Trump calls for stopping to restraining orders in the country amid court setbacks



On Thursday, President Trump called for stopping judicial orders at the country level and suggested that the Supreme Court intervene, as his administration faced multiple setbacks from federal judges.

“Unlawful orders at the country level by radical left judges can well destroy our country!” Trump was published on the social truth. “These people are the free, who do not care, even a little, about the repercussions of their dangerous decisions and rulings.”

Trump said it was “a commitment to the government’s twisted agencies to cancel these orders.”

Trump went to the complaint that the judges “want to take over the presidential powers” without election. Experts noted that the judges were not elected so that they would not face political pressure in their rulings.

Trump wrote on the social truth: “Stop restraining orders worldwide now, before it is too late,” Trump wrote on the social truth. “If Judge Roberts and the United States Supreme Court do not fit this toxic and unprecedented situation, then our country is in a very serious problem!”

The Trump administration has faced a large number of orders from federal judges who stop aspects of its agenda.

James Boasberg, the chief judge of the US District Court in Columbia County, issued an order at the end of last week to stop the deportation of a group of Venezuelans, including members of the alleged in the Trin de Aragoa gang, to El Salvador.

Trump attacked, in a separate publication on Thursday, Pasperg, describing him as “one of the coaches.”

On Tuesday, another federal judge prevented Trump’s executive order, which is prohibited from the transgender people from service in the army.

A federal judge recently ordered the departments of agriculture, defense, energy, interior, treasury and old warriors to return the test staff immediately.

Earlier this month, American boycott judge John McConnell spent a judicial order against the Trump administration’s attempt to freeze payments for federal scholarships.

Senator Josh Holie, a member of the Senate Judicial Committee, said on Thursday that he will present legislation to curb what he called “the dramatic abuse of the judiciary” by the courts that issued judicial orders against Trump.

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