Legal AF by MeidasTouch - Legal AF Full Episode - 4/2/2025

Episode Date: April 3, 2025

Michael Popok and Dina Sayegh Doll, contributing for KFA, on the top rated Legal AF podcast, discuss: Trump's failed economic plans and "Liberation Day" as contrasted with the Democratic winning big a...nd defeating Musk and Trump in the Wisconsin Supreme Court race, and Senator Cory Booker spending 25 hours on the Senate Floor reminding America who the Democrats are; the Supreme Court deciding what America we live in, the one where we are ok kidnapping, and deporting without due process to the wretched jails of El Salvador, or the one where that is not allowed; a federal judge blocking another Trump inhumane immigration policy; the Supreme Court hearing oral argument on whether Planned Parenthood can be defunded by a Red State; and so much more at the intersection of law and politics. Support Our Sponsors: Armra: Head to https://tryarmra.com/legalaf or enter promo code: LEGALAF to receive 15% off your first order! Sundays for Dogs: Get 40% off your first order of Sundays. Go to https://sundaysfordogs.com/LEGALAF or use code LEGALAF at checkout. Fast Growing Trees: Head to https://www.fast-growing-trees.com/collections/sale?utm_source=podcast&utm_medium=description&utm_campaign=legalaf right now to get 15% off your entire order with code LegalAF! Lume: Control Body Odor ANYWHERE with Lume deodorant and get $5 off your Starter Pack (that’s over 40% off) with promo code legalaf at https://LumeDeodorant.com! #lumepod Remember to subscribe to ALL the MeidasTouch Network Podcasts: MeidasTouch: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/meidastouch-podcast Legal AF: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/legal-af MissTrial: https://meidasnews.com/tag/miss-trial The PoliticsGirl Podcast: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/the-politicsgirl-podcast The Influence Continuum: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/the-influence-continuum-with-dr-steven-hassan Mea Culpa with Michael Cohen: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/mea-culpa-with-michael-cohen The Weekend Show: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/the-weekend-show Burn the Boats: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/burn-the-boats Majority 54: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/majority-54 Political Beatdown: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/political-beatdown On Democracy with FP Wellman: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/on-democracy-with-fpwellman Uncovered: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/maga-uncovered Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 To support sustainable food production, BHP is building one of the world's largest hot ash mines in Canada. Essential resources responsibly produced. It's happening now at BHP, a future resources company. Democracy is alive and kicking. The Democrats are alive and kicking. I'm not sure about the US economy, but we'll talk about that as well. Cory Booker beat Strom Thurmond, remember Strom Thurmond?
Starting point is 00:00:31 Strom Thurmond's Senate record passing 25 hours. He was competing with Bopac Live last night. And I love the fact that it was Cory Booker taking on Alina Haba. We'll talk about that, but more importantly, the alive and kicking part. Wisconsin, the Badger State, figured out a way to beat Donald Trump and get another liberal Supreme Court justice elected to the Wisconsin Supreme Court, which is great for voting rights and women's rights and immigration rights at least through 2028. And that is make Elon Musk the bad guy.
Starting point is 00:01:05 Got a lot of there. He's easy to make the bad guy. Look at that photo. Cheesehead. And rather than attack Trump directly, go after Elon Musk, who spent $20 million in that race, including handing out a couple of million dollars worth of checks, buying votes again, like he did in Pennsylvania, all for naught. And there's something to be learned for the Democrats checks, buying votes again like he did in Pennsylvania, all for naught.
Starting point is 00:01:25 And there's something to be learned for the Democrats as we try to get our hands back on the wheel of power. And even in Florida, there's a silver lining. Some people might be saying, Popak, what are you smoking? Or what edible are you taking? The winner in Wisconsin won by 10 points, but the two Florida people lost by 15 points apiece.
Starting point is 00:01:45 How can that be a silver lining? Because Donald Trump won both districts by 30 points or more. And the fact that during a special election, the Democrats were able through their messaging to cut that in half, which is sort of similar to what happens at the midterms, comparing apples to apples instead of midterm, you know, general election to special election. Special election is like a midterm and that bodes well. We were never gonna in the first and sixth district of Florida put a Democrat in there.
Starting point is 00:02:17 But what it shows is what the messaging, the rebranding of the Democratic Party is hard at work, as is of course Cory Booker. And then we're going to turn on this midweek edition of Legal AF over to an update on the Alien Enemies Act. Final papers are in, pencils down, we're waiting on the United States Supreme Court to tell us what America we live in.
Starting point is 00:02:40 Do we live in an America where we wake up in the morning and people around us have been kidnapped without due process, deported to a dank, dark, killer jail in El Salvador, and that's okay? A place so bad that when the Trump administration accidentally sent somebody there, you know, another one of those glitches, glitches that happens in the administration these days, they can't get them back. Sorry, I thought they were conducting foreign policy with all sorts of agreements
Starting point is 00:03:11 being negotiated by Kristi Noem and Marco Arrubio. Why can't they pick up the phone and tell the president of El Salvador Bukele to send the guy back? And if they can't, doesn't that reinforce the position at the United States Supreme Court that this has to be stopped? And we'll talk about what we think this week, likely next few days, the United States Supreme Court's going to rule. Are they going to affirm the rule of law, our due process and support, Jeb Boesberg and the D.C. Court of Appeals, or are they going to go in a different direction and tell us what what United States we live in? And then I want to talk about with Dina Sayegh-Dahl. Let's put Dina up on the screen for a minute so nobody's shocked.
