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- Sep 20, 2018
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While the president may well enjoy all sorts of immunities, to what extent do these extend to cabinet members, departmental heads and civil servants who carry out his instructions in defiance of a court order?Can the president send these men to labour camp in El Salvador without reference to the courts. And:
Can the executive can ignore a court order
The answer to both, unfortunately is: He can, until someone finds a way to stop him.
Federal court decisions are enforced -by- the Executive Branch. If the president tells his administration to follow his own orders instead of the courts, he can back that up by firing anyone who refuses.
It then falls to his cabinet to invoke the 25th to declare him incompetent (and many avian primates will sally forth from my rectal orifice before THAT happens.)
Which leaves congress to impeach the him and hold a trial (I think the chief justice is supposed to preside over the trial held by the senate). Which is going to require a blue landslide in the midterms.
And if he refuses to leave after being symbolically removed from office... and the federal agents responsible for physically removing him from the white house also refuse to remove him... then what happens?
We're definitely in the -dumbest- timeline, not just the darkest.
Is "I was only obeying orders" a defence?



















