The MAGA Supreme Court's Assault on America

The MAGA Supreme Court's Assault on America

The Supreme Court ruled that Trump can deport 350,000 Haitian immigrants without courts being able to review whether the law was followed — and Alito refused to even quote Trump's racist remarks in the opinion.

Jun 28, 2026 1:11:25 Difficulty: Intermediate Played

TL;DR

Dan Pfeiffer and Strict Scrutiny's Leah Litman break down a devastating week of Supreme Court rulings: a 6-3 decision stripping TPS protections from 350,000 Haitian immigrants, a ruling creating a loophole that incentivizes illegal border crossings over lawful asylum claims, and a 7-2 Monsanto/Roundup decision the liberal justices surprisingly joined. They preview looming decisions on birthright citizenship, trans sports bans, Federal Reserve independence, and campaign finance. The single most important takeaway: the Roberts Court is systematically dismantling who gets to sue to enforce their rights — corporations win, everyone else loses.

#TPS rescission #asylum loophole #birthright citizenship #unitary executive theory #mail ballot grace period #Citizens United successor #Dobbs anniversary #Kavanaugh confirmation #Susan Collins accountability #Monsanto FIFRA ruling #trans sports ban #Federal Reserve independence #bench dissent #Roberts Court corporate bias #NRSC coordination case #Supreme Court #TPS #Haitian immigrants #asylum #Alito #immigration #Roe v. Wade #Susan Collins #Kavanaugh #trans rights #campaign finance #mail ballots #Federal Reserve #Monsanto #Roundup #unitary executive #Dobbs #judicial review

Dan Pfeiffer and Strict Scrutiny's Leah Litman analyze a week of major Supreme Court rulings on immigration TPS and asylum, plus a Monsanto/Roundup decision, then preview upcoming decisions on birthright citizenship, trans rights, Federal Reserve independence, mail ballots, and campaign finance. They close with Leah's pointed response to Susan Collins's claims about her Kavanaugh vote and Roe v. Wade.

Chapter list
  • The episode opens with back-to-back pre-roll sponsor reads: McDonald's promotes six new drinks including Strawberry Watermelon and Mango Pineapple Refreshers with popping boba, and OnDeck pitches its small business loans up to $400,000 with an A+ BBB rating. These are brief commercial breaks before any editorial content begins.

  • Dan sets the scene: this was supposed to be the week the Supreme Court finished all its major decisions before the Fourth of July holiday, but Sam Alito and John Roberts had other plans. He introduces Leah Litman — law professor, Strict Scrutiny co-host, and author of 'Lawless' — and maps out the terrain: immigration rulings already out, and pending blockbusters on birthright citizenship, trans sports, the Federal Reserve, and election law. He also pitches Friends of the Pod subscriptions and his Substack newsletter, The Message Box.

  • Before diving into the substance, Leah Litman flags a procedural indignity: for decades, the Court has operated on an unwritten but firm tradition of resolving all argued cases before the Independence Day holiday. This court, despite its performative reverence for historical tradition, couldn't even manage that. It's a small point, but a revealing one — these justices claim originalism and tradition as guiding stars while failing to honor one of the institution's most basic customs.

  • This is the week's most immediately devastating ruling. Leah explains that TPS — which requires the executive branch to consult across agencies and document changed conditions before ending the program — was rescinded for Haitian and Syrian nationals by Kristi Noem in late 2025. Emails show DHS asked the State Department to weigh in on Haiti's conditions and then canceled TPS before State ever responded. That's not consultation. And on top of the statutory violation, Trump's own words — calling Haiti a 'shithole country,' claiming Haitians had AIDS, accusing them of poisoning American blood — point squarely to racial animus. Sam Alito's opinion does neither: it erases the statutory review mechanism entirely (courts can no longer check whether the executive followed the required process) and declares Trump's remarks 'not overtly racial' without quoting a single one. Justice Kagan's dissent notes the ruling effectively tells the government it can 'put these people on the next plane.'

  • The Haitian and Syrian cases are only the beginning. The Trump administration has moved to end TPS for nationals from Venezuela, Nicaragua, El Salvador, Afghanistan, and Ukraine. When Trump took office, over a million people held TPS. Now, in light of a ruling that guts judicial review of these decisions and excuses presidential racism, every one of those rescissions becomes nearly unreviewable. Most chillingly, the people being targeted are those who followed the rules — they submitted to vetting, they do check-ins with immigration officers. The government knows exactly who they are and where they live. Justice Kagan's dissent says it plainly: the court is inviting the administration to put these people on the next plane.

