The Dictatorship
What’s at stake in the Supreme Court case on transgender health care
Welcome back, Deadline: Legal Newsletter readers. The Supreme Court held a major hearing on transgender rights that highlighted the court’s partisan split, while Democrats kept confirming judges to the lower federal courts before Republicans take over next month. The impending transfer of power also puts a spotlight on clemency, with outgoing President Joe Biden pardoning his son Hunter and his aides reportedly considering pushing the same benefit for potential targets of the incoming administration. And in the dwindling saga of the president-elect’s criminal prosecutions, his two federal cases are gone as we move closer to learning the fate of his two state cases.
Transgender rights were at issue during Wednesday’s hearing in United States v. Skrmetti. The question there is whether a Tennessee law banning gender-affirming care for minors violates the Constitution’s equal protection clause. The court’s GOP-appointed majority seems to think notthough Justice Neil Gorsuch was notably silent. The Trump appointee wrote a 2020 ruling backing transgender workplace protections, and his vote could be important in Skrmetti. The court’s eventual decision, expected by July, could affect similar laws across the country and LGBTQ+ rights more broadly.
Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson drew a parallel to Loving v. Virginiathe landmark 1967 Supreme Court case that struck down the state’s interracial marriage ban on equal protection grounds. Tennessee argues that its law doesn’t discriminate based on sex, which led the Biden appointee to wonder “whether Virginia could have gotten away with what they did here by just making a classification argument the way that Tennessee is in this case.”
That Jackson’s concern stood out illustrates the 6-3 split on the court between appointees of Republican and Democratic presidents. While Biden will get only one Supreme Court appointment in his term, the rift on the nation’s top court places even greater significance on Democrats’ push to confirm judges to the federal trial and appeals courts. This week brought the total number of confirmations during the current administration to 229, as Democrats close in on the 234 judges in Donald Trump’s first term. The coming days and weeks will determine whether they break that number before Republicans take over the White House and Senate next month.
More pardons could come, tooafter Biden granted clemency for Hunter on Sunday before he could be sentenced on gun and tax charges. The president previously said he wouldn’t pardon his son, but he argued Sunday that “raw politics has infected this process and it led to a miscarriage of justice.” Whatever one’s views on the matter, it shows the president is capable of granting clemency when he sees an injustice. The bigger question now is whether he’ll do so for more people he isn’t related toincluding those for whom he previously signaled support — such as death row prisoners he said should serve life sentences instead and people convicted of marijuana-related crimes.
Meanwhile, Trump is trying to toss his New York and Georgia state cases before he takes office. The president-elect’s New York defense lawyers (whom he named to top DOJ posts in his administration) want Judge Juan Merchan to dismiss the hush money case due to their client’s political victory. Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg gets to respond in a filing due Monday, after which Merchan will decide whether the case moves toward sentencing in the only prosecution of Trump that went to trial.
In Georgia, Trump’s lawyers launched a similar effort this week to get out of the state election interference case there. With his two federal cases gone, we’ll soon learn what happens in the murkier question of his state cases, which presidents can’t pardon away or get their attorneys general to dismiss like federal ones.
The Supreme Court added to its docket Friday with cases to be argued later this term, over federal habeas corpus litigation and an appeal about whether terror victims can sue the Palestine Liberation Organization and Palestinian Authority in U.S. courts. The justices will take the bench next week for the final hearings of the year, considering a handful of cases including an environmental dispute from which Gorsuch recused this week.
Subscribe to theDeadline: Legal Newsletterfor expert analysis on the top legal stories of the week, including updates from the Supreme Court and developments in Donald Trump’s legal cases.
Jordan Rubin is the Deadline: Legal Blog writer. He was a prosecutor for the New York County District Attorney’s Office in Manhattan and is the author of “Bizarro,” a book about the secret war on synthetic drugs. Before he joined BLN, he was a legal reporter for Bloomberg Law.
The Dictatorship
Why Judge Boasberg’s ruling on DOJ’s Jerome Powell investigation is bigger than one case
The most important part of Chief Judge James Boasberg’s ruling quashing Justice Department subpoenas served on the Federal Reserve was not simply that he blocked them.
It was that he refused to suspend common sense. He read the subpoenas against the public record that produced them. He took President Donald Trump at his word. That is what made the opinion so important.
Judge Boasberg did not begin with dry procedural throat-clearing. He began with Trump’s own attacks on Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell and the broader campaign of presidential and White House pressure on the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates.
For too long, courts have often maintained an artificial separation between presidential rhetoric and executive action.
He quoted Trump calling Powell “TOO ANGRY, TOO STUPID, & TOO POLITICAL, to have the job of Fed Chair.” He cited another post calling Powell “one of the dumbest, and most destructive, people in Government.” He noted Trump’s statement that “Powell’s termination cannot come fast enough!” and his threat that if the Fed did not cut rates, “I may have to force something.”
