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One big win and three defeats for Trump in dramatic day at Supreme Court
To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. This video can not be played Figure caption, Watch: Trump reacts to expanded presidential power in Supreme Court ruling By Anthony Zurcher North America correspondent Published 9 hours ago On the second-to-last day of Supreme Court decisions for this term, the justices delivered a big win for Donald Trump. But beneath the headline-generating ruling on expansive presidential power, the court gave some indications that this particular president may not always get what he wants â and the three liberal justices may have a few unexpected allies amongst the six conservative justices on the high court. Here's a look at the three biggest takeaways from an eventful Monday morning for America's judicial branch. 1. Sweeping presidential authority over 'independent' regulators Nearly 100 years ago, the Supreme Court ruled unanimously that Democratic President Franklin Delano Roosevelt did not have unchecked power to replace commissioners on regulatory agencies set up by Congress to be insulated from presidential authority. On Monday, facing a challenge by Republican Trump, the court decisively scrapped that precedent. "Subordinates who exercise the president's power are subject to removal by him," Chief Justice John Roberts wrote in the majority opinion. "Then, and only then, can they remain accountable to the president, and the president to the people." In this ruling, the court's justices divided into familiar groupings. All six conservatives, three of whom were appointed by Trump, found in favour of the president. The three liberal justices, all appointed by Democrats, dissented. Supreme Court allows late-arriving mail-in ballots in defeat for Trump Trump's final appeal of E Jean Carroll sex abuse case rejected Supreme Court blocks Trump's attempt to fire Federal Reserve governor Lisa Cook The court's decision will give Trump, and all future presidents, broad power to remove and replace regulators from dozens of key agencies with whom they disagree. The Federal Trade Commission was directly at issue in this case (as it was in Roosevelt's), but the precedent the court sets here will apply to regulatory bodies interpreting election laws, issuing communications policies, resolving labour disputes and establishing financial and environmental regulations. By now, Americans are used to dramatic policy swings when a president of a different political party takes over the presidency â from Barack Obama to Trump to Joe Biden and back to Trump. This court's decision is sure to supercharge that trend. "Ninety years of precedent has been completely and unequivocally overruled," Trump exclaimed in a Truth Social post after the decision, "greatly increasing presidential power at a time when it is most needed!" To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. This video can not be played Figure caption, Watch: Trump reacts to expanded presidential power in Supreme Court ruling 2. Libe