Starting point is 00:03:50 Dina, sitting in for Karen Freeman-Ignifilo who's on assignment, is here reporting from her home office studio. Thank you, Dina. Love having you here. Always love our weekly show on Precedentive about the Supreme Court only on the legal AF YouTube channel and Dina's here, not just filling in, contributing mightily to this particular episode.
Starting point is 00:04:11 We're going to talk about Judge Chan out, your parts, at least state, the left coast, San Francisco judge, senior federal judge there. And he's had his own new ruling about Venezuelans. And I'm not even talking about the undocumented. I'm talking about the undocumented, I'm talking about the documented. Their document says temporary protective status, protective status, it's a program since the 1990s,
Starting point is 00:04:32 there's 1.7 million people who are here under it, and I know, and I live in a community of a proud Venezuelan community, hardworking, tax payinging, home owning. And they don't want their temporary protective status violated by Kristi Noem and sent back to a place that's so bad that our State Department says it's a level four do not travel to state. And again, we're going to talk a lot about the Trump administration talking out of both sides of their mouths.
Starting point is 00:05:05 And I'm not just talking about Carolyn LeVette's press conferences or social media statements. I'm talking about, they say out loud when it suits them and their filings, Dina, they say Venezuela has been taken over, the whole government, the Maduro government has been taken over by narco terrorists,
Starting point is 00:05:23 by the trend to Aragwa, right? That's what they say. Except now they're saying, everything's fine. We can send everybody back. They don't need to be here temporarily. It's all great. It's a garden of Eden. Now get on the plane.
Starting point is 00:05:36 Not so fast, says Judge Chen, with a new national injunction we'll talk about and what happens after that. And then right out of our normal playbook of talking about things at the United States Supreme Court every week when you and I get together as the anchors of unprecedented, we've got a oral argument just today about whether a South Carolina rule or law signed by then
Starting point is 00:06:01 and still governor of the Palmetto State, South Carolina, Henry McMaster, who was in the, apparently was at the Supreme Court today, about whether South Carolina could defund Planned Parenthood and make them not able to participate in Medicare and Medicaid. Do they have that right? And is there a fundamental personal right of action that a person who got screwed because they got cut off from Planned Parenthood. And I'm not talking abortion, that's not all Planned Parenthood does.
Starting point is 00:06:31 They test for diabetes, they do cancer screening, they do cholesterol screening. Some, for some people, it's their medical provider of choice, you know, and it's funded, so it's lower cost kind of thing. And the question is, can somebody who got screwed by that law sue personally for it? Or has Congress had another thing in mind
Starting point is 00:06:53 when they passed the Medicare and Medicaid Act? And, you know, listen, it was an oral argument, but you and I can sort of read the tea leaves about where that one particularly is going. All this and so much more on the midweek edition of Legal AF. Hi, Dina. Hello, good to be here.
Starting point is 00:07:10 Thank you, so glad to have you. Why don't we get right into it? We came on the air right after Donald Trump's Liberation Day. Apparently he's liberating America from its own economy. Seriously. And it's jobs. And jobs, that's right.
Starting point is 00:07:28 You want liberated from your wallet and your purse because it's one thing to sit around in some corporate retreat out of, in a forest with other executives and do tabletop exercises about, hey, I wonder what it'd be like if I pushed this button and eliminate worldwide foreign policy investment through USAID at the same time that I cut off billions of dollars to the states at the same time that I fire hundreds of thousands of federal workers who have paychecks at the same time that I raise car tariffs by 25%
Starting point is 00:08:03 at the same time that I do a Canada-Mexico trade war at the same time that I raise car tariffs by 25%, at the same time that I do a Canada-Mexico trade war, at the same time that I announce another 30, 40 reciprocal tariff war today. Well, I wonder what would happen. You know what will happen? The end of the economy as we know it. So let me turn it over to you. Why do you think he's doing this?
Starting point is 00:08:24 Somebody really believes this is gonna work. The stock market doesn't. The American consumer doesn't. The manufacturing base doesn't. So who does? This is an unserious person with an ego that's never been checked by anyone. That's who does it.