  • In a ruling Leah Litman calls 'unhinged,' the Court held that individuals must physically be inside the United States to have a legal right to claim asylum. The case originated from a challenge to the Obama-era metering policy — which acknowledged asylum rights but limited daily processing capacity — but the policy had already ended by the time the Court ruled. The decision was entirely voluntary: the Court went out of its way to create this loophole. As Justice Sotomayor's dissent puts it, the consequences are predictable: more people will die, because the only rational response to this ruling is to attempt an illegal crossing rather than present yourself lawfully at a port of entry. The ruling penalizes the rule-followers and rewards the lawbreakers — and in doing so, drives desperate people toward criminal trafficking networks.

  • After the asylum ruling was announced, Justice Sotomayor invoked one of the Court's rarest traditions: she read portions of her dissent aloud from the bench. This act, reserved for the most profound objections, signals a justice's belief that the majority has done something genuinely grievous. What happened next was almost without precedent — Justice Alito responded from the bench, suggesting he could have rebutted her arguments more thoroughly had he known she'd read more of her dissent. Dan and Leah connect this to Alito's 2010 State of the Union outburst, when he visibly reacted to Obama's criticism of Citizens United. The pattern, they argue, is an impulse control problem — particularly visible when he is criticized by people of color.

  • Squarespace is pitched as an all-in-one website platform with drag-and-drop editing, professional templates, and built-in analytics. ChiliPad 2.0 is described as a water-based mattress topper that actively controls bed temperature from 55 to 115 degrees to improve sleep quality. Dan shares that he owns the original ChiliPad and plans to upgrade; he describes his pre-sleep temperature strategy.

  • Not every ruling this week broke cleanly on ideological lines. The Monsanto decision was 7-2, with Kagan and Sotomayor siding with the conservatives, while Ketanji Brown Jackson and Neil Gorsuch dissented. Leah Litman thinks the majority probably got it right: Congress made an explicit choice in FIFRA to prioritize uniformity and EPA expertise over state-level jury verdicts when it comes to pesticide labeling. But she has larger concerns — this ruling joins a pattern in which corporations are increasingly insulated from accountability, from human rights liability to cancer claims. The plaintiffs can still try to compel the EPA to update the label going forward, but they cannot recover damages for harm they've already suffered.

  • Viewed individually, each ruling has its own legal rationale. Viewed together, they tell a single story. This week: corporations can't be sued for abetting foreign government atrocities; corporations can't be sued for insufficient cancer warnings on pesticide labels; corporations can sue Cuba for seizing their oil. Meanwhile: TPS holders can't challenge their deportation in court; incarcerated people can't sue officials who violate their religious rights; permanent residents can't enforce their right to re-enter the country. The consistent answer to the question 'who gets to sue and win' in the Roberts Court is: corporations. Everyone else — immigrants, prisoners, workers, asylum seekers — has been systematically stripped of legal recourse.

  • The birthright citizenship case should, in theory, be simple: the 14th Amendment's first sentence grants citizenship to all persons born in the United States and subject to its jurisdiction. The executive order purporting to deny it is, Leah says, 'wildly illegal.' And yet the Court has held the case for months, which likely signals a non-unanimous decision. Even if the Court rules against Trump, dissenting opinions from Thomas and Alito could normalize the idea that birthright citizenship is constitutionally contestable — making it the next Republican judicial litmus test, just as opposing Roe became a litmus test. And Leah argues the Court itself manufactured this situation: last year it refused to simply say the order was unconstitutional, instead demanding the Solicitor General bring the case back to give the Court a chance to play hero — creating its own PR opportunity while having already greenlighted far more harmful immigration rulings.

  • Leah ventures into the dark recesses of right-wing legal circles to surface two theories that could appear in a dissenting opinion — or worse. The first equates unauthorized immigration with a military invasion, arguing that children of 'invaders' aren't entitled to birthright citizenship, borrowing from Great Replacement Theory. The second generalizes the narrow exception for children of foreign diplomats into a sweeping 'allegiance' test: if your parents don't owe allegiance to the United States, you don't become a citizen. Both theories, Leah argues, rest on underlying racist assumptions about who is 'sufficiently American' — the same logic the Supreme Court used in Dred Scott v. Sanford, which denied citizenship to the descendants of enslaved people on identical grounds.

