Fresh Air - Are Trump's Executive Orders Legal?
Episode Date: February 17, 2025Constitutional scholar, historian, and New York Times staff writer Charlie Savage joins us this President's Day to talk about the scope of executive power. Savage takes us through the legal challenges..., the power of Congress and the Supreme Court, and how previous presidents have pushed the bounds.TV critic David Bianculli reviews Star Trek: Section 31 and Planet Earth: Asia.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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This is Fresh Air. I'm Tanya Mosley.
Since the inauguration, we've experienced a dizzying onslaught of actions from the Oval Office.
So we're devoting this President's Day to understanding the scope of President Donald Trump's power
as he continues to break laws, use billionaire Elon Musk to dismantle the government, and circumvent Congress.
Since taking office, President Trump has issued dozens of executive orders, memos, and proclamations
to change policies in immigration law.
He's expanded on the record of his first term and is acting on the promises he made during
his campaign, actions that will redefine the United States, like taking away birthright
citizenship, urging millions of federal workers to resign, and dismantling
efforts to prevent foreign influence in our elections.
Legal scholars and experts agree that we are in a constitutional crisis.
We explore what that is and what power Congress and the American people have against President
Trump's executive authority.
Our guest today, Charlie Savage, has studied and written about presidential power for two decades.
His 2007 book, Takeover, The Return of the Imperial Presidency and the Subversion of
American Democracy, is about the Bush-Cheney administration's efforts to expand the president's
power.
Savage is also a constitutional scholar and wrote in 2015 Power Wars, an investigative
account of national security and legal policy making
under President Obama.
Savage is a staff writer for the New York Times,
where he writes about national security and legal policy.
We recorded this conversation with Savage last week.
Charlie Savage, welcome back to Fresh Air.
Thank you for having me.
Okay, Charlie, so today will be kind of like a
civics lesson and hopefully a grounding to understand the scope of presidential
power and what actions are legal or illegal. Many legal experts, as I
mentioned, agree that we are in a constitutional crisis. Some have even
used stronger language. From you, what makes this a constitutional crisis
and what's happening now that points to one?
A constitutional crisis is a, obviously it's a strong phrase
and it's one that doesn't have a clear definition.
My colleague Adam Liptaj wrote recently that it's more of a sliding scale than an on or off.
And I think that's right.
So I think that's right.
So I think the reason people are saying that now is that Trump is brazenly, openly breaking
laws left and right in his assault on basic structures of the federal government.
He's firing people without obeying laws that set certain limits on when that can be done or how it can be done from members of independent agencies to inspectors general to civil servants.
He's basically shut down an agency, United States Agency for International Development,
and folded its remnants into the State Department in the face of a law passed by Congress that
says USAID will exist as an independent entity that's not face of a law passed by Congress that says USAID will exist
as an independent entity that's not part of a department.
And in many other ways, he is kind of rolling through legal constraints.
And this has in turn engendered a blizzard of lawsuits that are piling up now.
I think we're approaching 70 as you and I record this, and there's already been more
than a dozen court orders telling him to stop doing this and stop doing that.
And he's saying he will obey those and appeal them, but there's already mounting evidence
that agencies are not obeying, especially court orders telling them to unfreeze funds
that Trump had ordered blocked.
And so the prospect of a president openly violating laws and then not obeying court
orders, I think, would clearly be a constitutional crisis.
Trump is saying he's going to obey these and just appeal them and try to get higher courts
to let him do what he wants.
And it's not 100% clear that the agencies that are nevertheless jamming up certain funds
are doing so because of White House orders, as opposed to just sort of confusion and chaos
that have been unleashed by this onslaught.
So I'm not 100% sure myself that I would say this is yet a constitutional
crisis. I think the moment Trump says, I see the judge has ordered me to do this, but I
don't care. I'm going to act contrary to that order, not just try to get a higher court
to overturn it. I think that would be unambiguously in the zone we're talking about.
But can you remind us, this is kind of the civics lesson, how the three branches of government
are supposed to interact with each other as stated in the Constitution and how President
Trump of course in violating these laws, but also just in the way that our three, the legislative
branch, the judicial branch and the executive branch are actually supposed to work in concert
with each other.
