National Review Online
Wednesday, July 09, 2025
Donald Trump’s administration is teetering on the
precipice of another constitutional crisis with the courts that has been
prompted by a single rogue district judge. This time, not only does he have
Congress on his side, he also has a strong case that the judge is trying to
spend money from the Treasury before the executive branch can exercise its
right to appeal, in derogation of the powers of all three branches of
government. Only a staggering act of judicial recklessness could bring us to
this pass. But here we are.
On Thursday, July 3, Congress passed the “One Big
Beautiful Bill,” which President Trump signed into law on July 4. It included a
provision designed to stop sending Medicaid funds to Planned Parenthood,
including its multifarious affiliates, for a period of one year. The core
business of the nation’s leading abortion provider is one that many Americans
find repugnant and that is now properly illegal in many states. (That’s even
aside from its growing sideline in gender transitions.) Less than two weeks ago,
the Supreme Court ruled 6–3 that only the executive branch, not the courts,
is empowered to decide when states may remove Planned Parenthood from their
Medicaid programs.
On the afternoon of Monday, July 7 — the first business
day after the law was signed — Planned Parenthood filed suit in federal court
in Massachusetts. The complaint started with a flimsy legal theory: that
defunding a corporation from federal contracts is a constitutionally forbidden
bill of attainder — a punishment comparable to legislatures throwing people in
jail or executing them. Courts have rejected that theory in cases defunding and
debarring ACORN and a Russian cybersecurity firm from federal work. Planned
Parenthood’s legal theories of retaliation for speech and violations of the
equal protection clause get more tenuous from there.
The case went to Judge Indira Talwani, a Barack Obama
appointee. Before even waiting to hear the Justice Department’s defense of a
duly enacted federal law, she issued a “temporary restraining order” (TRO)
ordering that the federal government, starting immediately and continuing the
next two weeks, “shall take all steps necessary to ensure that Medicaid funding
continues to be disbursed in the customary manner and timeframes to Planned
Parenthood” and affiliates. Planned Parenthood is already asking the court to
extend the order further before giving the federal government its day in court.
Judge Talwani did not issue a legal opinion explaining
why she was overturning an act of Congress. Her order made none of the findings
required under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure for a TRO. Nor is this a
proper TRO. As we have previously observed, “a TRO is supposed to restrain one side of a case
temporarily, so that nothing changes until the court can issue a final order
changing things, which then can be appealed. But [the district judge] tried to
force the government to pay money it can’t get back.” By ordering that moneys
be irrevocably withdrawn from the Treasury without an act of Congress — indeed,
in direct contravention of an act prohibiting them — she is flatly
contradicting the Constitution’s allocation of powers.
We continue to believe that it would be a perilous step for
the executive branch to defy or ignore the order of a federal court, and that
many bad things can flow from crossing that particular Rubicon. But Judge
Talwani has given the administration no other choice — at least so long as it
has the power to appeal her order to a higher court that gives the American
people due process of law. The Justice Department is obligated to defend any
act of Congress unless it is firmly convinced that the act is unconstitutional
— which this one is not, and which the president endorsed by signing it into
law just last week. The president is duty-bound by his oath of office not to
disburse funds to Planned Parenthood simply on the basis of an ex parte order
telling him to violate a federal statute and giving the United States Treasury
no remedy to get the money back if the TRO is overturned on appeal. Those three
factors together — the presumption of regularity that a federal law is
constitutional and must be obeyed by the president, the impropriety of an order
that changes the status quo and would vitiate the right to appeal, and the fact
that this involves spending taxpayer money without an appropriation — justify
the drastic step of refusing to comply with the order unless and until it has
been reviewed on appeal.
The Supreme Court’s recent decisions, including the Trump
v. CASA ruling limiting equitable injunctions and a Tuesday ruling staying
an injunction against a Trump order reducing the federal workforce, show that
its patience is running short with district judges who think they can create
new facts on the ground rather than limiting themselves to the proper judicial
role of declaring what the law is. The Court should act swiftly, if asked, to
suspend this order, too — not because it should sanction executive defiance of
the courts, but because it should never sanction judicial defiance.
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