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Supreme Court Hands President Trump Win In Immigration Judge Speech Fight
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Supreme Court Hands President Trump Win In Immigration Judge Speech Fight

The Supreme Court sided with President Trump’s administration on Tuesday in Margolin v. National Association of Immigration Judges, reversing a Fourth Circuit decision that had attempted to rewrite the terms of a federal employment dispute no one had asked it to rewrite. The case started simply enough. The Executive Office for Immigration Review required immigration judges to get supervisory approval before giving public speeches related to their official duties. Their union, the National Association of Immigration Judges, sued on First and Fifth Amendment grounds. The district court dismissed the case, ruling the claims were channeled through the Civil Service Reform Act to the Merit Systems Protection Board. On appeal, the union made a narrow argument: yes, the CSRA covers most federal employment claims, but constitutional challenges fall outside the scheme. Then the Fourth Circuit did something the Supreme Court found unacceptable. Rather than deciding the question the parties actually presented, the appeals court raised an entirely different issue on its own: whether the CSRA system was still functioning as Congress intended, given recent removals of MSPB members and the Special Counsel. Neither party briefed this question. Neither party asked for it. The Fourth Circuit ordered it anyway, vacating and remanding with instructions for the district court to investigate whether the administrative review framework was operational. The Supreme Court reversed. The principle at stake is called party presentation, and it is foundational: federal courts decide the issues the parties bring to them, not issues judges dream up on their own. This is an important distinction. The Supreme Court did not decide whether the speech-approval policy is constitutional. That question remains open. Lower courts cannot manufacture new legal theories to keep cases alive in federal district court when the law says those disputes belong somewhere else. The ruling fits a pattern. Lower federal courts have repeatedly stretched their authority to second-guess Trump administration policies, often inventing procedural workarounds to reach outcomes they prefer. The Supreme Court has now told them, again, to stay in their lane. For President Trump’s broader fight to maintain executive authority over the federal workforce, the decision reinforces a basic structural point. Congress built the CSRA framework for a reason, and judges unhappy with the current political landscape cannot casually route around it. The union’s constitutional claims may still be litigated. But the Fourth Circuit’s attempt to turn a routine jurisdictional question into a referendum on the Trump administration’s personnel decisions just got reversed. Reuters flagged the ruling as a win for President Trump in the immigration-judge speech fight: Supreme Court sides with Trump in fight tied to speech curbs on immigration judges https://t.co/4e80ArC https://t.co/4e80ArC — Reuters (@Reuters) May 26, 2026 A legal explainer account broke down why the Supreme Court focused on judicial power, not the final merits of the speech policy: Immigration judges wanted to speak publicly about their work without asking permission first. That simple workplace dispute just became a Supreme Court ruling about the limits of judicial power. Decided 5/26/26, Margolin v. NAIJ started when EOIR required immigration judges to obtain supervisory approval before giving speeches related to official duties. Their union, NAIJ, challenged the policy on First and Fifth Amendment grounds. The district court dismissed, finding the claims channeled through the CSRA to the MSPB. On appeal, NAIJ made a surgical argument: yes, the CSRA covers most federal employment claims, but our constitutional challenges fall outside that scheme. Then something unusual happened. The Fourth Circuit, apparently concerned about recent removals of MSPB members and the Special Counsel, vacated and ordered the district court to determine whether the CSRA was functioning as Congress intended. Neither party asked for this. Neither briefed it. The Supreme Court reversed. The party-presentation principle means courts decide what parties present, nothing more. Transforming a narrow coverage dispute into a referendum on administrative functionality crosses a clear line. Political circumstances don't alter statutory meaning. The CSRA's exclusive review scheme stands. And federal courts, the Court emphasized, aren't "roving commissions looking for wrongs to right." The union's constitutional claims remain unresolved. But the rules of engagement just