Sure. And I want to preface this by saying, yes, he is openly violating these statutes enacted by Congress about how agencies should be structured or when in you can and can't fire a federal worker.
It appears that his legal team wants to set up test cases
that would allow the Supreme Court
to declare those laws unconstitutional.
And the only way to get something like that into court
is to violate it, have a lawsuit,
and then fight about whether the law
is constitutional or not.
And so there's this gloss over this
of the prospect that down the road, the Republican
appointees at least on the Supreme Court who have a supermajority will say that he had
constitutional authority to do these things despite those laws.
As far as the basic structure of government, the founders of the United States mistrusted concentrated government
authority, the sort of all the power in the hands of the king. They did not want
to have a country that was subject to that much unaccountable concentrated
power. They divided the powers of government up among three separate but equal branches, the presidency,
the Congress, and the courts.
And there's these overlapping checks and balances that are supposed to prevent any one branch
or one person from having too much concentrated, accumulated, and therefore unaccountable power.
That's how the United States is supposed to work
Can you remind us as it relates to the Supreme Court how over the last few years?
Executive power has been redefined by the Supreme Court
Yes, this Supreme Court now has
six
Republican appointees out of the nine justices. And five of those six are former executive branch attorneys
from the Reagan administration or the George W. Bush administration.
And the executive branch legal teams in those two administrations
both were pushing at the limits of presidential power.
And even before the second Trump administration began,
that new majority bloc, especially,
but not with his appointees, which added three,
but even before then, had started chipping away
over the last 10 or 15 years
on some of the ability of Congress through statutes
to place limits on presidential authority.
In particular, they clearly wanted to advance the idea
that presidents must have exclusive control
of the executive branch, and therefore,
they must be able to fire anyone in the executive branch
at will in order to exert control over how
those subordinates are exercising executive authority.
And so the Supreme Court has been saying, no, the president can fire this kind of person
or that kind of person, regardless of job protections that Congress has created for
them.
And of course, most importantly, last summer, the Republican appointees on the court granted,
more or less invented out of thin air, not out of clear text or history, that the Constitution
makes presidents presumptively immune from prosecution for crimes they commit using their
official powers.
And as part of that, they also went further when it came to the president's authority
over law enforcement and the Justice Department and said he is absolutely immune for anything
he does with the Justice Department based on the idea that he is supposed to be the chief law
enforcement officer under the Constitution.
And so these rulings, before Trump comes back into office, have already clearly created
momentum for a unfolding reinterpretation of the Constitution that would, and is already
resulting in much greater concentration of power in
the White House and a reduced rule for Congress and the courts. An opening of
the throttle on something that has been moving gradually up until now. One very
contentious act that the president has made in the last few weeks is
birthright citizenship. If birthright citizenship makes its way to the Supreme Court,
what do we know about how the justices might rule?
I was actually reading one scholar who said,
Justice Brett Kavanaugh and Neil Gorsuch,
both who are Trump appointees, may disagree
with Trump on this one.
They may.
I really don't like the prediction game,
especially when there's something novel like this. I'm pretty't like the prediction game,
especially when there's something novel like this.
I'm pretty confident that some of these job protection statutes,
this court would eagerly strike down just based on their momentum
and already doing so for sort of far right legal scholars, think tankers
have kind of developed this idea that they've convinced themselves of that the 14th Amendment
can be reinterpreted from the way it's always been interpreted.
And it's all based on this very sort of contorted theory that there's an exception in that amendment
for people
who are not subject to the jurisdiction of the United States.
That's always been understood just to be diplomats, people who are here with diplomatic immunity.
You can't charge them with crimes.
You just have to sort of send them home, et cetera.
And their children do not become citizens.
And the idea is, well, let's interpret that phrase as encompassing anyone who's not here
permanently or lawfully.
But the problem is that tourists who are here on tourist visas or illegal immigrants who
are here without documentation are subject to the jurisdiction of the United States.
If they commit a crime, they can be prosecuted.
And it seems like a real reach to take this sort of odd reinterpretation of that and totally
change the meaning of something
this important.
Executive orders historically have been kind of controversial and sort of like seen as
a last resort after a president is unable to get legislative support.
So the essence of an executive order per se is not controversial. What becomes controversial is when a president has tried to get something through Congress
and failed and then tries to do it unilaterally anyway on his own, especially using contested
theories of his power.
