Opinion editor’s note: Editorials represent the opinions of the Minnesota Star Tribune Editorial Board, which operates independently from the newsroom.
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Not long ago, many members of Congress, Republicans especially, made a virtue of carrying a copy of the Constitution. These “pocket Constitutions” — mini versions of America’s big idea and ideals — haven’t been seen as much recently in Washington, even though the Trump administration has openly defied statutes in its blitzkrieg dismantling of parts of the federal government.
The list, which seems to expand daily, includes flouting a law meant to ban TikTok in the U.S. unless its Chinese owner sells it — a bipartisan measure that was first initiated during President Donald Trump’s first term.
Now, in his second term, his administration has frozen most foreign aid and moved to shutter the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) despite funds for both already approved by Congress. Domestically, the administration tried to temporarily ice nearly $3 trillion in grants and other government spending before chaos (and two court injunctions) caused a retreat.
Similarly, it took judicial action to halt, at least for now, the administration’s attempt to end birthright citizenship, which is granted in the 14th Amendment to the Constitution. Courts may eventually catch up to other legal violations too, like the firing of 17 inspectors general overseeing federal agencies — despite clear legal language stipulating that presidents must give Congress 30 days’ notice and a written “substantive rationale, including detailed and case-specific reasons” before dismissing any of them. Or the firing of prosecutors who worked on cases involving Trump or the Jan. 6 MAGA mob that attacked the Capitol, and the sacking of a Democratic member of the National Labor Relations Board in order to keep it from having a quorum. But overall, the judicial branch, by constitutional design, moves slower, if it moves at all.
Congress, with 535 members, moves more deliberately too. But because Republicans have majorities in both the House and Senate, it has barely challenged Trump’s truncation of these laws, at least as of now.
“I see Congress abdicating its responsibility in our system of separation of powers,” said Kathryn Pearson, a University of Minnesota associate professor of political science whose scholarship often focuses on Congress. “All three branches are supposed to be a check on the other, and I don’t see Congress fulfilling that role.”