got reinforced. — Ruling Breakdown (@RulingBreakdown) May 27, 2026 The Supreme Court opinion laid out the core issue this way: The Supreme Court identified the case as Daren K. Margolin, Director of the Executive Office for Immigration Review, v. National Association of Immigration Judges, No. 25-767. The Court said EOIR adopted an October 2021 policy requiring immigration judges to obtain supervisory approval before public speeches related to their official duties. The policy was designed to keep employee speech that could appear to carry EOIR’s imprimatur consistent with the agency’s official positions. The National Association of Immigration Judges challenged the policy in federal district court in Virginia. The union asserted First and Fifth Amendment claims on behalf of its members. The district court dismissed the challenge, holding that it had to proceed through the Civil Service Reform Act’s administrative review system. The Fourth Circuit agreed the claims were covered by the CSRA, but it vacated and remanded after raising a new question the parties had not presented. The Supreme Court said that move violated the party-presentation principle. The Court reversed the Fourth Circuit and sent the case back for further proceedings consistent with the opinion. Justice Clarence Thomas, joined by Justice Amy Coney Barrett, wrote separately to say the Fourth Circuit was wrong on the merits as well. FedSmith explained why the procedural ruling matters for federal employee lawsuits: FedSmith described the ruling as narrow and procedural, but not minor. The site said the decision reinforces limits on lawsuits by federal employees and unions trying to bypass the Civil Service Reform Act. According to the analysis, the Supreme Court faulted the Fourth Circuit for raising and relying on an issue neither side had briefed or argued. The Fourth Circuit had agreed with the district court and the government that the immigration judges’ First Amendment challenge was covered by the CSRA. That meant the challenge generally had to be routed through the Merit Systems Protection Board and the Office of Special Counsel, not launched as an initial case in federal district court. FedSmith noted that the appeals court then shifted to a different concern: whether the administrative review system was still functioning as Congress intended. The Supreme Court rejected that shortcut. FedSmith also highlighted the Thomas concurrence, which argued that courts cannot treat changed political circumstances as a license to rewrite a statutory scheme. The practical result is a procedural win for the government and a warning to federal worker groups seeking a different forum. The Associated Press confirmed the broader context: The Supreme Court sided with President Trump’s administration in the dispute over immigration judges’ speech restrictions. The report emphasized that immigration judges are federal employees rather than Article III federal judges. The judges want to sue over a policy restricting public speeches tied to their work. The administration argued the dispute belongs in the federal employee complaint system overseen by the Merit Systems Protection Board. The Court ruled on procedural grounds, not on whether the speech policy is constitutional. Justice Thomas’s concurrence, joined by Justice Barrett, rebuked the Fourth Circuit for responding to political controversies of the day. The judges’ association said it was disappointed and said the case is far from over. Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche applauded the decision in a social-media post. He said lower courts must accept that the law is the law, regardless of political controversies. MarketScreener carried the Reuters wire details this way: The wire report described the result as a procedural victory for President Trump’s administration. The dispute centers on whether federal immigration judges can pursue a free-speech challenge in court or must proceed through the federal employment review system. The speech policy at issue restricts what immigration judges may publicly say about immigration in certain work-related contexts. The Supreme Court did not decide the legality of the policy itself. Instead, it reversed the Fourth Circuit after the appeals court relied on an argument the judges’ association had not raised. Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche welcomed the ruling. Blanche said judges should resolve the case before them and should not try to seize Congress’s role. The National Association of Immigration Judges has argued the policy is an unconstitutional restraint on speech. The case now returns to the lower courts under the Supreme Court’s instructions, with the constitutional fight still unresolved. This is a Guest Post from our friends over at WLTReport. View the original article here.