  • SimpliSafe is pitched as a comprehensive home security system requiring no drilling, with 24/7 professional monitoring and over 5 million users. Willie's Remedy — a THC-infused social tonic created by Willie Nelson — is described as a low-calorie alcohol alternative with fast-acting effects; Dan and the co-host both praise it, noting they served it at a recent wedding.

  • Two pending cases test the limits of presidential removal power. The first asks whether the president can fire commissioners of independent multi-member agencies — the FTC, SEC, EEOC, NLRB — despite a nearly century-old precedent (Humphrey's Executor) limiting that power. The Supreme Court already signaled it would adopt the unitary executive theory, but carved out a bespoke exception for the Federal Reserve because applying the theory there would allow the president to blow up the global economy. Trump immediately tested the exception by attempting to fire a Fed governor. The second case (the Lisa Cook case) asks whether Trump violated the existing statutory limits on firing Fed governors — a narrower question than the sweeping agency one. Leah emphasizes that if the larger case goes against independent agencies, it gives the president power to install loyalists at the FTC, SEC, and beyond — using regulatory power to reward friends and punish enemies.

  • The trans sports case was decided at oral argument, Leah says — the six Republican-appointed justices are virtually certain to uphold state bans as consistent with Title IX. The disturbing variables are what else the ruling says. At the more extreme end, a ruling could hold that Title IX not only permits these bans but mandates them. And an equal protection ruling saying that laws discriminating against trans people require no meaningful judicial scrutiny would functionally immunize every anti-trans state policy — from healthcare bans to bathroom restrictions to school exclusions — from constitutional challenge. Even if Congress later tried to pass protective legislation, Leah notes that this particular Supreme Court has repeatedly found ways to gut spending conditions and override congressional choices.

  • The Republican National Committee is challenging Mississippi's five-day grace period for mail-in ballots received after Election Day, arguing a federal law requires all ballots to be received by Election Day. If the Court agrees, it would invalidate ballot-receipt grace periods in approximately 29 states. The timing is catastrophic: state and local election officials have already begun preparing to administer elections under existing rules; mid-cycle upheaval would create administrative chaos and voter confusion. Historically, flexible ballot timing originated during the Civil War to ensure Union soldiers could vote — and today, overseas military members would be among the first disenfranchised by a ruling that only counts ballots received on Election Day itself. Even a narrow ruling raises broader questions, Leah warns: if Election Day is magical, why count early-received absentee ballots at all?

  • The NRSC is challenging limits on how closely party committees can coordinate spending with candidates — limits that function as a de facto cap on direct donations. If the Court strikes them down, it opens the door to the final frontier: no contribution limits at all. Instead of Elon Musk spending $132 million through super PACs, he simply writes a check to the candidate. Dan and Leah note that the Trump administration itself isn't even defending the law — they're on the NRSC's side. The only sliver of hope is that the Court might find the case moot. Otherwise, this ruling would rapidly accelerate the concentration of donor power in America's elections, building on decades of Roberts Court decisions that have steadily deregulated campaign finance.

  • Dan plays a clip of Susan Collins arguing on Fox News that Roe would have been overturned 6-3 with or without Kavanaugh. Leah dismantles this in seconds: Chief Justice Roberts did not vote to overrule Roe — he voted to narrow it, not eliminate it. The Dobbs majority was exactly five justices. Collins confirmed the fifth. Her claim is simply, factually wrong. But Leah's deeper contempt is for the framing itself — 'I disagree with the outcome, I don't regret my vote' — which requires pretending that Brett Kavanaugh has done something worth the documented loss of women's lives, fertility, and health in post-Roe America. The discussion closes on the Maine Senate race where Graham Plattner is running against Collins, and the broader accountability opportunity the 2026 midterms represent.

  • It's been four years since Dobbs. Pro-choice identification is at an all-time high and has held steady — a remarkable shift in American public opinion. Dan argues the 2024 election was a one-off distorted by unique factors, and that Trump was a singular exception because nobody actually believed he was anti-abortion. The other Republicans — Ken Paxton, state-level architects of the harshest abortion bans — don't have that cover. Leah shares the optimism but adds her persistent fear: she has 'rarely gone wrong in estimating the amount of misogyny Americans will tolerate in their politics'. They close on a call to action — call senators, give blue slips, support primary challenges to Fetterman and others, and vote at votesaveamerica.com.

