SCOTUS Removes Due Process Requirement On Deportations to Third Countries

The Supreme Court’s conservative wing on Monday allowed the Trump administration to conduct “third country removals,” deporting detainees to nations with which they may have no connection, and without a due process requirement put in place by a lower court. The court’s three liberals dissented.

The ruling suspends a lower court order which mandated a three-week period in which non-citizens would have to receive notice and an opportunity to challenge their removal to a third country before deportation.

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Marjorie Taylor Greene Blasts Fox News And Iran War Hawks: ‘The Entire World Is Going To Erupt’

President Trump’s decision to bring the U.S. into Israel’s war with Iran has exploded rifts on the right. On Monday, those conflicts spilled into view as Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) ripped Fox News host Mark Levin, Sen. Lindsay Graham (R-SC) and other “neocon suckups” who she blamed for advocating for military action that is a clear break with Trump’s campaign promises. 

“We are entering a nuclear war, World War III, because the entire world is going to erupt,” Greene said, adding, “The people that are cheering it on right now, their tune is going to drastically change the minute we start seeing flag-draped coffins on the nightly news — on Fox News that brainwashes all the baby boomers, and on CNN that brainwashes all the Democrat baby boomers. And that is exactly how this is going to go down.”

Greene offered her searing assessment of the situation on a broadcast of the “War Room” podcast hosted by Trump’s former strategist and perpetual ally-slash-adviser Steve Bannon. 

During his campaigns, Trump consistently critiqued the country’s past involvement in foreign wars and argued he would focus on avoiding overseas entanglements to put “America First.” Along with Greene, Bannon and former Fox News host Tucker Carlson are among the prominent figures associated with Trump’s MAGA movement who have consistently advocated against attacking Iran. Bannon, who met with Trump last week ahead of Saturday night’s strike on Iranian nuclear facilities, seemed to tease the possibility of military action on a broadcast that morning where he described it as the “Third World War.” 

As he introduced Greene on Monday, Bannon referred to Mediaite’s coverage of social media sparring between her and Levin, who had called her a “shameless nitwit” for criticizing the Iran strikes even as she stressed her continued support for Trump. Bannon also played a clip of Levin cheering on the military action on Fox News. 

“The military has to be used. If it’s used by a smart commander in chief, if it’s used wisely, if it’s used for a specific purpose, it gives us peace,” Levin said in the clip, adding, “America, don’t you feel relief? Of course you feel relief because … these Islamo-Nazis were building nuclear weapons to attack us, too.”

Bannon then invited Greene to respond — after they addressed some technical difficulties.

“Unmute,” Bannon said. “You’ve got to unmute yourself, MTG.” 

Once her microphone was on, Bannon mockingly paraphrased Levin and asked Greene, “Did you sleep better last night as a nitwit? Did you sleep better … because of Mark Levin?”

Fully unmuted and unbound, Greene proceeded to go off on Levin.

“That’s quite some name calling from one of Fox News’ hosts. It was hard to listen to … what he was saying with all the screeching, which is why most people I know don’t watch his show,” she said. “But no, you know, I didn’t sleep better after neocons and warmongers talked this administration into entering a hot war that Israel started.”

Greene went on to suggest that Israel’s initial attacks on Iran, which she pointed out were “unprovoked,” were part of an effort by that country’s leader, Benjamin Netanyahu, to “stay in power” after his coalition government had “barely won a vote.” 

“Now, I’m not making apologies for Iran. I have no investment in the terrorist regime of Iran. But the reality is, no Americans slept better after America bombed Iran, because all of a sudden we now have threats on our homeland,” Greene said, later adding, “Americans in Israel are terrified for their lives as well as Israeli people are terrified for their lives because bombs have been falling in Israel. … Americans all over the world are seriously questioning, is this going to be World War III?”

Greene specifically addressed warnings to Americans in Qatar. Shortly after she was on air with Bannon, those concerns proved prescient as a U.S. base in Qatar was targeted by retaliatory missile strikes from Iran. Qatar and the U.S. said there were no casualties from that attack.

Bannon then asked Greene if “other voices” are “going to get in to start advising the president.” She didn’t directly address the question but expressed frustration Trump is evidently listening to people like Levin and Graham, casting them as less loyal Trump supporters than she is.

“Mark Levin was one of the biggest Never Trumpers when President Trump was running for president. So it absolutely makes me sick, it makes me want to throw up in my mouth that he’s one of the voices that is constantly texting, and calling President Trump’s phone, and showing up at the White House demanding for America to go to every single foreign war on behalf of Israel,” Greene said. “I’m really sick and disgusted at that — and it’s people like him and Lindsey Graham and all these other people that never really supported Trump in the beginning.”