BREAKING: President Trump Issues Major Iran Deal Ultimatum
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BREAKING: President Trump Issues Major Iran Deal Ultimatum

President Trump is not leaving any ambiguity about what he expects from Iran. Trump laid out a blunt condition for any deal with Tehran: Iran’s enriched uranium, which he called “Nuclear Dust,” must either be handed directly to the United States for destruction or destroyed in place under witnessed supervision. That is the part of the story the regime-friendly media would rather blur. JUST IN: President Trump says Iran WILL be handing over their enriched uranium “nuclear dust” for destruction, and now the only question is HOW it’s done It’s either: A) The US will take possession of it, bring it home, and destroy it B) Destroyed in place in Iran with the… pic.twitter.com/Q6fndeFUhQ — Nick Sortor (@nicksortor) May 25, 2026 The demand goes to the core of the entire Iran question. If Tehran keeps the material, Democrats and the foreign-policy class will call it diplomacy. Trump is making clear that the stockpile itself has to be neutralized. AP laid out the Cabinet meeting and the tense Iran negotiations now surrounding the uranium demand: President Trump met with his Cabinet on Wednesday while talks aimed at ending the war with Iran remained in flux, but he still projected confidence that a settlement was close. The administration is seeking an agreement that would reopen the Strait of Hormuz and give Trump a credible argument that Iran’s nuclear capability has been diminished enough to declare victory and wind down a conflict that has created political pressure inside the Republican coalition. Secretary of State Marco Rubio told reporters there had been progress in the discussions, while warning that the next hours and days would provide more clarity on whether a final agreement could be reached. The broader military backdrop is just as important: the U.S. carried out self-defense strikes in southern Iran on missile launch sites and boats placing mines, even as diplomatic channels remained open, the ceasefire remained fragile, and the White House continued pressing for a deal that does not leave Iran holding leverage over shipping lanes or nuclear material after weeks of conflict. That is why the “nuclear dust” line matters. Trump is not asking Iran to promise better behavior later. He is publicly attaching any deal to the physical fate of the enriched uranium itself. Washington Examiner detailed the exact uranium terms Trump put on the table: Iran’s enriched uranium would either be immediately turned over to the United States, brought home, and destroyed, or preferably destroyed in place in coordination with Iran at another acceptable location. Trump used the phrase “Nuclear Dust” for the material and framed the destruction or transfer of the stockpile as a central condition in the negotiations, making the fate of the uranium itself a public benchmark rather than a buried technical footnote in another insider-driven agreement. The process would be witnessed by the Atomic Energy Commission, or an equivalent body, so the issue is not left to vague assurances from Tehran. That is a very different standard from the old Washington habit of accepting paper promises and calling them breakthroughs, because under Trump’s public position, the dangerous material must be removed from Iran’s control or destroyed under eyes that can verify the event, and the regime would not be allowed to keep the core asset that made the nuclear fight so urgent in the first place for America, Israel, and allies. In plain language: Tehran does not get to keep the material and sell that as peace. Interesting Trump says he prefers to destroy the enriched uranium in place, in conjunction with Iran, so long as the IAEA, or its equivalent, are present to witness the “process and event”. It’s not like we need the uranium for use, we just need to test for its origins, and… pic.twitter.com/OBxAFON1PU — Clandestine (@WarClandestine) May 25, 2026 No final agreement has been signed. Rubio’s own language about the next “hours and days” shows the details are still being hammered out. But the public condition Trump has set is unmistakable. The enriched uranium goes, one way or another, either into American custody for destruction or into a witnessed destruction process on Iranian soil. That is not diplomacy by suggestion. That is diplomacy backed by pressure, backed by military action when needed, and backed by a president who is willing to walk away with no deal rather than bless another weak Iran arrangement. This is a Guest Post from our friends over at WLTReport. View the original article here.