That was not decoration; it was the architecture of the opinion. From page one, Judge Boasberg made clear that motive was not some side issue here. Motive was the case. The subpoenas arose from a Justice Department investigation into supposed cost overruns in the Federal Reserve’s multiyear headquarters renovation project and into Powell’s congressional testimony touching on those renovations. On paper, that was the inquiry. In reality, Judge Boasberg concluded, something else was going on.
Judge Boasberg wrote that there was “abundant evidence” that the dominant, if not sole, purpose of the subpoenas was to harass and pressure Powell either to yield to the president or resign and make way for someone who would. On the other side of the scale, he said the government had offered “no evidence whatsoever” that Powell committed any crime other than displeasing the president. By the end of the opinion, that judgment hardened even further: The government had produced “essentially zero evidence” of criminality, and its stated justifications looked like “a convenient pretext” for another unstated purpose.
That is an extraordinary thing for a federal judge to say about the Department of Justice.

This was not a close call. It was not a case in which prosecutors pushed the envelope and got reined back in. It was a finding that criminal process had been used as pressure rather than law enforcement.
And the way Judge Boasberg got there was the real story. He did not invent improper purpose. Rather, he looked at what was already in plain view. Trump spent months attacking Powell, demanding lower rates and making his desired outcome unmistakable. He said, “Anybody that disagrees with me will never be the Fed Chairman!” He said, “I want to get him out.” He said he would “love to fire his ass.” He said Powell “should resign.”
A political appointee then floated the Fed renovation issue as a path toward investigation and possible removal. After that, the U.S. Attorney’s Office opened a criminal investigation on that very theory and served subpoenas on the Federal Reserve.
Judge Boasberg looked at that sequence and refused to act naive.
He was right to.
For too long, courts have often maintained an artificial separation between presidential rhetoric and executive action. The president says what he says. Prosecutors do what they do. Judges examine the narrower legal record and resist attributing too much significance to the political atmosphere outside the courthouse. But there comes a point where that posture stops looking disciplined and starts looking unserious.
From page one, Judge Boasberg made clear that motive was not some side issue here. Motive was the case.
When a president has repeatedly identified the official he wants pressured or removed, made his desired outcome unmistakable and then his Justice Department shows up with a paper-thin theory aimed at that same target, a court does not have to pretend those events are unrelated. Judge Boasberg’s opinion suggested that at least some courts may be losing patience with that formalism.
What made the opinion important was not just that Judge Boasberg drew that inference here. It was that he did so openly, in a way that may signal a broader judicial willingness to read executive motive more realistically in politically saturated cases.
That is not judicial activism. It is common sense.
And Trump’s response since the ruling only reinforced the point. In a post after the decision, Trump attacked Judge Boasberg personally, called him a “Wacky, Nasty, Crooked, and totally Out of Control Judge,” said he has been “‘after’ my people, and me, for years,” claimed the ruling had “little to do with the Law, and everything to do with Politics,” and said Judge Boasberg should be removed from cases involving Trump and his administration.
That mattered because it underscored the precise interpretive move Judge Boasberg made in the opinion. The judge treated Trump’s public words not as background noise, but as evidence reasonably bearing on motive and pretext. Trump’s reaction did not undercut that reasoning. It strengthened it.
It also said something larger and more troubling about the DOJ.

The government was given the chance to substantiate its claims and chose not to. Judge Boasberg was left, as he put it, with “no credible reason” to think prosecutors were investigating suspicious facts as opposed to targeting a disfavored official.
That is not just a loss. It is a collapse of confidence.
And it matters all the more because of what a subpoena is. A subpoena is the point where political pressure becomes legal compulsion. It is the government bringing the authority of criminal process into the room.
That is why misuse of subpoena power is so dangerous. It can impose burden, stigma, cost and fear long before any indictment, and it can intimidate even when no charges are ever filed. Judge Boasberg understood that. He did not treat these subpoenas as some technical skirmish over records. He treated them as part of an effort to pressure the chair of an independent central bank and, in his words, to “bulldoz[e] the Fed’s statutory independence.”
That is why this ruling matters beyond Powell and beyond the Federal Reserve.
Judge Boasberg did not just quash subpoenas.
He modeled a more realistic way for courts to evaluate politically freighted exercises of state power.
And if more judges start doing the same, this opinion will be remembered as more than a rebuke in one ugly case. It will be remembered as an early sign that courts were no longer willing to separate presidential coercion from the legal machinery deployed to carry it out.
Duncan Levin is a criminal defense attorney and former federal prosecutor who serves as a Lecturer on Law at Harvard Law School and is a frequent contributor to MS NOW.
The Dictatorship
Judge writes Kari Lake ‘repeatedly thumbed her nose’ at legal requirements
Kari Lake“repeatedly thumbed her nose” at legal requirements as the Trump administration dismantled Voice of America.
