Donald Trump issued a ruling on Friday that continues to issue a Supreme Court decision to stop his efforts to deport immigrants without due process, citing an ancient wartime law.
On Saturday, Trump shared a social post by Mike Davis, one of his most extreme magazine allies, saying the Supreme Court has introduced an "illegal ban on the U.S. president, preventing him from directing military operations to expel these foreign terrorists."
Davis added in the post that Trump “should place these terrorists near the Chevrolet Chase Country Club and be released during the day.” (Supreme Court Justices John Roberts and Brett Kavanaugh both live in Chevrolet Chase, Maryland.)
Trump shared another Davis article, complaining that the judges blocked Trump’s “no years of court proceedings” and deported undocumented immigrants. "The Supreme Court must come to rescue the United States," the president wrote.
It should be clear that the Supreme Court did not stop Trump from expelling undocumented or foreign-born terrorists, but instead deported immigrants under the Foreign Enemy Act, the 1798 law of 1798 to justify internships with Japanese Americans.
Trump used the Alien Enemy Act to deport hundreds of Venezuelans and transport immigrants to the El Salvador prison, known for its civil rights violations. These deportations are based on Trump's administration's determination that immigrants are members of the gang that the president considers terrorist groups.
The government’s claims about immigration gangs seem extremely strange – several courts have ruled that Trump’s use of the Foreign Enemy Act is illegal because the law aims to use the law during a foreign “invasion” or “invasion” or “predatory invasion”, neither of which occurred.
The Supreme Court has not weighed whether Trump is legally using foreign enemies. On the contrary, judges have no respect for the constitutional right to not respect the due process rights of immigrants.
The High Court previously ruled that under the Foreign Enemy Act, Trump must enable immigrants to challenge their evacuation. Last month, the Trump administration tried to use the law to conduct new deportations. This time, under the Alien Enemies Act, but in English alone, immigrants were notified of their pending dismissal notice. They were given hours to compete for their strikes and were not told they had the right to do so.
The Supreme Court intervened and temporarily stopped these dismissals. On Friday afternoon, the Supreme Court issued a 7-2 ruling prohibiting more deportations under the Foreign Enemy Act and returning the matter to the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals for further review.
The judge wrote that the government had insufficient notice to the deported immigration: "Please note about 24 hours before evacuation that there is no information on how to exercise the right to compete and certainly will not be passed through the call."
These judges cite from previous rulings directing the Trump administration to respect due process rights to immigrants: “The (Fifth Amendment) entitles foreigners to appropriate legal proceedings in the context of dismissal procedures,” they wrote.
Trump has now issued several complaints about the ruling, and some have been published by the President's Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller.
"The courts are undermining democracy," Miller wrote on Saturday X. He shared a screenshot in the CBS News/Yougov poll. Polls found that as of late April, 56% of Americans favored the Trump administration's plans to find and deport illegal immigrants.
However, the same poll found that two-thirds of Americans believe that non-citizens should undergo a court hearing or other U.S. legal process (as the law does) before Trump’s expulsion.
Polls found that 85% of Americans believe that the Trump administration should comply with the court's ruling if the Supreme Court adopts policy or administrative litigation provisions against the Trump administration.