  • Armra Colostrum is described as a gut health and immune support supplement; ThirdLove is pitched as a comfort-first bra brand with over 60 sizes; Carvana promotes its fully online, from-home car buying experience. These reads air near the episode's conclusion.

  • Dan closes by acknowledging this was not the most optimistic episode in Pod Save America's history, but calls it insightful and important. He thanks Leah, promotes upcoming Strict Scrutiny episodes, and signs off with production credits including the Writers Guild of America East union affiliation of the staff.

Temporary Protected Status (TPS)
A US immigration program that grants legal status and work authorization to nationals of designated countries experiencing disasters, conflict, or other extraordinary conditions that make return unsafe.
FIFRA
Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act — the federal law giving the EPA authority to regulate pesticides and approve their labels; central to the Monsanto/Roundup ruling.
Unitary executive theory
A constitutional doctrine holding that the president has broad or plenary power over all executive branch functions, including the authority to fire agency heads at will without Congressional limitation.
Metering policy
A border management practice where immigration officials limit the number of asylum seekers processed at a port of entry on any given day, telling others to return later when capacity allows.
Bench dissent
When a Supreme Court justice reads portions of their written dissent aloud from the bench after a majority opinion is announced, signaling an unusually strong objection to the decision.
Overton window
The range of policy ideas the public considers acceptable at any given time; used here to describe how even a non-unanimous birthright ruling could normalize previously fringe legal positions.
Title IX
A 1972 federal law prohibiting sex discrimination in any education program or activity receiving federal funding; at issue in the trans athlete cases before the Supreme Court.
Administrative Procedure Act (APA)
A federal law governing how government agencies create and enforce regulations, and providing a legal basis for suing agencies for failing to follow required procedures.
Equal protection
The 14th Amendment's guarantee that the government must apply the law equally to all persons; at stake in the trans rights cases regarding what level of judicial scrutiny applies to laws targeting trans people.
Coordination limit
Campaign finance rules restricting how closely a political party can work with a candidate in spending money, to prevent coordinated spending from functioning as an unlimited direct contribution.
Citizens United
The landmark 2010 Supreme Court decision that held corporations and other groups have a First Amendment right to spend unlimited money on independent political expenditures.
Plenary power
Absolute, unqualified authority in a given area — used here to describe the broad executive power over immigration that the Court's rulings appear to grant the president.
Racial animus
Discriminatory motivation rooted in racial prejudice; a constitutional standard under which a government policy motivated by racial hostility can be struck down as unconstitutional.
Dred Scott v. Sanford
The 1857 Supreme Court decision that held Black Americans could not be citizens; cited here as a historical parallel to legal theories that would deny birthright citizenship based on 'allegiance' tests.
Spending clause
The constitutional provision allowing Congress to attach conditions to federal funding; the basis for laws like Title IX that require non-discrimination as a condition of receiving federal money.
Retrograde
Directed or moving backward; used here by Dan Pfeiffer to describe abortion restrictions he views as regressive steps against previously established rights.
Delegalization
The act of removing legal status from a group or activity; coined in the episode to describe the mass loss of lawful presence that TPS rescissions would cause for over a million immigrants.
Perfunctory
Carried out with minimal effort or reflection; implicitly referenced in critiques of the administration's hollow 'consultation' process before canceling TPS.

Chapter 2 · 01:20

Introduction: Dan Introduces Leah Litman and the Week's Supreme Court Stakes

Dan sets the scene: this was supposed to be the week the Supreme Court finished all its major decisions before the Fourth of July holiday, but Sam Alito and John Roberts had other plans. He introduces Leah Litman — law professor, Strict Scrutiny co-host, and author of 'Lawless' — and maps out the terrain: immigration rulings already out, and pending blockbusters on birthright citizenship, trans sports, the Federal Reserve, and election law. He also pitches Friends of the Pod subscriptions and his Substack newsletter, The Message Box.

Chapter 3 · 03:42

The Supreme Court's Broken Tradition: Missing the Pre-Holiday Deadline

Before diving into the substance, Leah Litman flags a procedural indignity: for decades, the Court has operated on an unwritten but firm tradition of resolving all argued cases before the Independence Day holiday. This court, despite its performative reverence for historical tradition, couldn't even manage that. It's a small point, but a revealing one — these justices claim originalism and tradition as guiding stars while failing to honor one of the institution's most basic customs.

