Supreme Court rulings mix losses, gains for Trump on Fed, agencies, ballots, Carroll case
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Topics in This Edition
Summary
The broadcast covers multiple June 29, 2026 Supreme Court decisions. Segments address denial of Trump's appeal in the E. Jean Carroll defamation case, a 5-4 ruling upholding counting of certain late mail ballots against GOP challenges for the midterms, and a 5-4 decision blocking Trump's attempt to fire Fed Governor Lisa Cook while granting broader removal power over other independent agencies like the FTC. It highlights perceived inconsistency in protecting Fed independence but expanding executive authority elsewhere. Sourcing relies on court outcomes, references to Washington Post reporting, and commentary without named experts or graphics. The throughline stresses judicial inconsistency favoring Trump on agencies but not the Fed or ballots.
Editorial Assessment
The core factual reporting on rulings holds up against contemporaneous court records and coverage from outlets including SCOTUSblog, NPR, and the Guardian. Viewers may miss nuance on the Fed's unique statutory structure and historical tradition noted in opinions, or the narrower scope of the ballot decision limited to postmark/receipt windows. Loaded language frames decisions as part of a 'plot' and grants of 'impunity,' skewing perception toward alarm over expanded presidential power. The broadcast correctly flags the split outcomes and 5-4 alignments but omits full counterarguments on Article II removal authority or state election flexibility. Overall accurate but partisan in tone and emphasis.
Key Moments
SCOTUS refuses Trump's appeal in E. Jean Carroll defamation case
Multiple sources confirm denial of review, leaving $5M verdict intact
SCOTUS rules 5-4 to allow counting of late mail ballots postmarked by Election Day
Upheld Mississippi-style grace periods; Roberts and Barrett joined majority against GOP challenge
SCOTUS 5-4 blocks Trump from firing Fed Gov. Lisa Cook; Roberts and Kavanaugh join liberals
Cook remains pending further litigation; due process concerns cited
SCOTUS expands Trump's power to fire officials at independent agencies like FTC
Overturns longstanding precedent; major structural change to government noted in coverage
Notable Concerns
- Loaded language and selective framing amplify narrative of judicial inconsistency and power grabs
Sources Consulted
- US supreme court rules Trump’s firing of Lisa Cook from Fed was unconstitutional
- Supreme Court rules states can count late-arriving mailed ballots, rejecting Trump-led challenge
- Supreme Court rejects Trump's appeal of 2022 E. Jean Carroll defamation case
- Supreme Court cements Trump's power over agencies long considered independent
- Trump v. Cook
- Justices uphold state law allowing for late-arriving mail-in ballots