BREAKING: Supreme Court Hands President Trump 9-0 Win
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BREAKING: Supreme Court Hands President Trump 9-0 Win

President Trump just picked up a clean 9-0 win at the Supreme Court. The justices unanimously reversed the Fourth Circuit in Margolin v. National Association of Immigration Judges, a fight over where immigration judges must bring challenges to federal workplace speech rules. This was not a narrow partisan squeaker. It was every justice telling a lower court it went off track. DOJ SUPREME COURT WIN: The Supreme Court yet again reversed the Fourth Circuit, this time with a unanimous 9-0 decision. As the Department of Justice argued, the Fourth Circuit was wrong to try to rewrite a statute about the process for resolving government employee complaints.… — Acting AG Todd Blanche (@DAGToddBlanche) May 26, 2026 The case involves a Justice Department policy requiring immigration judges to get approval before certain official speaking engagements. The judges’ association wanted to press its challenge in federal district court, while the Trump administration argued the dispute belonged in the federal employee review system Congress created. AP laid out the dispute and why the ruling matters beyond one workplace-speech fight: The Supreme Court sided with President Trump’s administration in a lawsuit over speech restrictions for immigration judges, overturning a lower-court ruling that had allowed the case to move forward. Immigration judges are federal employees, not Article III federal judges, and the administration argued that their challenge should go first through the federal employee complaint system overseen by the Merit Systems Protection Board instead of starting in district court. The underlying policy requires approval for official speaking engagements tied to an immigration judge’s government role, while personal-capacity remarks outside that official lane are treated differently under the case record. The judges’ association says the policy burdens speech and has vowed the case is not over, but the Supreme Court’s ruling gives the administration a major procedural victory and resets the fight after the Fourth Circuit tried to revive the suit. The ruling also lands while the Court is weighing broader questions about President Trump’s power over officials inside independent agencies, which is why this procedural fight carries more weight than a normal workplace dispute. For the DOJ, the decision reinforces the argument that Congress created a specific path for federal employee claims, and lower courts cannot casually replace that path with one they find more convenient. That distinction matters. Blanche’s post also started circulating through DOJ-aligned accounts almost immediately, framing the order as a clean rebuke of the Fourth Circuit rather than a dry procedural footnote. DOJ SUPREME COURT WIN: The Supreme Court yet again reversed the Fourth Circuit, this time with a unanimous 9-0 decision. As the Department of Justice argued, the Fourth Circuit was wrong to try to rewrite a statute about the process for resolving government employee complaints.… — Acting AG Todd Blanche (@DAGToddBlanche) May 26, 2026 The Supreme Court did not decide the full First Amendment merits of the policy. It said the Fourth Circuit could not invent a route around the statute based on a theory the parties had not properly presented. Justia summarized the Supreme Court’s ruling in Margolin and the party-presentation problem at the center of the reversal: The case began after the Executive Office for Immigration Review adopted a policy regulating work-related speech by immigration judges, and the National Association of Immigration Judges challenged that policy in federal court. A district court dismissed the case under the Civil Service Reform Act framework, but the Fourth Circuit revived it by relying on concerns about the administrative review system and presidential removal power that were not actually raised and argued by the parties in the way the appeals court used them. The Supreme Court reversed and remanded, emphasizing that courts are supposed to decide the case the parties bring, not redesign the case around theories the judges prefer. That principle is not a technical footnote; it keeps courts from turning into roaming policy boards and forces lower courts to stay inside the dispute before them, which is exactly why the Trump administration called the Fourth Circuit ruling a clear candidate for correction. Justice Clarence Thomas, joined by Justice Amy Coney Barrett, also wrote separately to say the Fourth Circuit was wrong on the merits. That makes the win even sharper for the administration: a unanimous reversal, plus a separate warning from two justices that the lower court’s deeper theory was wrong too. The Fourth Circuit has repeatedly become a stop for challenges to President Trump’s agenda. This time, even the liberal wing of the Supreme Court joined the reversal. A 9-0 ruling sends a message lower courts cannot miss. They do not get to rewrite the case, rewrite the statute, and then call it judicial review. At least on this one, the Supreme Court told them no. This is a Guest Post from our friends over at WLTReport. View the original article here.