A federal judge made that observation on Tuesday about the Donald Trump ally, when he ordered the setting aside of unlawful government actions at the agency, including the placement of more than 1,000 employees on administrative leave.
U.S. District Judge Royce Lamberth’s ruling restoring some of the administration’s destruction follows his previous ruling explaining why Lake wasn’t lawfully overseeing the international broadcaster, which started as an effort to counter Nazi propaganda during World War II.
In his latest rulingthe Reagan-appointed judge wrote that Lake had said that she “has no opinion about which countries censor and repress their people — or even the basic question of which regions of the world qualify as significant, as would be required just tofeigncompliance” with the law.
Lamberth noted that Trump had issued an executive orderlast year to reduce the “bureaucracy.” The order directed several agencies, including the one overseeing Voice of America, to reduce their functions to the minimum required by law.
But, as the judge explained, the government proceeded to immediately wind the agency down to “skeletal operations,” including placing nearly all staff on paid administrative leave, before determining what its minimum legal obligations were.
The judge called out the government’s “arbitrary and capricious” actions and its “hasty, indiscriminate approach.”
Notably, in light of the war in Iranamong the failures listed by Lamberth is that Voice of America was unable to operate its service in that country at current staffing levels, despite it being legally required to do so.
The judge ordered thatall employees placed on leave pursuant to a government directive last year return to work by March 23.
Subscribe to the Deadline: Legal Newsletter for expert analysis on the top legal stories of the week, including updates from the Supreme Court and developments in the Trump administration’s legal cases.
Jordan Rubin is the Deadline: Legal Blog writer. He was a prosecutor for the New York County District Attorney’s Office in Manhattan and is the author of “Bizarro,” a book about the secret war on synthetic drugs. Before he joined MS NOW, he was a legal reporter for Bloomberg Law.
The Dictatorship
In touting SAVE Act, Johnson refuses to cite any fraud it would have prevented
House Speaker Mike Johnson’s, R-La., refusal, or perhaps inability, to name a single example of voter fraud that would have been prevented by Republicans’ SAVE Act, which has the potential to disenfranchise millions of eligible votersprovided a revealing kickoff to the Senate’s debate on the legislation.
At a Tuesday press conference pegged to the Senate beginning debate on the bill, Johnson was asked to provide an example of previously committed voter fraud that the SAVE Act would have stopped. Johnson dismissed the question saying, “We’re not gonna litigate that,” before going on with his talking points.
Considering any act of actual voter fraud warrants being litigated, both in actual court and in the court of public opinion, it was an interesting choice of words.
Q: Can you give one example of fraud in a previous election that the SAVE America Act would stop?
MIKE JOHNSON: Look, we’re not gonna litigate all that pic.twitter.com/rLuEn4PJOx
—Aaron Rupar (@atrupar)”https://twitter.com/atrupar/status/2033918330269053434?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw”>March 17, 2026
Note the little trick Johnson used after declining to provide an example, because it’s a trick many Republicans are using these days. He said polling suggests a broad majority of Americans support requiring a photo ID to vote and that this amounts to support for the SAVE Act, which, beyond requiring a photo ID, would authorize other disenfranchising policies, such as limiting mail-in voting. It’s also worth noting Republicans have not proposed corresponding changes to make it easier for people to obtain the IDs they’d require, which is why many of the bill’s critics have said the SAVE Act is essentially a poll tax reminiscent of Jim Crow.
As for the polling equating to support for the bill, that isn’t always a measure of a policy’s efficacy or constitutionality. U.S. history is replete with examples in which broad public opinion has been at odds with civil rights.
But Johnson’s evasion is what’s most notable here. It’s remarkable that the MAGA movement, whose membership embraced slogans such as “facts over feelings,” seems bereft of facts to support claims that the SAVE Act is anything other than a ploy to help Republicans commandeer the electoral process and help the party win races.
Trump himself exposed the true motive behind this voter suppression effort. As he’s faced growing unpopularitythe president has called for his administration to “take over” elections in areas where Democrats have won and has pressured Republican lawmakers to pass the SAVE Act.
“He promised Republican lawmakers last week that passing the bill would ‘guarantee the midterms’ for the GOP,” the Washington Post reported Wednesday.
Even the conservative Wall Street Journal editorial board denounced the bill, arguing “a pyrrhic victory isn’t worth busting the Senate filibuster.”
“Although Mr. Trump insists that voter fraud is endemic, his big claims aren’t backed by hard evidence,” the editors wrote. They also warn the bill’s restrictions on absentee voting risk overruling conservative-led states. The SAVE Act, they pointed out, “wouldn’t turn blue states red, and it can’t save Republicans from voter anger at unpopular policies.”
Ja’han Jones is an MS NOW opinion blogger. He previously wrote The ReidOut Blog.
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