So it's not really the issuing of executive orders, but it's what particular orders say
and what the legal theory is behind it.
There's never been quite as intense a flurry
of executive orders as we're seeing at the start,
have seen at the start of the second Trump administration.
We know they had a huge number of them pre-written
and ready to go.
And this is part of the sort of novelty of someone
who had been in and the people around him lost power, thought about what they should have done with that power if they
ever got a second chance.
You told me the last time we spoke in December of 2023 that Trump had made clear during the
campaign that he would get rid of federal employees and replace them with Trump loyalists.
And you told
us that these plans were in the making even during the last Trump presidency, because back then he
issued an executive order that would have altered civil service protection rules for any employee
of the government who was deemed to have some sort of influence over policymaking, which would open
them up to be fired, I guess like a political appointee. Now those rules never went into effect because President Biden was then elected and rescinded
that executive order.
Is what we're witnessing now potentially a part of Trump's plan to streamline and replace
those federal workers with loyalists?
So the order you're talking about that Trump put in at the end of his first term and Biden revoked
before it took effect was called schedule F.
And one of the dozens of orders that Trump signed
on his inauguration night this time
was to restore a version of that,
which is they changed the name, it's no longer schedule F,
it's schedule policy career or something like that.
Basically, yes, it takes senior civil servants who exercise some control over policy and
it says they can be summarily dismissed at will.
It's been almost overlooked that that got put back because the second administration's
assault on the federal bureaucracy has been so much bigger than that. Trump is firing swaths of people,
purging government employees in ways that go wildly beyond
the category of senior policymaking civil servant
that that directive addresses.
He's firing all Justice Department prosecutors
that had anything to do with the cases against
him or the cases against January 6 rioters.
Simply I said he is firing.
He has fired.
No notice, no hearings before Merit System Protection Board.
Pack up your office, you're gone, your paycheck is cut off.
He fired 17, now 18, I think, inspectors general,
who are not supposed to be fired
unless Congress has gotten 30 days advance notice
and a detailed written rationale
of some case specific reason to remove them.
He didn't provide that notice
or have any specific rationale.
He just fired them, took away their email phones, computers,
locked them out of their buildings.
They have filed a lawsuit now
challenging that some of them. He's fired members of independent agencies cell phones, computers, locked them out of their buildings.
They have filed a lawsuit now challenging that, some of them.
He's fired members of independent agencies like the National Labor Relations Board,
who are not supposed to be removed unless there's a particular cause like misconduct or neglect of office.
Just fired them anyway, shutting down that and other agencies because they now lack a quorum of members to take any official action.
There's a lawsuit over that too.
He's fired senior executives at the Justice Department and the FBI and other places also, summarily,
without going through these protections.
And so the sort of thing that we used to call Schedule F is certainly foreshadowing of the notion of a
mass purge of people who work for the government trying to do various things.
But it's turned out to be minor compared to what's actually happening right now.
What is Congress's power in objecting to these removals?
The current Republican Party is controlled by Trump.
All of the people who are more traditional Republican conservatives,
let's say Reagan-Bush style conservatives,
who sometimes in Trump's first term stood up to him, objected to him,
think of John McCain types, Liz Cheney types, Adam Kinsnicker types, wouldn't
go along with everything he wanted, have been either purged from the party through primary
challenges or have been cowed into submission by the threat of primary challenges or in
some cases, people are talking more and more about this physical fear for their own physical safety from
Trump supporters and
Therefore there has been barely a peep out of this Congress in defense of
the laws that they passed
Funding for the government expires on on March 14th, right? What power does that wield, I guess,
for Democrats in particular?
Well, this is a little different than executive power.
The issue is that there's very thin majorities
for the Republican party in both chambers.
And there is a sizable faction of Republicans,
especially in the House, who want draconian spending cuts,
but also appear not to be willing to raise taxes
to close the deficit that they're worried about,
in fact want to make permanent
and expand large tax cuts from the Trump era
that are about to expire.
It means that the Republican Party on its own
will have great difficulty passing a budget and lifting the debt ceiling.
And that means if they can't reach some internal agreement, then they would need the votes
of Democrats to get a majority to keep the government from shutting down and keep the debt ceiling crisis from happening.