Government
Data point 350,000

The MAGA Supreme Court's Assault on America · Jun 28, 2026

The 6-3 Supreme Court ruling allows the Trump administration to rescind Temporary Protected Status for 350,000 Haitian immigrants, potentially enabling their deportation.

Chapter 4 · 04:10

The 6-3 TPS Ruling: Stripping Legal Status from 350,000 Haitians

This is the week's most immediately devastating ruling. Leah explains that TPS — which requires the executive branch to consult across agencies and document changed conditions before ending the program — was rescinded for Haitian and Syrian nationals by Kristi Noem in late 2025. Emails show DHS asked the State Department to weigh in on Haiti's conditions and then canceled TPS before State ever responded. That's not consultation. And on top of the statutory violation, Trump's own words — calling Haiti a 'shithole country,' claiming Haitians had AIDS, accusing them of poisoning American blood — point squarely to racial animus. Sam Alito's opinion does neither: it erases the statutory review mechanism entirely (courts can no longer check whether the executive followed the required process) and declares Trump's remarks 'not overtly racial' without quoting a single one. Justice Kagan's dissent notes the ruling effectively tells the government it can 'put these people on the next plane.'

Claims made here

The Trump administration canceled TPS for Haiti before the State Department even responded to the DHS request to weigh in on conditions in Haiti.

Leah Litman no source cited

Trump called Haiti a 'shithole country,' said Haitians had AIDS, and accused them of 'poisoning the blood of the country.'

Leah Litman no source cited

Justice Alito did not quote Trump's racist remarks about Haitians in his TPS majority opinion, while declaring them 'not overtly racial.'

Leah Litman no source cited

Government
Racial Animus Alito Won't Even Quote

The MAGA Supreme Court's Assault on America · Jun 28, 2026 Government

Trump called Haiti a 'shithole country,' said Haitians had AIDS, and accused them of poisoning American blood — and Alito declared none of it 'overtly racial' without quoting a single remark. If you won't repeat what someone said to prove they're not racist, that's the tell.

Chapter 5 · 11:40

The Largest Delegalization in US History: 1M+ TPS Holders at Risk

The Haitian and Syrian cases are only the beginning. The Trump administration has moved to end TPS for nationals from Venezuela, Nicaragua, El Salvador, Afghanistan, and Ukraine. When Trump took office, over a million people held TPS. Now, in light of a ruling that guts judicial review of these decisions and excuses presidential racism, every one of those rescissions becomes nearly unreviewable. Most chillingly, the people being targeted are those who followed the rules — they submitted to vetting, they do check-ins with immigration officers. The government knows exactly who they are and where they live. Justice Kagan's dissent says it plainly: the court is inviting the administration to put these people on the next plane.

Claims made here

When Trump took office, more than one million people were living in the United States with Temporary Protected Status.

Leah Litman no source cited

Government
Data point 1M+

The MAGA Supreme Court's Assault on America · Jun 28, 2026

When Trump took office, more than one million people were living in the US with Temporary Protected Status from countries including Haiti, Syria, Venezuela, Nicaragua, and El Salvador.

Chapter 6 · 14:00

The Asylum Ruling: A Loophole That Rewards Illegal Crossings

In a ruling Leah Litman calls 'unhinged,' the Court held that individuals must physically be inside the United States to have a legal right to claim asylum. The case originated from a challenge to the Obama-era metering policy — which acknowledged asylum rights but limited daily processing capacity — but the policy had already ended by the time the Court ruled. The decision was entirely voluntary: the Court went out of its way to create this loophole. As Justice Sotomayor's dissent puts it, the consequences are predictable: more people will die, because the only rational response to this ruling is to attempt an illegal crossing rather than present yourself lawfully at a port of entry. The ruling penalizes the rule-followers and rewards the lawbreakers — and in doing so, drives desperate people toward criminal trafficking networks.

Claims made here

The asylum ruling creates a loophole: if the executive branch physically blocks migrants outside the US border, it does not have to consider any of their asylum applications.

Leah Litman no source cited

The metering policy that originated the asylum case began almost a decade ago and was ended before the Supreme Court ruled on it.