Greene then touted her own “MAGA” bonafides as she argued Trump’s movement is deadset against this latest action. 

“I represent MAGA far more than Mark Levin or any of these other neocon suckups ever will and ever do because MAGA is not for foreign wars,” she said. “We are not for regime change and we are for America first.” 

For some viewers who watched Bannon’s show online, the entire episode had distinctly apocalyptic overtones. On Rumble, the right-leaning streaming platform that has had business ties with Trump’s vice president, J.D. Vance, and his son, Donald Trump Jr., Bannon’s show was preceded by dramatic digital ads declaring that “war erupting between Israel and Iran” was evidence of “prophecy in real time” and looming catastrophe. Clicking on those ads directed “War Room” viewers to a page that declared “The AI Beast Is Rising” and advertised “prepper” guides “built for Christian men who lead in the storm.” 

Yet for Greene, the most cataclysmic event almost seemed to be the collapse of what she understood to be the America First agenda. 

“Six months in Steve and here we are turning back on the campaign promises,” she said. “We bombed Iran on behalf of Israel.”

A MAGA Schism on Iran? Not So Fast.

A lot of things happened. Here are some of the things. This is TPM’s Morning Memo. Sign up for the email version.

Why MAGA Evangelicals Support Bombing Iran

In the run-up to Saturday’s bombing of Iranian nuclear facilities, certain prominent figures in MAGA-land sought to pressure Trump and his pro-war allies to remember the movement’s supposedly non-interventionist roots. Tucker Carlson made headlines for grilling Sen. Ted Cruz, a longtime ally of the Christian Zionist movement, about what evangelicals claim is a biblical imperative to support Israel. Steve Bannon actually accused Fox News of being an unregistered foreign agent of the Israeli government for its pro-war coverage. 

Trump has disingenuously claimed to be anti-war, and MAGA purports to be an isolationist movement opposed to further American military misadventures in the Middle East. But the Republican Party remains dominated by white evangelicals whose views are very much in line with the Cruz position that Carlson took such pains to mock. And despite Bannon’s plaint, Trump remains heavily influenced by Fox and its pro-war and pro-regime change coverage. 

MAGA figures like Carlson and Bannon know how to make headlines through viral posts and combative podcasts. But as they likely know just as well as anyone else enmeshed in American right-wing politics, Christian Zionists have spent decades building a movement that runs from church pews to the highest echelons of American power, advocating for the United States to intervene militarily to stop Iran’s nuclear ambitions. Christian Zionists see Iran as a central player in what they say is a biblical prophecy about Jesus’s return. The core tenet of this movement holds that a series of prophesied events, including Jews’ return to Israel and invasion by armies of foreign countries including Iran, will culminate in a bloody, victorious battle at Armageddon. It’s a dangerous mix of warmongering theology and politics, and anyone is right to question it. But the truth is it still undergirds the thinking of many Republicans, including elected officials and other figures in Trump’s orbit.

John Hagee, the founder of Christians United for Israel (CUFI) and a top evangelical proponent of both this end-times scenario and U.S. military intervention in Iran, was close to Trump in his first term. After Saturday’s bombing raids, CUFI promptly praised Trump on social media, thanking him for “standing with Israel.” CUFI is hosting its annual summit starting Sunday in Washington, D.C., and you can expect it to feature high praise for Trump.

Elon Musk Watch: Inside Trump’s Destruction of USAID

You might have missed this amid the Iran news, but the New York Times published a harrowing moment-by-moment account of how the Trump administration and Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) rapidly descended on and destroyed the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) within days of Trump assuming office. A cascade of White House edicts, firings, contract cancellations, and spending freezes sent shockwaves throughout the world, crushing, in just days, the vital work of USAID staffers and contractors on programs, including food aid, disease prevention and treatment, and democracy promotion.

But DOGE’s appearance at the agency on January 30, the Times reports, was what “sealed” USAID’s future–or lack of one. In DOGE’s sights was a career official who tried to stop the administration’s firings of agency staff, contending they were unlawful. DOGE had him escorted out of the building, and then seized control of the agency’s computers. 

Just in case anyone still believes the fiction that Elon Musk was never actually in charge of DOGE, as he and the administration have attempted to claim in public and in court, he in fact played a central role at USAID, according to the Times. “Employees at first declined to give that kind of [agency computer] access to DOGE, most of whom lacked security clearances, according to people familiar with what happened,” the Times reports. But then, “[m]embers of DOGE got Mr. Musk on the phone, who told U.S.A.I.D. employees to cooperate.”