So that could give Democrats leverage to do something.
The problem is that normally if there's a political deal
to be made across party lines like that,
Democrats would be asking for spending
on something they cared about. But how can they make a deal like that when you have a president who is freezing funds,
refusing to spend it even when Congress has appropriated it and said he wants a fight over whether the Supreme Court will let him
not spend money that Congress has appropriated on things he doesn't like.
And so even if Democrats wanted to help, it's not clear that Republicans are capable of
offering something to Democrats that Democrats can count on.
Our guest today is New York Times staff writer Charlie Savage.
We'll be right back after a short break.
I'm Tonya Mosley and this is Fresh Air.
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Charlie we have already seen significant changes to the Justice Department some of the things we expected, like President Trump overhauling the leadership and appointing his own person, Pam Bondi as Attorney General.
But there are several other things that are questionable. Recently, the FBI was told to
hand over a list of employees who worked January 6 cases, not the agents' names, but a list
to the Justice Department.
And the department says this is part of a review process to end what it calls the weaponization
of the justice system.
What are some of the bigger concerns around disclosing that information, even if these
names are being blacked out in documents?
So to get into that, I have to talk about what was happening at the main justice before
attention turned to the FBI.
Right away when the administration came in, all of course, the Biden political appointees
resigned on January 20th.
And Trump put in his own acting people while his nominees were going through the Senate,
including a guy named Emil Beauvais,
who was one of his criminal defense attorneys.
And he became the acting deputy attorney general
and essentially was running the show,
although there was a career person briefly
as acting attorney general.
So here's an extraordinary situation
where a criminal defense attorney
who was facing off with prosecutors in court
suddenly is put in charge of those prosecutors.
And in the first couple of weeks, under Beauvais,
there was a scorging of the Justice Department.
Many of the most senior leaders,
career officials with decades of experience
who were in charge of various sections and divisions
across the department were either fired or moved to
a sort of humiliating assignment to work on a task force that didn't even exist
that was going to look at sanctuary cities. These were not people who were
immigration law experts. They were national security law, environmental law,
criminal law, and they were subbed over here, the obvious effort was to make them resign
as many of them did.
Then all the prosecutors who worked on the Trump cases
were summarily fired, as I mentioned earlier.
And then a huge swath of the prosecutors who worked on
the ordinary January 6th rioter cases
were also summarily fired.
And as this is happening then,
Boves attention turns to the FBI.
And he does the same thing.
He fires or tells the most senior leaders in charge of several of the major field offices,
but also all of the major divisions at FBI headquarters, cyber, national security, intelligence,
criminal, etc.
They must resign within a couple days or they will be fired.
People like this are always from one time or another moving on, but there's never been just a decapitation across the board
of all of the most senior, important, experienced leaders
who are in the middle of working on cases and overseeing things and so forth. And then Beauvais demands this list.
The acting head of the FBI director turns over the list and hides the names, just gives
the employment numbers, which Beauvais considers insubordination, and now they do have the
names as well.
And so the question has been, what are they going to do with those names?
Is the intent to fire all those FBI agents as well, just as all the prosecutors who worked
on the J6 cases were fired?
In the case of the FBI, that would be thousands of people because the rioters went home after
January 6th, and they went home to their homes all around the country.
As the FBI was figuring out who they were, through face recognition and social media posts
and other things, agents in all around the country
were being assigned to go find this guy and arrest him.
And so it would just be a decimation of the FBI workforce.
And of course, no one at the FBI chooses
what they're assigned to do.
There's just as the prosecutors didn't,
they're just doing their jobs.
But this sort of revenge
Scourging is nevertheless sending the message even if you touch this through no will of your own your career is over
It's astounding and I think we could play out in our mind what the potential ramifications are for this But what are some more immediate things that you're concerned about is is you watch this unfold?
some more immediate things that you're concerned about as you watch this unfold.
Well, I don't like to put it in terms of
what I personally am concerned about.
But I can tell you that there's been a lawsuit now
that has resulted in a court order
that for now is preventing the Trump administration
from making public the names of all those agents.
And the plaintiffs have raised concerns
that the agents' personal safety
and that of their families might be put at risk.
