If the president issues an executive order and it isn’t followed, he can enforce it by deploying the military. But what happens if the Judicial Branch issues an order but the president refuses to follow it? What recourse, if any, do the courts have to enforce their orders?
No, he can’t. Posse Comitatus Act of 1878
Yep. Contempt.
This is literally and example of ‘begging the question’ because a criminal contempt judgment is just another court order that the Executive could ignore, and because of recent Supreme Court rulings the President is legally exempt from consequences while in office (and can issue pardons for any subordinates cited). The courts can still issue civil contempt judgments which basically says, “Do what we told you to do!” which has all the efficacy of a cheesecloth poncho when it comes to the person who controls the entire executive branch of government.
There has been this mantra that “the courts” will rein in a rogue President who defied Constitutional strictures which people have convinced themselves to be fundamentally through through repetition even though the only actual enforcement power that courts (including the Supreme Court) have outside their courtroom is via the various law enforcement arms of the Department of Justice, which is why independence of that body has so long been considered a necessary precept of democratic integrity. Justice should probably be considered a fourth branch of government reporting to Congress and the Supreme Court, and fundamentally independent of the Executive Branch as a significant portion its work is actually enforcement legal and regulatory judgements by the courts on government agencies and departments.
Congress ultimately has the power to forestall the President through the passage of laws (and if necessary overruling a Presidential veto), or in extremis impeachment, conviction, and removal from office. The Framers assumed that Congress would jealously guard its own prerogatives and not make itself a dead fish at the feet of a would be despot or self-styled king because everybody fought to have a representative democracy. They were not, understandably, conversant with fascism or an autocracy where a major polity of citizen electorate would voluntarily subject themselves to a dictator, or that the Congress of representatives would willingly hand over their powers to a tyrant.
The Posse Comitatus Act is not any inviolate shield against Executive overreach, either. Although it prevents the Army and Air Force (and as of 2022 the Navy including the Marines and the Space Force) from being used for domestic law enforcement purposes, there exist numerous loopholes that would permit the Executive to call up the military or the National Guard, notwithstanding what would occur if compliant military officials elected to ignore court orders in the face of contravening executive direction. This is something, by the way, that President Abraham Lincoln was very concerned about and constrained many (but not all) of his decisions about how to prosecute the American Civil War and recognition of then-current and former slaves as US citizens.
This is an ongoing point of legal dissection:
Stranger
The only recourse with actual power is impeachment by Congress. That’s one thing a president can’t ignore because after being convicted in the Senate, he simply ceases to be the president. But whether like-minded appointees in the line of succession will simply carry on with the same or similar illegal policies is another question.
There is nothing preventing the House from impeaching and Senate from holding a group trial to remove the fucking lot of Trump-appointed officials and Speaker of the House in one fell sweep except their own cowardice and perfidy.
Stranger
I suspect trump is now at the point where if he was in fact impeached by House and Senate he would simply say: “OK. Come enforce your silly writ. The executive branch will still follow my instructions on my personal say so”. And he’d probably be right in that.
At the end of the day, the guy who controls the guys with the guns rules the country. Any country.
And also for sure that would be close to the end of the USA’s current system of government.
This is exactly the constitutional crisis that we have been moving towards these past several months (has it truly only been 5?!) As of yet, he has not directly told any court to pound sand. Instead, his consistent approach has been to obfuscate and delay, and hope that if need be he will be bailed out by the Supremes.
Then, there is always his modus operandi that TACO. As with Abrego Garcia. He’s back in the US, facing a whole new pile of made up bullshit. So far, Trump seems content to cause as much harm IMMEDIATELY to as many people as possible. Then, if some isolated aspect of his action is adjudged improper some months down the line, such judicial relief is unlikely to help ALL the folk he harmed.
It will be interesting - and not in any good way - to see what happens when/if he directly refuses a court order. Plus, we have the effort by the House budget bill to outlaw contempt judgments.
[Moderating]
A reminder again that this is Factual Questions, and we should therefore remain factual. It may be that there’s not much factual to say on this topic, in which case, this thread will relatively quickly fade away. I will not be moving this thread to one of the more political forums, because we’ve already had the similar political discussion in enough other threads. If you wish to make political commentary, find one of those threads, or start a new one.
Constitutional crisis seems like the correct answer.
Right. Washington was reputed to have said “Government is not reason, it is not eloquence, it is force”.
Apparently there is no documented evidence for him saying this.
But it’s right all the same…
Only the house can remove the speaker and only the senate its president pro-tem. But if you could somehow remove the whole lot of them, what then? There is no provision in the constitution (nor, AFAIK, in statute law) to deal with this.
We exhume the corpse of Nelson Rockefeller and swear him into office in Weekend At Bernies-inspired political hijinks? Conscript Kiefer Sutherland into reprising his role for real? (Shit, he’s Canadian…) Will Harrison Ford slum in a six-figure gig?
Seriously, just removing both the sitting President and Vice-President simultaneously would be unprecedented; the removal of an entire leadership chain is beyond the scope of experience for American governance and Constitutional scope, although parliamentary systems do it regularly and seem to keep chugging along. But they aren’t exceptional the way the United States. I don’t think there is a factual answer to that unlikely question, but it doesn’t stop me from dreaming.
Stranger
Apologies - I did not appreciate the forum.
The get-out clause from a constitutional crisis in most parliamentary systems is to hold a new general election. But even then, depending on the jurisdiction concerned, there can be a crisis about exactly how that’s to happen (Australia 1975).
Nobody’s going to mention Andrew Jackson? “[Justice] John Marshall has made his ruling, now let him enforce it…”
It seems to me that while the president may have immunity, nobody else down the chain does. And the president has no veto or pardon over civil cases. If a person were, hypothetically, deported to a Salvador prison and his legal representative chose to sue for damages, the government could not prevent the courts from issuing a judgement and then an order that the bank pay up the damages. I presume part of the interesting issue was whether the individual actors in the process, having acted illegally, would be personally liable. (sort of like they would be for state crimes). AIUI immunity from liability only applies if they were legally doing their legal job. Like a police officer who acts illegally, they are subject to lawsuits.
Widely believed to be apocryphal.
Or as Jackson ackshually said:
The decision of the Supreme Court has fell still born … and they find that it cannot coerce Georgia to yield to its mandate.
If I remember correctly, this was a plot point in Tom Clancy’s Debt of Honor. A 747 takes off from DC airport & intentionally crashes into the Capitol during a joint session, killing (almost?) all senators/reps. While governors can appoint new ones, there wasn’t a senate president to swear the new ones in & none to elect a new senate president.
All you’d need to “replace the whole lot of them” would be for the House to elect a different speaker, the House impeaches the President and Vice President, and the Senate removes both. At this point, the new Speaker of the House would succeed to the Presidency, and could fire all of the cabinet members.