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Fractured Supreme Court not always in his corner
Los Angeles Times
|July 05, 2026
Despite giving Trump some wins, justices also deflated his claim to unlimited power.
PRESIDENT TRUMP walks past the Supreme Court justices in the Capitol.
Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. led a fractured Supreme Court this year that both expanded a president's power to run the government and dealt major defeats to President Trump.
In Trump's second year back in the White House, Roberts and the court punctured his claim to have power with no limits.
The justices struck down his worldwide tariffs, ruling these import taxes are a matter for Congress, not the president.
They also threw out his executive order that would end the principle of birthright citizenship. The Constitution wrote this promise into law, Roberts said, and the president may not change it.
The court also ruled in December that the president did not have the power to put National Guard troops on of Chicago.
The three decisions came over fierce dissents from conservative Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel A. Alito Jr. and with Neil M. Gorsuch in two of them.
The three liberal justices dissented angrily when the court ruled the administration may end Temporary Protected Status for Haitians and Syrians.
They did the same when the court ruled the president may replace the top appointees of semi-independent agencies.
But they joined Roberts in a 5-4 ruling that affirmed the independence of the Federal Reserve and blocked Trump's move to fire Fed Governor Lisa Cook.
Trump has won on most immigration fronts because Roberts and the conservatives believe Congress put the enforcement power in the hands of the administration.
This story is from the July 05, 2026 edition of Los Angeles Times.
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