On Friday, when the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit ruled that Donald Trump went too far when he declared national emergencies to justify tariffs on goods from nearly every country, the ruling upheld one back in the spring by a federal trade court in New York. That was strike one against the president.
Strike two came over Labor Day weekend, when a federal judge, through a temporary restraining order, stopped him from illegally deporting hundreds of Guatemalan children, many of whom had already been boarded onto planes.
Strike three came on Tuesday, when the U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer in San Francisco stated in a 52-page ruling that Trump and his administration had “willfully” broken federal law by sending National Guard troops into Los Angeles in June.
But only in