@TuckerCarlson @RepThomasMassie @TheProblem anybody…….
It’s obvious: if a seat of Congress is bought by foreign dollars, if
@realDonaldTrump is hiding from the Epstein files, if Congress is insider trading, and if the largest amount of fraud is occurring in our markets, then Trump is literally profiting from his office in broad daylight. Ken Griffin, a financial terrorist, is getting away with market manipulation and stealing from investors, plus much more. Trump continues to lie to the American people—and I’m no Democrat. Trump doesn’t care because he will pardon himself and his family. There is so much wrong, and there is no balance. It’s time for lawsuits and for the Supreme Court justices to step in.
If both the executive and legislative branches fail to uphold the laws, it creates what constitutional scholars call a constitutional crisis. When two of the three branches of government are either failing to act or actively working together to ignore existing laws, the system of checks and balances faces its absolute limits.
Here are the remaining lines of defense in our system when both political branches break down:
1. The Judicial Branch (The Courts)
Even if Congress and the President agree to ignore a law, the courts remain an independent check.
- Civil Lawsuits: Citizens, business owners, or advocacy groups can sue the government in federal court for failing to follow its own statutory duties.
- State Action: State Attorneys General often step in to sue the federal government if federal inaction or illegal action harms their state's citizens.
- The Bound: The limitation here is that while the Supreme Court and federal judges can rule that the other branches are breaking the law, the courts have no army or police force to physically compel the other branches to comply. They rely on the executive branch to enforce their rulings.
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