[Congressional Record Volume 171, Number 59 (Wednesday, April 2, 2025)]
[Senate]
[Pages S2108-S2109]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
Trump Administration
Mrs. BLACKBURN. Madam President, in our constitutional Republic, the
President represents the will of ``we the people.'' He does this more
than any other elected official in this country because, alongside the
Vice President, he is the only office holder who is elected by the
entire Nation, State by State.
And in November, the American people gave President Trump a powerful
mandate to secure the border, lower inflation, rein in spending,
restore our standing in the world, and usher in what he terms is a new
``golden age'' for America. And to be certain, the administration is
seeing a lot of success, and the American people are very pleased with
what he has done.
However, on many fronts, the Trump agenda has been held up in court,
not for legitimate legal reasons but because activist judges want to
block as many actions by this administration as they possibly can.
In the last two months alone, judges issued more injunctions--and, in
February, that was 15 against President Trump--than they did against
President Biden in his entire 4 years. There were 14 against him.
Now, these judges are not issuing rulings on small details in narrow
cases. They are trying to stop policies at the heart of President
Trump's ``America First'' agenda.
What we know that the American people and, indeed, Tennesseans, whom
I represent--what they want to see is a government that is going to be
transparent, a government that is going to be accountable, a government
that will be a good steward of their money.
But activists on the left can't get what they want at the ballot box.
They lost on November 5. They lost, and they can't accept that. They
can't get what they want legislatively. They don't have the votes.
The American people said we are tired of leftist DEI-ESG policies. We
are tired of two tiers of justice. We are tired of seeing waste, fraud,
and abuse in the government. Reporting it, and the bureaucracy does
nothing--zip, zero, nada. They are tired of that, and they are pleased
with the actions that are being taken by this administration to hold
the bureaucracy to account--not for just what is some of what I think
they are doing, but for every single penny that they are spending and
every decision that they are making.
Now, as I said, we have got those on the left. They can't get what
they want at the ballot box. They can't get what they want
legislatively. They are looking at Governors and State legislators who
are not giving them what they want, which is control and power over the
American people.
But that is what the American people are saying: Oh, no, we are not
going to let you have that.
So what have our colleagues on the left decided to do? Well, there is
one branch of government that is left for them to try to go in and say:
You do it for us. We have failed. We can't get it legislatively. We
can't win these elections, but we are going to count on you.
And that is the judiciary.
So what we have seen and what is troubling so many Tennesseans is
activist judges that are on the bench, but, all of a sudden, they are
trying to act like they are Supreme Court Justices. They are trying to
act like they have the authority to take down the decisions and actions
of a President who is delivering what the American people want.
So our colleagues and friends on the left are now depending on the
judiciary to rescue them--to rescue them. They failed because they are
wrong, and the American people said we are not with you.
So now we have these judges. They are stepping up. They are district
judges.
Now, what we know is this. A district judge has a case before him.
His decision or her decision applies to that case, and it applies to
the district in which that judge is seated.
But oh, no, these activists on the court have decided they are going
to make nationwide injunctions to try to stop some of President Trump's
policies, which as I said, are policies the American people have said:
We want to see this done.
It is like cutting down the size of the Federal bureaucracy. The
American people are loving what DOGE is doing, but the leftists go to a
district judge out in, of all places, San Francisco, and they have that
judge issue an order to block what the President is doing.
So this district judge out in San Francisco--the ``left coast,''
appropriately named--directed the administration to rehire thousands of
terminated bureaucrats.
Tennesseans and a lot of Americans, also want a government that
spends taxpayer dollars responsibly because we have $36 trillion in
debt--$36 trillion in debt.
Now, the Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE, has already
found north of $140 billion in waste and fraud. They have identified
this, and we are working to save this money for the taxpayers.
But here, again, the left can't pass what they want on the floor of
the Senate or the floor of the House. So they go to the judiciary, and
they say: You stop them because we can't get enough of the taxpayer
money. We want more of it, and we want to shove it out the door to
leftist NGOs and organizations and nonprofits. We want that money so we
can waste it the way we want to waste it.
Now, that is, in essence, what they are saying. They want the power
and the authority to waste your money. That is what the Democrats are
working for.
Well, DOGE is working for the people--for the people. Go pick up
those founding documents: ``People''--``We the People.'' It is in caps.
It is in caps.
But see what happens with the bureaucracy? The people stand up to be
the people, and, all of a sudden, the leftists say: Oh, no, this is our
sandbox. We have got to have more spending. We have got to have more
money. We want to waste it all.
Who is going to pay for this? It is going to be our kids and our
grandkids because it not only affects our Nation's solvency; that
addresses our Nation's ability to be a sovereign nation.
We have got activist judges, and oh, you know, all those NGOs--they
are
[[Page S2109]]
just stuck in a tear over this. So you have got a judge that says: Oh,
no, you have got to send this money out.
Are you kidding me? They don't want to save the taxpayers' money?
Now, I think one that has come up so often with Tennesseans and the
reason this issue of these out-of-control leftist judges came up on our
telephone townhall last night--by the way, we had thousands of
Tennesseans on that call, and it had to do with deporting these
criminal illegal aliens--Tren de Aragua, MS-13.
To my colleagues, I remind you, we have deemed them foreign terrorist
organizations. These are not people who are our friends. These are
people who are terrorists. They are gangs. They have murdered. They
have raped. They have robbed.
But we have some of our friends on the left who are saying: Oh, you
can't deport them. You can't send them to the gang prison in El
Salvador. You have got to bring them back.
Are you kidding me? Show me somebody that actually wants to have more
murderers and rapists and robbers in their community.
I invite anybody: If you want to go out there and protect rapists and
murders and robbers, you come on down here, and you explain why you
would like to have them come.
If they are for that, I would like to hear why they are.
But what we see happening is these activist judges are undermining
our Nation's Constitution. In each of our Nation's 677 district judges,
there is no veto power over the President--none. They do not have it.
There is nothing--nothing--that gives a Federal district judge veto
power over the actions of the President of the United States.
Now, if they did have that power, they would be circumventing the
will of the people, and we would no longer be a sovereign nation.
The separation of powers works both ways. Judges must respect the
President's authority over the executive branch. That is his
jurisdiction.
To ensure that happens, my Republican colleagues and I are
introducing the Judicial Relief Clarification Act.
Now, this is being led by Senator Chuck Grassley, who is chairman of
our Judiciary Committee. And it would end this harmful practice of
nationwide injunctions, make temporary restraining orders against
Federal or State governments immediately appealable, and ensure the
courts can only issue relief for the case or the controversy before
them.
A district judge in San Francisco or anywhere else should not ever be
deciding national policy. That is not something they have the ability
to do. Altogether, these provisions would help restore Federal courts
to their core purpose, which is administering justice under the rule of
law--not deciding nationwide policy.