WASHINGTON β TopΒ Trump administrationΒ officials are openly questioning the judiciary's authority to serve as a check on executive power as the new president's sweeping agenda faces growing pushback from the courts.
Over the course of 24 hours, officials ranging from billionaire Elon Musk to Vice President JD Vance not only criticizedΒ a federal judge's early SaturdayΒ decisionΒ that blocksΒ Muskβs Department of Government EfficiencyΒ from accessing Treasury Department records, but also attacked the legitimacy of judicial oversightΒ β a fundamental pillar of American democracy, which is based on the separation of powers.
βIf a judge tried to tell a general how to conduct a military operation, that would be illegal. If a judge tried to command the attorney general in how to use her discretion as a prosecutor, thatβs also illegal. Judges arenβt allowed to control the executiveβs legitimate power,βΒ Vance wrote on XΒ on Sunday morning.
That post came hours after Musk said overnight that the judge who ruled against him should be impeached.
βA corrupt judge protecting corruption. He needs to be impeached NOW!βΒ said Musk, whom President Donald Trump tasked with rooting out waste across the federal government.
Musk also shared a post from a user who suggested that the Trump administration openly defy the court order. βI donβt like the precedent it sets when you defy a judicial ruling, but Iβm just wondering what other options are these judges leaving us,β the person wrote, in part.
The court order against Musk temporarilyΒ barred his team from accessing a Treasury system that contains sensitive personal data, such as Social Security and bank account numbers for millions of Americans. Musk and his team say they are simply rooting through government systems to identify waste and abuse at the Republican president's direction.
Deputy White House chief of staff Stephen Miller called the ruling βan assault on the very idea of democracy itself.β
βWhat we continue to see here is the idea that rogue bureaucrats who are elected by no one, who answer to no one, who have lifetime tenure jobs, who we would be told can never be fired, which, of course, is not true, that the power has been cemented and accumulated for years, whether it be with the Treasury bureaucrats or the FBI bureaucrats or the CIA bureaucrats or the USAID bureaucrats, with this unelected shadow force that is running our government and running our country,β Miller said on Fox News Channelβs "Sunday Morning Futures."
The pushback comes as the administration's efforts to dismantle government agencies and eliminate large swaths of the federal workforce are being held up by the courts.
Judges also blocked Trump, at least temporarily, from moving forward with mass federal buyouts, from placing thousands of USAID workers on leave and from implementing an executive order thatΒ seeks to end birthright citizenshipΒ for anyone born in the United States.
Early Saturday, U.S. District Judge Paul A. Engelmayer issued a preliminary injunction after 19 Democratic attorneys general sued, alleging the Trump administration allowed Muskβs team access to the Treasury Departmentβs central payment system in violation of federal law.
βI disagree with it 100%. I think itβs crazy," Trump told Fox News Channel's Brett Baier in an interview that aired Sunday on the Super Bowl pregame show.
The payment system handles tax refunds, Social Security benefits, veteransβ benefits and much more, sending out trillions of dollars every year while containing an expansive network of Americansβ personal and financial data. A hearing is set for Feb. 14.
Democrats sounded alarms over Musk and Trump's efforts, including efforts to halt spending that was appropriated by Congress. Under the U.S. Constitution, Congress is the body in charge of spending.
βI think this is the most serious Constitutional crisis the country has faced, certainly, since Watergate," Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., said on ABCβs βThis Week.β βThis is a red alert moment when this entire country has to understand that our democracy is at risk."
Murphy expressed concern that the courts are ill-prepared for the onslaught they face.
βThe pace of this assault on the Constitution in order to serve the billionaire class, it is absolutely dizzying. And so, you have to run a full-scale opposition," Murphy said. "Ultimately, youβve got to bring the American public into this conversation because we need our Republican colleagues in the House and in the Senate ultimately to put a stop to this. You cannot just rely on the court system.β
Republicans,Β who largely stood in lockstep behind the presidentΒ since he was sworn in for a second term, did so again Sunday.
Ohio Rep. Jim Jordan blasted the court ruling for the Treasury Department case while arguing that the president should be able to implement his agenda as he sees fit.
βI assume we will argue this out in court, like the other 17 or 18 decisions we have seen in the last several days. That all is going to get argued out in court. And, frankly, we knew the left, we knew the Democrats were going to do this," the Republican said on CNN's βInside Politics.β



