.

“Judges aren’t allowed to control the executive’s legitimate power,” said Vice President JD Vance in a social media post.

Mr. Vance’s post came as courts have emerged, once again, as the principal check against Trump administration actions that could violate the U.S. Constitution. Three weeks of executive action by Mr. Trump and his subordinates – particularly Elon Musk, the multibillionaire head of the president’s effort known as the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) – have resulted in dozens of lawsuits filed by parties ranging from the American Civil Liberties Union to anonymous FBI agents. In many cases, federal judges have ordered a pause to Trump administration actions.

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