Of course, one of the first things Trump did was pardon
1,600 or so people who were convicted of crimes
as part of the January 6th riot,
including people who physically assaulted police officers, very far-right militia types.
And those people are now free.
And they might want to come after an FBI agent that was responsible for arresting them if
they knew that person's name and could find their address and so forth.
And advocates for the FBI, lawyers who brought brought those cases, and Democrats are also raising the prospect
that the public safety in general right now
has been put in an increasing jeopardy.
Both the FBI is taking its eye off the ball
of terrorism cases and drug cartel cases
and everything else they might be working on
because they're so consumed by, am I going to have a job tomorrow?
The foreign aid spending freeze that Trump put in has meant that all kinds of counter
narcotics and counterterrorism programs with partner forces in Latin America or the Middle
East, where we're training them and equipping them.
And they are doing work there that is helpful
to public safety here in terms of trying to stop
terrorist groups from operating or drug cartels
from moving fentanyl and other drugs
towards our borders has ceased.
And in many ways, just the work of the federal government across the board
right now has been severely disrupted by the effort by the new administration to dismantle
the administrative state.
Let's take a short break.
If you're just joining us, I'm talking with New York Times staff writer Charlie Savage about the scope and limits of executive power
under President Donald Trump. Savage writes about presidential power, security
and legal policy for the times. We will continue our conversation after a short
break. This is Fresh Air.
There is a new office within the DOJ focusing on immigration enforcement,
right? So based on what we've seen in your reporting, what are their priorities?
Well, there's certainly a major reprioritization of the new administration.
And one of the things they want to do more of, clearly, there's no secret about this,
is more aggressive immigration enforcement.
And a lot of the early executive orders were about pulling on various levers and pushing
on various buttons to try to speed up the expelling of people from the United States,
to try to shut down aspects of the deportation process that can take a long time curtailing people's right to seek asylum and have hearings,
expand a form of due process free removal
for people who can't prove they've been in the United States
for more than two years.
They clearly have other innovations underway.
We see now that Trump is sending migrants to Guantanamo,
which is going to raise new and novel legal issues.
And I'm just touching the surface of it.
There's myriad things that are going to raise legal issues that they're going to need lawyers
to work on in the coming months and years.
That expedited removal allows the US to deport someone
undocumented without a court hearing.
That's something we've never seen before, but is it legal?
Well, we'll find out.
This is not a case where the administration
is violating a statute Congress has passed,
because Congress long ago passed a statute
that said,
expedited removal is available for anyone
who hasn't been in the country for more than two years,
anywhere in the country.
But it's a very aggressive thing to do,
because people in the United States,
even if they're here without documentation,
and even if they entered unlawfully,
are protected by the
Constitution.
And so they have due process rights against arbitrary government action.
And the denial of the full hearings process is obviously a curtailing of due process.
And so previous administrations of both parties, even the Trump administration, used this technique
sparingly. They used it just near the border for people who were just
captured after they had, you know, crossed the river and just sort of plunk them back on the other side of the border.
They did not try to use it for people who had been here for a long time and
Trump wanted at the end of his first administration to do this and it got jammed up in court and never went into effect.
President Trump has also threatened Trump wanted at the end of his first administration to do this and it got jammed up in court and never went into effect.
President Trump has also threatened to revoke all federal funding to states and localities that are deemed to be sanctuary jurisdictions.
What is the president's scope been trying to establish that he or any president going
forward can withhold money that Congress has authorized at will if he doesn't like it.
And that is a technique called impoundment
that previous presidents sometimes did
in the 19th and 20th century, not very often,
and then started to be used much more aggressively
in the Cold War when there were disputes
between Congress and various presidents
over big ticket military weapon systems know, weapons systems. Congress
wants this thing to be built because the factories in that guy's district. And then Nixon really
took it to a new level and was using it all over the place to cancel programs on the environment
and roads and stuff that he just didn't like. And Congress reacted to this by passing the Impoundment Control Act of 1974, which makes
it a crime to not spend money that Congress has authorized after a certain while, unless
you follow a certain process, which basically lets Congress make the decision.
The president can send a list to Congress and they can vote it up or down.
So Trump has been ignoring that process and simply holding money.
And he himself openly said during the campaign and people around him, he thinks that laws
are constitutional and he wants the Supreme Court to knock it down.