Starting point is 00:08:41 Because I mean, I got the most telling kind of quote around his tariffs thing is when he threatened to impose a 200% tariff on Europe's alcohol imports. It was like somebody right out of those. Um, you know, like a movie, right? Like that fake villain. He was like, I'll do 200% tariffs. But I think that's that's who he is, right? These 25% tariffs or 10% tariffs kind of come across as serious, but this is an unserious person. He does not care about the American people. He probably doesn't care that much about the market. He's in crypto for the most part. He does not care. He doesn't like it. if any country dares not kiss his ring, bend the knee, does what he
Starting point is 00:09:27 wants to do, and he's using his tariffs because he's a bully and an unserious person. And unfortunately, it's like somebody gave him a toy. He sees this as a toy and the rest of the American people are going to suffer as a result. Yeah. that American people are going to suffer as a result. Yeah, and so he has this big, and apparently he thinks he's going to be using a lot of these media clips. They had more cameras at this event on the roof, on the, you know, dozens and dozens of cameras
Starting point is 00:09:58 for social media purposes. He thinks this is going to be his great, you know, this great fanfare. And it's just, you know, and then when it goes awry, and it will, quickly, and we head into a recession, he'll just say, it was a glitch, and Joe Biden made me do it, and I had to do cleanup for Joe Biden, and, you know, and again, even when he's announcing these things,
Starting point is 00:10:17 he looks, and Midas will run a bunch of clips about this, I'm sure, tonight and tomorrow, but he looks so gassed. And so, he's always like this. He's got and tomorrow. But he looks so gassed. And so he's always like this. He's got this new thing where he leans on the podium sideways. And we have to everybody, where are those three labor union people we paid to be here? Can you cheer now? Okay. All right, everybody. I mean, it looks like he's already like can't wait to hit the pack nine at the golf course, you know, and leave for Thursday and another millions of dollar boondoggle to play golf.
Starting point is 00:10:50 The good news is that that was not the big news story. It's sort of bookended, right? We've got Saturday hands-off mass mobilization movement, and there's so many different ways for people to participate. We'll put it in the note today where you can click on for hands off. We support Midas Dutch and Legal AF. This hands off. If you come over to Legal AF, the YouTube channel, you'll see in our shorts,
Starting point is 00:11:17 all of our contributors have some version of telling you more about that. So you got that on Saturday. And then you had last night's historic win and basically punching Elon Musk and Donald Trump in the nose. In a state that frankly Donald Trump won, one of the seven battlegrounds that Donald Trump, you know, ran the table as they say. But when it came to their Supreme Court
Starting point is 00:11:41 and their constitution, the Badger State said hands off. And they found a way to flip the script because they watched the, because it just makes everybody feel comfortable. Yes, in a lot of states, the Supreme Court is an elected position. It's not just Wisconsin. Nevada does it that way.
Starting point is 00:12:00 Sometimes it's appointed by the governor, sometimes it's elected. And here there was an election. two judges ran against each other. They were trial level judges. And the liberal, self-professed liberal, she didn't run away from being a liberal, you know, not even a moderate, and replaced another liberal there. And, but the guy on the other side, he, you know, not even a moderate, and replaced another liberal there. And, but the guy on the other side, he, you know, he dressed up like Donald Trump at Halloween, he wore a MAGA hat,
Starting point is 00:12:33 he kept playing over and over again in a loop, Donald Trump's endorsement of him, he clinged and gripped Donald Trump so tight, it was a surprise he didn't suffocate him. And the Democrats in Wisconsin and the National Democrats made him pay for it. And the way they did it was the big bad wolf of Elon Musk. And he spent $20 million of his own money and that turned everybody off to try to steal that seat.
Starting point is 00:12:58 Why? Because they want, they wanted, they didn't want a liberal majority because they want to take away women's rights, voter rights and immigration rights in Wisconsin, is another way to put it. So what did you make of the anti-Musk vote and how that can be used nationally by Democrats? And then why don't you also touch on this new reporting that must be true because Carolyn LeVette,
Starting point is 00:13:23 this press secretary is denying it, which is that Elon Musk is being shown the door exit stage left because he's politically and from a political capital standpoint, he's doing terribly for the Trump administration. Why don't you tie all that together? I mean, it was so satisfying because Musk put it all in. He put his money in, he did interviews talking about how they needed to have that court
Starting point is 00:13:49 because they're redistricting. You know, they can get even more Republican seats in order to have Trump's agenda. And the voters came out to say no and to save not only the state of Wisconsin, but the House, right? Because if they had been able to add more Republican seats, it would have been even harder to ever stop them. And I think this is a really good lesson. Like, it can feel demoralizing.
Starting point is 00:14:12 Like, how do we stop the richest man in the world? But at the end of the day, I mean, first of all, we have to get money out of politics. We have to figure out a way to overturn Citizens United. Maine actually passed something in November, ending Citizens United and their state and that's kind of being tied up in the courts. We'll see what happened. But while we are trying to get money out of politics, this is a really good
Starting point is 00:14:35 example that what money does is it buys ads, it buys people to knock on doors, you know, But at the end of the day, the only thing that matters is your vote. And you can get out that vote without money. You can get out that vote because as a candidate, you're good at giving the message and people understand what you wanna do once you're in office.
Starting point is 00:14:59 You can volunteer to help give out the vote. And so hopefully this also inspires Democrats. Don't wait until the midterm. You know, start talking to people now, You can volunteer to help give out the vote. And so hopefully this also inspires Democrats. Don't wait until the midterm. You know, start talking to people now, signing up for democratic clubs in your area. