President Donald Trump's administration has no plans of slowing down its assault on the courts, according to one lawyer.

Andrew Weissmann, a former Assistant U.S. Attorney, joined The Bulwark's Sarah Longwell on the podcast, "George Conway Explains It All (To Sarah Longwell)," on Thursday to discuss Trump's legal approach to deploying National Guard troops on the streets and enforcing immigration laws.

Longwell asked Weissmann whether the Trump administration would adhere to a court opinion that restricts its right to deploy troops to cities. A court in San Francisco is hearing arguments in a case that could decide just that.

"No, there's not a snowball's chance in hell that this administration is going to say that a decision in San Francisco is going to bind them," Weissmann said.

"Just be clear, normal Republican administrations, normal Democratic administrations, if they got a decision like that from a district court judge, even if it didn't technically bar them in other locations, they would put things on hold and wait for an appeal, and they would have respect for the decision absent some extraordinary circumstance," Weismann said. "That is not what's happening here."

"We see it in the immigration context, where you see just so much end running around district courts and courts of appeals, and frankly, I think the Supreme Court," he added.

"The Trump administration is saying, 'We're going to continue until we're told to stop,'" Weissmann continued. "And frankly, as many judges have pointed out, even when we're told to stop, judges are upset because they still go forward in a sort of what are you going to do about it way."

Watch the entire episode below or by clicking here.