So it's clear where this is going.
They want a legal fight over his power to withhold funds.
So first of all, can he freeze money that these states were supposed to get because
he doesn't like something that's happening in those states, is a subset of this bigger
question of whether this challenge to the power of the purse that has been long understood
to be maybe the core power of Congress in the separation of power systems we have is
going to erode under this onslaught.
The more specific question within, you know, can I withhold funds from California because
I don't like that San Francisco is not cooperating with immigration authorities, is something
that would seem to be unconstitutional under relatively recent Supreme Court jurisprudence.
There's a Supreme Court case from the 90s, which says the federal government can't force
states to enact certain laws they may not want to enact or to do its bidding.
It's called commandeering.
It's part of the federalism part of our constitution where states have their own sovereignty.
And so the notion that the federal government would say, here's this pot of money that you're
otherwise entitled to, but because you have a local ordinance that says your police will
not work with ICE agents, you will not get this money. That would seem to be an example of the federal government
commandeering the state governments in contravention
of how the constitution has been understood to work.
And that used to be something at least that conservatives
who weren't interested in states' rights
were very strongly in favor of, this limit on the power of the federal government.
Last question for you.
Trump isn't in office because he was elected. These congressional members are in office because they were elected.
But as we start to see things unfold,
where does this leave people as things evolve, as people maybe change their minds or they they want to embolden support for it?
You know one thing about our system of government unlike most democracies is that we have
this rigid election schedule. In a parliamentary system when the government
starts to really annoy people and
Parliament can you know have a vote of no confidence in the prime minister, and within a month or something,
there's a new national election to sort of settle the matter,
and so the country can move on.
And we have congressional elections every two years,
presidential elections every four years,
and in between, there's not a lot of things
the public can do directly if they decide
that even though a majority of them voted someone in that they
don't like what that person is doing now other than wait.
Obviously, people can do protests and they can let their elected members of Congress
know that they want some pushback.
And if they have some specific grievance, their particular grant was frozen or whatever,
they can file a lawsuit and try to get into court.
All of which is happening, right?
All of which is happening, but well, I'm not sure the pressure on lawmakers, if there is any,
has resulted in any visible sign of life yet on the Republican side,
but partially we're all just kind of watching.
Charlie Savage, thank you as always.
Thank you. Charlie Savage is a staff writer for the New York Times and a Pulitzer Prize winning journalist.
Coming up, our TV critic David Bianculli looks at two different offerings from beloved long-running franchises, Planet Earth and Star Trek.
This is Fresh Air.
In his latest review, TV critic David Bianculli looks at two different programs that premiered
recently. One is a documentary series on BBC America called Planet Earth Asia. The other
is a science fiction made-for-TV movie Star Trek Section 31 on Paramount+. He says, on
the face of it, it would seem these two don't have much in common. But both are the latest entries and long-established TV franchises,
and both are built around veteran performers who once again deliver the goods.
David Attenborough has been roaming the planet Earth exploring and presenting
its endless wonders
since the 1950s. For decades he did it exclusively for TV audiences in the
United Kingdom.
But since his breathtaking nature series Life on Earth was imported in 1979,
Attenborough has been a fixture here as well.
For a long string of gorgeously photographed programs, Life on Earth, The Living Planet,
The Trials of Life, The Life of Birds, Planet Earth, and The Blue Planet,
Attenborough traveled the
world and filmed on location. He narrated each series with a mesmerizing voice that
was part whisper and part lullaby. And he spoke and wrote with words clear enough to
be understood and enjoyed by viewers of any age.
For his last few documentaries, Attenborough generally has provided
narration only. And to introduce Planet Earth Asia, the latest BBC America entry
in the series, Attenborough doesn't roam the globe. He walks into a library and
opens an atlas. But hey, the man is 98 years old. And though you can't see the
astounding images that are part of this clip,
you can hear Attenborough's voice and description, which are as magical as ever.
Of all the wonderful places in the world, one continent holds more riches than any other.
It covers almost a third of the land on Earth.
In the south stand vast forests. And to the north lies an immense frozen wilderness.
Much of the centre is dominated by deserts.
And at its heart are the world's highest mountains.
Every one of Attenborough's nature series benefits from the latest developments in technology. Cameras get better, images get sharper, sound gets clearer.
Drones fly to capture behavior once filmed by helicopter, and night vision and underwater
photography have opened up whole new areas to explore.
Planet Earth Asia really puts the vision back in television.
From grand and elusive creatures like the snow leopard to small and bizarre ones like
the sea bunny and the mudskipper, Planet Earth Asia is a
wonderful series with wonders in every frame.
Star Trek Section 31 would seem to have nothing in common with an Attenborough documentary,
but it does share a few attributes.
It too comes from a very durable TV franchise.
The original Star Trek series on NBC ran in the late 1960s. And the
stated five-year mission of that original crew was one of curiosity, to
explore, to seek out strange new worlds. Star Trek has spawned a large litter of
spin-off series, including Star Trek Discovery, which was set aboard a science
vessel. That's the series from which the newest Paramount Plus TV movie,
Star Trek Section 31, is generated.
For the first three seasons of Star Trek Discovery,
one of the show's special guest stars was Michelle Yeoh.
She appeared in 24 episodes, playing two very different characters.
In the regular Star Trek universe, she was starship captain, Philippa Georgiou,
who eventually died in battle defending her crew.
But then Discovery visited the long established
Star Trek alternate mirror universe,
where characters encounter their evil counterparts,
and Michelle Yeoh got to play Emperor Georgiou,
one of that universe's evil rulers.
In a complicated series of plot twists, this evil Georgiou was brought back to the real
universe of Star Trek, then left the series after entering a dimensional gateway and vanishing.
That episode was shown in 2020, and was intended as a backdoor pilot to spin off Georgiou and
Yeoh into a standalone series.
But then Michelle Yeoh went off and starred
in Everything Everywhere All at Once
and won an Oscar for Best Actress.
And even though Yeoh said she loved
the flamboyant Georgiou character
and the idea of continuing the storyline,
the actress suddenly was too much in demand.
So instead of a series,
Star Trek Section 31 is now a standalone
streaming movie. But clearly it was built with a series in mind and could easily
support a series of movie sequels. Section 31 is sort of Star Trek's
Starfleet version of the CIA. To start this movie, an operative listens to a
recording detailing his latest mission.
The voice on the recording isn't matched to a face until the end, but it's someone
Yeoh has worked with before on film.
And if the recording sounds a lot like the way they used to set up the plots on the old
Mission Impossible TV show, well, it's the same deal.
All that's missing is the self-destruct message at the end.
This is control with a priority message
for Alpha Team Leader.
Your subject is Emperor Philippa Georgiou,
former ruler of the Terran Empire.
It's in a parallel universe with the most criminal
population in recorded history.
Even there, Georgiou had the market cornered on atrocities.
In 2257, she was brought to our universe and joined Section 31. But after a few years,
we lost contact. Recently, Giorgio was spotted using an alias in the border territory outside
Recently, Georgiou was spotted using an alias in the border territory outside Federation space where we're tracking a new threat on the black market.
This is where your team comes in.
Federation treaty forbids us from crossing over that border, which means Starfleet cannot
get its hands dirty.
You and your 31 team will go in, make contact with Giorgio to help identify and neutralize
the threat.
But make no mistake, this dog bites.
So watch your backs.
The Section 31 operative tracks down Giorgio, who's hiding in plain sight running a very
decadent space station.
She's glamorous, wicked, and easily bored, which she signals by impatiently
tapping her very long nails.
How long have you known about me?
Ever since you took over from the previous owner, we still haven't found him. Well,
all up.
That wasn't Emperor Jojo. I'm authorized to arrest you.
Ha ha ha!
And wipe your mind clean. But then again, there's a part of me that wants you to live with your memories.
The genocidal ones.
Being authorized to arrest me isn't the same as being able to arrest me.
You really want Section 31?
Want me dogging you until the end of time?
Boring.
Very quickly, the movie does turn into a Mission Impossible in space,
with Giorgio as a loose-canon member of a spy team.
But it's enjoyable enough and fits nicely into the Star Trek canon.
And Michelle Yeoh, like David Attenborough, never fails to entertain.
David Bianculli is a professor of television studies at Rowan University.
He reviewed Planet Earth Asia and Star Trek, Section 31.
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