Leah Litman no source cited

Chapter 7 · 18:20

A Historic Bench Confrontation: Sotomayor Dissents Aloud, Alito Responds

After the asylum ruling was announced, Justice Sotomayor invoked one of the Court's rarest traditions: she read portions of her dissent aloud from the bench. This act, reserved for the most profound objections, signals a justice's belief that the majority has done something genuinely grievous. What happened next was almost without precedent — Justice Alito responded from the bench, suggesting he could have rebutted her arguments more thoroughly had he known she'd read more of her dissent. Dan and Leah connect this to Alito's 2010 State of the Union outburst, when he visibly reacted to Obama's criticism of Citizens United. The pattern, they argue, is an impulse control problem — particularly visible when he is criticized by people of color.

Claims made here

Reading a dissent from the bench has happened only rarely, and having the majority author respond to a bench dissent has happened maybe once or twice in Supreme Court history.

Leah Litman no source cited

Samuel Alito heckled President Obama during the 2010 State of the Union address in reaction to the Citizens United ruling being criticized.

Dan Pfeiffer no source cited

Chapter 9 · 23:55

The Monsanto Roundup Ruling: When the Liberals Joined the Conservatives

Not every ruling this week broke cleanly on ideological lines. The Monsanto decision was 7-2, with Kagan and Sotomayor siding with the conservatives, while Ketanji Brown Jackson and Neil Gorsuch dissented. Leah Litman thinks the majority probably got it right: Congress made an explicit choice in FIFRA to prioritize uniformity and EPA expertise over state-level jury verdicts when it comes to pesticide labeling. But she has larger concerns — this ruling joins a pattern in which corporations are increasingly insulated from accountability, from human rights liability to cancer claims. The plaintiffs can still try to compel the EPA to update the label going forward, but they cannot recover damages for harm they've already suffered.

Claims made here

The 7-2 Monsanto ruling means individuals cannot sue pesticide manufacturers for inadequate warning labels if the EPA has approved those labels under FIFRA.

Leah Litman no source cited

Chapter 10 · 28:50

The Week's True Verdict: Corporations Win, Everyone Else Loses

Viewed individually, each ruling has its own legal rationale. Viewed together, they tell a single story. This week: corporations can't be sued for abetting foreign government atrocities; corporations can't be sued for insufficient cancer warnings on pesticide labels; corporations can sue Cuba for seizing their oil. Meanwhile: TPS holders can't challenge their deportation in court; incarcerated people can't sue officials who violate their religious rights; permanent residents can't enforce their right to re-enter the country. The consistent answer to the question 'who gets to sue and win' in the Roberts Court is: corporations. Everyone else — immigrants, prisoners, workers, asylum seekers — has been systematically stripped of legal recourse.

Chapter 11 · 31:10

Birthright Citizenship: Why the Delay Is Alarming

The birthright citizenship case should, in theory, be simple: the 14th Amendment's first sentence grants citizenship to all persons born in the United States and subject to its jurisdiction. The executive order purporting to deny it is, Leah says, 'wildly illegal.' And yet the Court has held the case for months, which likely signals a non-unanimous decision. Even if the Court rules against Trump, dissenting opinions from Thomas and Alito could normalize the idea that birthright citizenship is constitutionally contestable — making it the next Republican judicial litmus test, just as opposing Roe became a litmus test. And Leah argues the Court itself manufactured this situation: last year it refused to simply say the order was unconstitutional, instead demanding the Solicitor General bring the case back to give the Court a chance to play hero — creating its own PR opportunity while having already greenlighted far more harmful immigration rulings.

Government
Birthright Citizenship: Why the Delay Is Alarming

The MAGA Supreme Court's Assault on America · Jun 28, 2026 Government

The 14th Amendment plainly says all persons born in the US are citizens, yet the Court has sat on this case for months. Leah Litman warns the delay likely signals a non-unanimous ruling — and even dissents from Thomas and Alito could make rejecting birthright citizenship the next Republican judicial litmus test.