Two days later, Musk tweeted, “U.S.A.I.D. is a criminal organization. Time for it to die.” The next day he crowed on his social media platform X, “We spent the weekend feeding U.S.A.I.D. into the wood chipper. Could [have] gone to some great parties. Did that instead.”

Senate Parliamentarian Lays Down the Law on the Big Beautiful Bill

The Senate Parliamentarian, the legislative body’s official, nonpartisan advisor on the intricacies of its own rules, has concluded that many key parts of the “Big Beautiful Bill” cannot be included through reconciliation. Republicans had hoped to push a host of insidious priorities through the rapid, simple majority track to passage for budget bills, free of the threat of a filibuster. But Parliamentarian Elizabeth MacDonough has said many are not budget items. They include:

  • Consumer protection: Cuts to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau so draconian they would eliminate the agency, along with other cuts to the Federal Reserve, the Office of Financial Research, and the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board;
  • Reverse Robin Hood: An attempt to shift Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) costs from the federal government to the states, undermining a key way Republicans hope to find money to fund their massive tax breaks for the wealthy;
  • Climate: GOP efforts to gut Biden-era emissions reductions and electric vehicle incentives, along with provisions of the Inflation Reduction Act. MacDonough also found against a provision that would have forced the United States Postal Service to scrap its $1.5 billion fleet of electric vehicles and charging equipment;
  • Checks and balances: Crucially, MacDonough determined that Republicans could not include their provision to require litigants suing the government to post bond in order to seek emergency relief. If such a provision became law, it would forever shield the Trump administration from the sorts of lawsuits that have proven to be some of the sole checks on his naked power grabs.

Shadow President Stephen Miller

The Wall Street Journal reports on Stephen Miller’s unprecedented power and sway in the Trump 2.0 White House, with a hand in every high-profile decision on immigration and much more, including Trump’s assaults on universities, law firms, and museums. But it’s the mini-scoop in the lede of the piece that is likely of greatest interest to the Chief Judge of the United States District Court for the District of Columbia, James Boasberg. According to the Journal, it was Miller who, back in March, made the decision to defy Boasberg’s order to return  airborne planes carrying detained migrants back to the United States, instead handing them over to the brutal CECOT prison in El Salvador.

Judge Orders Mahmoud Khalil Released from Detention

Palestinian activist Mahmoud Khalil, one of Trump’s early targets in his supposed quest to eradicate antisemitism on college campuses, is back home in New York with his family. On Friday, U.S. District Judge Michael Farbiarz ordered his release from more than three months of detention in an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) facility in Jena, Louisiana. Khalil said of his time there: “You see a different reality, a different reality about this country that supposedly champions human right[s] and liberty and justice.” 

Another Judge Orders Kilmar Abrego Garcia’s Pre-Trial Release  

U.S. Magistrate Judge Barbara D. Holmes has denied the government’s attempts to keep Kilmar Abrego Garcia in pre-trial detention pending the human smuggling case against him in Tennessee. In her 51-page opinion, Holmes called into question the government’s claims about Garcia’s alleged criminality and gang affiliations, noting he “has no reported criminal history of any kind” and “his reputed gang membership is contradicted by the government’s own evidence.” The government nonetheless has pledged to keep him in ICE custody and possibly deport him again.

Texas Theocracy Watch (Again)

Over the weekend, Texas Governor Greg Abbott signed two Christian nationalist bills into law. One requires the posting of the Ten Commandments in public school classrooms and the other authorizes school districts to permit staff and students time during the school day for prayer.

Speaking of Texas and Christian Nationalism

Trump’s White House Religious Liberty Commission, chaired by Dan Patrick, the Lone Star state’s Lieutenant Governor, had its first meeting in D.C. last week–at the Museum of the Bible. Americans United for the Separation of Church and State’s Alessandro Terenzoni has a disturbing report on the seeming merger of the commission’s work with that of the Department of Justice (DOJ). With Attorney General Pam Bondi as a surprise guest, commission members appeared on stage flanked by a line alternating flags: the American flag and the official flag of the DOJ. 

The Rise of a White Nationalist Legal Movement

This past semester, a law student at the University of Florida, Preston Damsky, won an award in an “originalism” seminar, for a racist paper arguing the phrase “we the people” in the Constitution’s preamble refers only to white people. The professor who made the decision to honor this student was John L. Badalamenti, a Trump-nominated federal judge in the Middle District of Florida. Damsky has since been suspended from the law school for a social media post stating that Jews must be “abolished by any means necessary.” 

WMD Redux, Trump Capitulation Edition

Who needs Judith Miller when you have Tulsi Gabbard?