JUST IN: Longtime 60 Minutes Star Fired For “Insubordination”
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JUST IN: Longtime 60 Minutes Star Fired For “Insubordination”

CBS News has parted ways with longtime 60 Minutes correspondent Sharyn Alfonsi after declining to renew her contract. The split comes months after Alfonsi clashed with CBS editor-in-chief Bari Weiss over a segment about conditions inside El Salvador’s CECOT prison involving deported migrants and President Trump’s administration. The Trending Politics report laid out the contract decision and the internal fight that preceded it: Alfonsi’s deal expired over the weekend, and CBS chose not to renew it after nearly two decades with the network and more than a decade on 60 Minutes. The exit followed a high-profile fight over a CECOT segment that examined conditions inside the Salvadoran prison used to hold deported migrants. The dispute traces back to CBS holding the segment before it aired. Alfonsi told colleagues in internal emails that Bari Weiss’s decision to spike the piece was political, while CBS leadership treated the situation as a serious newsroom chain-of-command problem. Several sources told the New York Times that CBS executives viewed Alfonsi’s actions as insubordinate. Alfonsi did not back down, arguing that the network was punishing a reporter for refusing to soften accurate reporting. The segment eventually aired in January with administration comment and additional material included. That is the key detail: the fight was not simply over whether the story would run, but over how CBS handled editorial control, sourcing, and public defiance inside one of television’s most famous news programs. That is the part legacy media usually prefers to bury. The same network that spent years lecturing America about institutions is now dealing with an internal war over who actually controls its flagship newsmagazine. Fox News reported Alfonsi’s own account of the split and the message she says CBS sent to its newsroom: Alfonsi told Fox News Digital that her contract expired after almost 20 years at CBS News, including more than a decade at 60 Minutes. She said repeated attempts by her representatives to find a path forward were met with silence from network executives. She framed the move as a deliberate choice by CBS management, not a routine corporate transition. In her telling, the network penalized her after an intense editorial dispute over the CECOT story and moved away from the independent-reporting standard that built the 60 Minutes brand. Fox also noted that CBS had previously said the segment needed additional reporting, reportedly because the story did not yet include an on-the-record response from the Trump administration. Alfonsi had argued internally that the White House, DHS, and State Department had already been asked for comment. The segment later aired, and CBS included additional administration material. That makes the story less about one immigration segment and more about the newsroom revolt that followed when a powerful correspondent accused her own bosses of political interference. There is a certain irony in all of this. CBS brought Weiss into a battered newsroom after years of credibility problems, including public fights over President Trump and 60 Minutes. Then one of the program’s longtime correspondents went public against the new boss and ended up out of the show. TheWrap added more detail on Alfonsi’s status and her refusal to quietly accept the move: Alfonsi remains technically employed by CBS News, but her 60 Minutes contract was not renewed. TheWrap tied the decision to the months-long fallout from the CECOT story and the broader clash with Weiss over the segment. Alfonsi had also warned she was not resigning. She said that if CBS wanted her gone because she did her job, the network would have to fire her, putting CBS in the position of either keeping a defiant correspondent or making the separation unmistakable. TheWrap also described the segment as a major internal flashpoint at CBS. The issue was not merely a programming delay; it became a public dispute over whether CBS leadership was demanding stronger editorial standards or bending to political pressure. Either way, the result is now clear. Alfonsi is not expected back on 60 Minutes, and CBS has another very public media drama tied to its handling of President Trump-era coverage. The old media guard wants to call every newsroom fight a noble crusade for truth. Sometimes it is simpler than that. A correspondent challenged the new leadership, accused them of a political decision, and reportedly got viewed by executives as insubordinate. Now her 60 Minutes run appears to be over.

Twelve Republican Holdouts in South Carolina Senate Save Jim Clyburn’s Seat by Killing President Trump’s Redistricting Push
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Twelve Republican Holdouts in South Carolina Senate Save Jim Clyburn’s Seat by Killing President Trump’s Redistricting Push