Chapter 14 · 44:00

Pending Cases: Federal Reserve Independence and Independent Agencies

Two pending cases test the limits of presidential removal power. The first asks whether the president can fire commissioners of independent multi-member agencies — the FTC, SEC, EEOC, NLRB — despite a nearly century-old precedent (Humphrey's Executor) limiting that power. The Supreme Court already signaled it would adopt the unitary executive theory, but carved out a bespoke exception for the Federal Reserve because applying the theory there would allow the president to blow up the global economy. Trump immediately tested the exception by attempting to fire a Fed governor. The second case (the Lisa Cook case) asks whether Trump violated the existing statutory limits on firing Fed governors — a narrower question than the sweeping agency one. Leah emphasizes that if the larger case goes against independent agencies, it gives the president power to install loyalists at the FTC, SEC, and beyond — using regulatory power to reward friends and punish enemies.

Claims made here

Willie's Remedy has sold out 3 times in its first 6 months and has over 300,000 customers.

Leah Litman no source cited

Government
Trans Sports Bans: The Worst-Case Spectrum

The MAGA Supreme Court's Assault on America · Jun 28, 2026 Government

Leah Litman expects the six Republican-appointed justices to uphold state bans on trans athletes, but the real danger is a ruling that Title IX not only permits but requires such bans — or an equal protection holding stripping trans people of meaningful judicial scrutiny in any context.

Chapter 15 · 49:30

Pending Cases: Trans Sports Bans and the Equal Protection Danger

The trans sports case was decided at oral argument, Leah says — the six Republican-appointed justices are virtually certain to uphold state bans as consistent with Title IX. The disturbing variables are what else the ruling says. At the more extreme end, a ruling could hold that Title IX not only permits these bans but mandates them. And an equal protection ruling saying that laws discriminating against trans people require no meaningful judicial scrutiny would functionally immunize every anti-trans state policy — from healthcare bans to bathroom restrictions to school exclusions — from constitutional challenge. Even if Congress later tried to pass protective legislation, Leah notes that this particular Supreme Court has repeatedly found ways to gut spending conditions and override congressional choices.

Government
Mail Ballot Grace Periods and the Midterms

The MAGA Supreme Court's Assault on America · Jun 28, 2026 Government

The RNC is asking the Supreme Court to rule that ballots received even one day after Election Day can't be counted, which would upend voting procedures in 29 states mid-cycle. The practice of flexible mail ballot counting dates back to Civil War-era protections for Union soldiers.

Chapter 16 · 53:45

Pending Cases: Mail Ballot Grace Periods and Midterm Chaos

The Republican National Committee is challenging Mississippi's five-day grace period for mail-in ballots received after Election Day, arguing a federal law requires all ballots to be received by Election Day. If the Court agrees, it would invalidate ballot-receipt grace periods in approximately 29 states. The timing is catastrophic: state and local election officials have already begun preparing to administer elections under existing rules; mid-cycle upheaval would create administrative chaos and voter confusion. Historically, flexible ballot timing originated during the Civil War to ensure Union soldiers could vote — and today, overseas military members would be among the first disenfranchised by a ruling that only counts ballots received on Election Day itself. Even a narrow ruling raises broader questions, Leah warns: if Election Day is magical, why count early-received absentee ballots at all?

Claims made here

The RNC's mail ballot case, if decided in its favor, would nullify or change vote-counting procedures in 29 states.

Leah Litman no source cited

The practice of voting outside of Election Day originated during the Civil War to ensure Union soldiers could cast their ballots.

Leah Litman no source cited

Government
Data point 29

The MAGA Supreme Court's Assault on America · Jun 28, 2026

The Supreme Court's pending mail ballot case could nullify or change how votes are counted in 29 states, potentially destabilizing midterm election administration.

Chapter 17 · 59:10

Pending Cases: Campaign Finance and the End of Contribution Limits

The NRSC is challenging limits on how closely party committees can coordinate spending with candidates — limits that function as a de facto cap on direct donations. If the Court strikes them down, it opens the door to the final frontier: no contribution limits at all. Instead of Elon Musk spending $132 million through super PACs, he simply writes a check to the candidate. Dan and Leah note that the Trump administration itself isn't even defending the law — they're on the NRSC's side. The only sliver of hope is that the Court might find the case moot. Otherwise, this ruling would rapidly accelerate the concentration of donor power in America's elections, building on decades of Roberts Court decisions that have steadily deregulated campaign finance.

Claims made here

An individual can give approximately $7,000 directly to a federal candidate, split between the primary and general election.

Dan Pfeiffer no source cited

Government
Data point $7,000

The MAGA Supreme Court's Assault on America · Jun 28, 2026

Currently, individuals can give approximately $7,000 directly to a candidate (split between primary and general), but the pending NRSC coordination case could eliminate contribution limits entirely.