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Day After Thoughts on Trump’s Iran Strike

A few points on the effect rather than the wisdom or possible fall-out of these attacks.

The President has repeatedly said the Fordow nuclear facility was “obliterated”. Clearly that is a party slogan rather than any kind of factual analysis. We’re now getting the first after-action reports out of the Pentagon and Israel which speak of the Fordow facility appearing to have sustained “severe damage” but not being destroyed. One thing that struck me last night was the US assessment that helped prompt this attack which, reportedly, was that the entirety of the Israeli assault had pushed Iran’s program back roughly six months. That’s pretty paltry in terms of any great change in the strategic outlook. I note that because we should wait a significant period of time before we conclude – if the evidence ever merits it – that the US has somehow put the Iranians back to square one in their ability to build nuclear warheads.

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A Few Thoughts on Trump’s Bombing Raid

A few quick thoughts on Trump’s military strike on the Iranian nuclear facilities, in no particular order.

Trump has referred to this as very successful and — if I’m understanding his statement — essentially done. I don’t think that’s how it works. My understanding is that there’s real uncertainty about how many strikes it would take to destroy especially the Fordow facility, which is buried deep in a mountainside. So I think we should be skeptical about how we know how successful this was. You need after action reports to have any sense of what actually happened. The geography here, the composition of the mountainside, how it interacts with these particular munitions. These are incredibly complicated and make outcomes uncertain. (I’m going from memory since we’re reacting to breaking news. So keep that in mind.) The U.S. has conducted extensive testing on these “bunker buster” bombs. And there has been extensive planning going back a number of years on how this attack specifically would be carried out. The Pentagon produces and maintains war plans on almost everything. But this specifically has been planned out in great detail and over many years.

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Is There Fire Behind the Sergio Gor Smoke?

I wanted to flag your attention to a story bubbling up in the MAGA world that may amount to something or may be merely entertaining. It turns on a guy named Sergio Gor, a 38-year-old who is in charge of the Presidential Personnel Office. He’s in charge of vetting presidential appointees, but with an apparently very Trumpian emphasis on evidences of political loyalty as opposed to more conventional kind of reviews. But it turns out that Gor himself has yet to submit what is called an SF-86, the standard form for appointees who need a high level security clearance. So the guy in charge of vetting political appointees has yet to submit his own materials to be vetted himself. Not great, but the kind of mix of incompetence and probable sleaze that’s pretty standard in Trumpland.

But now there’s a bit more.

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Senate Republicans Take The Attack On Obamacare To A New Level

House Republicans included massive cuts to federal social safety net programs, like Medicaid, in the reconciliation package they passed in May. Experts tell TPM that the cuts to the programs amount to an effort to repeal elements of the Affordable Care Act

This week, Senate Republicans signalled they might go even further in that ACA repeal effort than their counterparts in the lower chamber. 

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Nearly 150 Deportees Remain Wrongfully Detained After Months Of Trump Stonewalling

A lot of things happened. Here are some of the things. This is TPM’s Morning Memo. Sign up for the email version.

The Absence Of News Is News

A key storyline through the first five months of the Trump administration is how the judicial branch has held up to the challenge of an autocratic president. While on balance the judiciary has fared better than it might have, one group of cases has been particularly vexing: the unlawful removals of foreign nationals in defiance of court orders.

The courts have either been slow, too solicitous of the executive branch, or wrong-headed in their approaches. That has yielded lethargic outcomes that don’t provide justice to the wrongfully deported or sufficient accountability for the bad-faith defiance by the administration.

A quick accounting of some of the most notable cases where detainees have fallen into and remain in an interminable legal limbo:

Alien Enemies Act

Who? The CECOT detainees remain the single biggest cluster of wrongfully removed foreign nationals. They are a group of 137 Venezuelan nationals sent to a maximum security prison in El Salvador under the Alien Enemies Act (AEA) without the due process that U.S. courts – including the Supreme Court – have since nearly universally found to have been required.

When? The CECOT detainees were removed on two flights from Texas on March 15 despite a court order that they not be removed and that the planes should be turned around.

What next? The original Alien Enemies Act case in front of Judge James Boasberg in D.C. is now a class action lawsuit consisting of all the CECOT detainees removed under the AEA. While Boasberg has generally been amenable to their claims, his most recent ruling was more focused on providing them with the due process they were denied than on immediately returning them to the United States, contemplating some sort of remote or virtual hearing process that has yet to be determined.

Why the delay? Boasberg’s early June order has been stymied by a Trump-heavy appeals court panel, which issued an administrative stay and is considering whether to grant the Trump administration’s request that the case be paused during its appeal. A ruling here may come as soon as today.