President Trump asked Republican-led states to redraw their congressional maps before the 2026 midterms to help protect the GOP House majority. South Carolina’s Republican-dominated Senate said no. On May 26, the South Carolina Senate killed a redistricting effort when a cloture vote failed 20-24, meaning the plan never even got to a final vote. The proposed maps would have redrawn the state’s congressional districts and almost certainly targeted the seat held by Rep. Jim Clyburn, the lone Democrat in South Carolina’s seven-member U.S. House delegation. The AP confirmed the timing and stakes of the South Carolina vote: The Senate rejection came as early in-person voting was already beginning for South Carolina’s June 9 congressional primaries. The redistricting plan would have canceled those votes and forced a new primary under revised district lines, a move designed to give Republicans a shot at taking the one South Carolina House seat still held by a Democrat. The fight was part of President Trump’s broader midterm map strategy, with Republican-led states looking for legal ways to improve their House math before November. In South Carolina, that meant taking aim at the district held by Jim Clyburn, a longtime Democrat whose seat has helped keep the state’s delegation from becoming an all-Republican slate. Republican state Sen. Richard Cash said voters were already going to the polls and argued that neither his conscience nor common sense would let him stop an election that had already started. That argument carried the day for enough Republicans to block the plan before a final map vote could happen. The same day also brought a companion setback in Alabama, where a federal court blocked a Republican-backed congressional map. Together, the two developments showed how quickly the GOP’s midterm map strategy can run into resistance from courts, Democrats, and Republicans who refuse to move when the pressure is highest. The current breakdown is six Republicans and one Democrat, and a successful redistricting push could have made it seven to zero heading into November. Instead, twelve Republican state senators voted against cloture, effectively handing Clyburn a lifeline. The Gateway Pundit captured the conservative frustration after the vote failed: The conservative reaction centered on the Republican senators who stopped the push before the chamber could force a vote. The article described the South Carolina redistricting map as likely dead on arrival after the cloture vote failed, then named the GOP no votes who sided with the procedural argument that early voting had already begun. Those Republican no votes were Bennett, Campsen, Cash, Cromer, Davis, Hembree, Johnson, Massey, Peeler, Rankin, Stubbs, and Zell. The point was not subtle: grassroots conservatives wanted South Carolina Republicans to use their power to help secure another House seat, and instead watched enough Republicans join Democrats to preserve the existing map. The same article embedded Adam Morgan’s post showing the 20-24 vote failure, which quickly became the cleanest public receipt for who blocked the redistricting effort. That receipt matters because voters do not have to guess which Republicans stopped the map. The names were public within hours, and conservative anger moved immediately from abstract frustration with the legislature to specific lawmakers who denied the party a chance to fight for the seventh seat. South Carolina state Senator Adam Morgan posted the results on X, listing the Republican no votes by name. BREAKING—South Carolina Redistricting likely DEAD! Vital cloture vote to limit debate and force a vote in the SC Senate FAILS 20-24. Republican Nos—Bennett, Campsen, Cash, CromerDavis, Hembree, Johnson, MasseyPeeler, Rankin, Stubbs, & Zell — Adam Morgan (@RepAdamMorgan) May 26, 2026 That is a dozen Republicans who chose to protect the status quo over expanding the GOP’s advantage in Congress. One of the holdouts, Republican state Sen. Richard Cash, cited the fact that early in-person voting in South Carolina’s primaries had already begun that same day as his reason for opposing the move. Cash argued he would not stop an election that was already underway. It is a procedural argument, and maybe even a defensible one in isolation, but the practical result is the same: Jim Clyburn keeps his seat untouched heading into November. Clyburn certainly understood what happened. He reportedly wrote on X that a critical number of Republicans chose not to put one man over the law. NPR/South Carolina Public Radio reported how Clyburn responded after the map push collapsed: Clyburn’s district survived intact for now after South Carolina lawmakers rejected the rushed map push. The proposed map backed by President Trump would have targeted Clyburn, the only Democrat in the state’s congressional delegation, and state officials said House primaries would have been delayed if lawmakers had redrawn the lines. Clyburn wrote on X that someone in the White House wanted Republicans to ignore the constitutional principles behind the current map. He added that a critical number of Republicans did not believe in putting one man over the law, giving Democrats exactly the talking point they wanted after the GOP-controlled Senate failed to move. The report also pointed to the political calculation behind the fight: South Carolina has one majority-Black district, Clyburn has held it for decades, and Republicans saw a chance to convert a 6-1 delegation into a potential 7-0 delegation before the midterms. That framing is rich coming from a career Democrat operative who has benefited from gerrymandered maps for decades, but the political reality is that he got what he wanted because Republicans gave it to him. Trump made his position clear. He wanted red states to use every legal tool available to shore up the House majority, which currently hangs by the thinnest of margins. South Carolina was one of the clearest opportunities on the board. A state with a 6-1 Republican delegation and full GOP control of the legislature had every reason and every mechanism to act. The twelve holdouts decided the timing was wrong or the politics were uncomfortable. Every one of those names on Adam Morgan’s list should be remembered by South Carolina Republican voters who expected their elected officials to fight for the party’s majority when it mattered most.