
Retired Justice Stephen Breyer defends federal judges under attack from White House in CNN interview
CNN
Retired Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer on Wednesday defended federal judges that have come under withering criticism from President Donald Trump and his allies for a series of rulings that have slowed the White House’s agenda.
Retired Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer on Wednesday defended federal judges that have come under withering criticism from President Donald Trump and his allies for a series of rulings that have slowed the White House’s agenda. Breyer, who retired from the court in 2022, said that every judge in the nation is “aware of the climate of the era” but said that they must nevertheless decide controversial cases based on their best – if sometimes imperfect – reading of the law. “You decide what you think is correct in the law. Period,” Breyer said during an exclusive interview on “The Situation Room with Wolf Blitzer & Pamela Brown.” “But are you aware of what’s going in the country? Yes, you are,” he added. Breyer’s remarks came as federal judges have faced fierce criticism from the Trump administration over rulings that have temporarily halted some of the president’s actions, including a block on rapid deportations under a wartime authority enacted in 1798. Trump urged Congress to impeach the judge involved in that case, which prompted a highly unusual public statement from Chief Justice John Roberts on Tuesday. Roberts urged parties who lose in lower courts to appeal those decisions rather than threatening to impeach the judge who made them.

In Venezuela, daily routines seem undisturbed: children attending school, adults going to work, vendors opening their businesses. But beneath this facade lurks anxiety, fear, and frustration, with some even taking preventative measures against a possible attack amid the tension between the United States and Venezuela.

The alleged drug traffickers killed by the US military in a strike on September 2 were heading to link up with another, larger vessel that was bound for Suriname — a small South American country east of Venezuela – the admiral who oversaw the operation told lawmakers on Thursday according to two sources with direct knowledge of his remarks.