Contempt of court: In the background of all this remains the violation of Boasberg’s original March order barring the removals in the first place. Boasberg found probable cause that the Trump administration is in criminal contempt of court, but the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals issued an administrative stay in April blocking him from continuing with contempt proceedings and still hasn’t ruled even though two months have now elapsed.

Cristian

Who? Cristian is a Venezuelan national removed to CECOT under the Alien Enemies Act in violation of a 2024 court-ordered settlement agreement.

When? Cristian was removed on March 15. On April 23, U.S. District Judge Stephanie Gallagher of Maryland ordered the Trump administration to facilitate his return.

What next? Under orders from Gallagher, the Trump administration is required to facilitate Cristian’s return and file weekly status reports on its progress. It has thus far filed desultory status reports, with the Department of Homeland Security pointing the finger at the State Department but providing no real update on diplomatic efforts, if there are any. The next status report is due today.

Why the delay? The Trump administration is continuing to stonewall in this case like it did for months in the Abrego Garcia case, which was only resolved when the administration took the face-saving step of indicting him on criminal charges that it used to justify asking the Salvadoran government to return him.

Contempt of court: Judge Gallagher has confronted the stonewalling by ordering expedited discovery similar to that previously ordered in the Abrego Garcia case. The expedited discovery has been underway since early June, and so far it’s unclear whether the administration has stonewalled that process, too.

South Sudan Detainees

Who? A group of six detainees of various nationalities has been stuck at a U.S. military base in Djibouti where their flight to South Sudan was diverted after U.S. District Judge Brian Murphy of Boston intervened to enforce his already-issued injunction against such third-country removals without notice.

When? The detainees have been in Djibouti since about May 21.

What next? Under orders from Murphy, the Trump administration must give the detainees a chance to raise objections to their deportations to South Sudan or to other third countries. That was supposed to be a 14-day process beginning around May 23. It’s now been almost a month and the status of that process remains somewhat opaque.

Why the delay? It’s not clear exactly. By giving the administration a chance to provide due process to the detainees while still in Djibouti, he set up the potential for further delays and opacity. The Trump administration has described the conditions at the U.S. base as harsh, but it was the administration’s choice to keep the detainees there instead of returning them to the United States.

Contempt of court: Murphy is poised to launch a contempt of court proceeding over the violation of his order blocking such removals without notice after the immediate fate of the South Sudan detainees is determined. Murphy is already probing a separation alleged violation of his order that occurred when the Department of Homeland Security used the Defense Department to fly detainees from Gitmo to El Salvador as a ham-handed way to get around his order.

Jordin Melgar-Salmeron

Who? Jordin Melgar-Salmeron is a Salvadoran national deported to his home country in violation of an order from the Second Circuit Court of Appeals.

When? Melgar-Salmeron was deported on May 7, minutes after the appeals court issued its order barring his removal.

What next? After revising its explanation, the Trump administration is now calling the violation of the court order an inadvertent mistake due to a “confluence of administrative errors,” but it has moved slowly to remedy the situation.

Why the delay? The Trump administration is taking the position that it must only allow Melgar-Salmeron into the country, not actively seek his return.

Contempt of court: The appeals court has been asking tough questions of the administration, but it has not yet launched a contempt proceeding per se, as Melgar-Salmeron’s legal team has asked for.

We may see movement in some of these cases as soon as today, but when you step back and survey the blatant violations of court order by the administration and the long delays in remedying those violations, it’s clear that the process and procedures in place – plus problematic interventions by appeals courts – have been insufficient to produce just outcomes. Even the cases of two detainees – Kilmar Abrego Garcia and another migrant known as O.C.G. – who were returned eventually don’t offer any satisfaction. So even if the courts have “stood up” to the administration, the rule of law has not been validated in a timely or robust way.

Appeals Court Upholds Trump’s National Guard Move

The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, as expected, paused a lower court order blocking President Trump’s federalization of the California National Guard while the administration’s appeal proceeds.

Good If Sobering Read

Alistair Kitchen: How My Reporting on the Columbia Protests Led to My Deportation

Where’s The Outrage?

Chris Geidner on the Supreme Court’s anti-trans decision this week.

Seems Important

U.S. intel assesses that Iran remains undecided on whether to build nukes, the NYT reports.

I’ll See You In A Couple Of Weeks

I’m handing over the reins to Morning Memo so I can get away for a few days.

Sarah Posner, whose work you’ve often seen at TPM, will sub for me next week, and the TPM team will handle things the following week. Be kind and supportive to them in my absence.

See you soon.

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