Chapter 18 · 1:03:40

Susan Collins, Kavanaugh, and the Lie About Roe

Dan plays a clip of Susan Collins arguing on Fox News that Roe would have been overturned 6-3 with or without Kavanaugh. Leah dismantles this in seconds: Chief Justice Roberts did not vote to overrule Roe — he voted to narrow it, not eliminate it. The Dobbs majority was exactly five justices. Collins confirmed the fifth. Her claim is simply, factually wrong. But Leah's deeper contempt is for the framing itself — 'I disagree with the outcome, I don't regret my vote' — which requires pretending that Brett Kavanaugh has done something worth the documented loss of women's lives, fertility, and health in post-Roe America. The discussion closes on the Maine Senate race where Graham Plattner is running against Collins, and the broader accountability opportunity the 2026 midterms represent.

Claims made here

Susan Collins claimed on Fox News that Roe v. Wade would have been overturned regardless of her vote to confirm Brett Kavanaugh because of the 6-3 vote.

Dan Pfeiffer Fox News interview with Susan Collins

Chief Justice Roberts did not vote to overrule Roe v. Wade in the Dobbs decision; he voted only to change the legal test for abortion restrictions, leaving Roe technically intact.

Leah Litman no source cited

Chapter 19 · 1:08:10

Dobbs at Four Years: Will 2026 Deliver Accountability?

It's been four years since Dobbs. Pro-choice identification is at an all-time high and has held steady — a remarkable shift in American public opinion. Dan argues the 2024 election was a one-off distorted by unique factors, and that Trump was a singular exception because nobody actually believed he was anti-abortion. The other Republicans — Ken Paxton, state-level architects of the harshest abortion bans — don't have that cover. Leah shares the optimism but adds her persistent fear: she has 'rarely gone wrong in estimating the amount of misogyny Americans will tolerate in their politics'. They close on a call to action — call senators, give blue slips, support primary challenges to Fetterman and others, and vote at votesaveamerica.com.

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1 / 15 cited (7%)

Factual claims made this episode, and whether a source was named.

The Trump administration canceled TPS for Haiti before the State Department even responded to the DHS request to weigh in on conditions in Haiti.

Leah Litman no source cited

Trump called Haiti a 'shithole country,' said Haitians had AIDS, and accused them of 'poisoning the blood of the country.'

Leah Litman no source cited

Justice Alito did not quote Trump's racist remarks about Haitians in his TPS majority opinion, while declaring them 'not overtly racial.'

Leah Litman no source cited

When Trump took office, more than one million people were living in the United States with Temporary Protected Status.

Leah Litman no source cited

The asylum ruling creates a loophole: if the executive branch physically blocks migrants outside the US border, it does not have to consider any of their asylum applications.

Leah Litman no source cited

The metering policy that originated the asylum case began almost a decade ago and was ended before the Supreme Court ruled on it.

Leah Litman no source cited

Reading a dissent from the bench has happened only rarely, and having the majority author respond to a bench dissent has happened maybe once or twice in Supreme Court history.

Leah Litman no source cited

Samuel Alito heckled President Obama during the 2010 State of the Union address in reaction to the Citizens United ruling being criticized.

Dan Pfeiffer no source cited

The 7-2 Monsanto ruling means individuals cannot sue pesticide manufacturers for inadequate warning labels if the EPA has approved those labels under FIFRA.

Leah Litman no source cited

Chief Justice Roberts did not vote to overrule Roe v. Wade in the Dobbs decision; he voted only to change the legal test for abortion restrictions, leaving Roe technically intact.

Leah Litman no source cited

Susan Collins claimed on Fox News that Roe v. Wade would have been overturned regardless of her vote to confirm Brett Kavanaugh because of the 6-3 vote.

Dan Pfeiffer Fox News interview with Susan Collins

The RNC's mail ballot case, if decided in its favor, would nullify or change vote-counting procedures in 29 states.

Leah Litman no source cited

The practice of voting outside of Election Day originated during the Civil War to ensure Union soldiers could cast their ballots.

Leah Litman no source cited

An individual can give approximately $7,000 directly to a federal candidate, split between the primary and general election.

Dan Pfeiffer no source cited

Willie's Remedy has sold out 3 times in its first 6 months and has over 300,000 customers.

Leah Litman no source cited