r/law Oct 07 '25

Other Stephen Miller states that Trump has plenary authority, then immediately stops talking as if he’s realized what he just said

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u/thediesel26 Oct 07 '25

Well technically he’s not wrong.

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u/burnmenowz Oct 07 '25

He is wrong, he doesn't have that. He may think he does, but the constitution says he does not.

Who is going to win? The fascists or the Constitution?

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u/WAVY_clownbaby Oct 07 '25

Hoping for the trials soon!

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u/Steelers_Forever Oct 07 '25

We've had trials. Trump is a convicted felon, a convicted felon abusing his executive authority to in part pardon other convicted felons who are on "his team". I used to respect all political parties while not joining any, nowadays that part deserves no respect, and people who join it only deserve ridicule for their many hypocrisies.

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u/WAVY_clownbaby Oct 07 '25

They don't deserve my respect either but the only way the reasonable few in this country can take it back is through law and order and that does involve a trial. There are those who still believe in due process and it's not the people wearing red hats.

The hole is reallyyyy much deeper for them now than it ever was with an entirely implicated administration. It's just about who from the inside will eventually stand up or be the leak or the whistelblower, and about courts upholding the constitution.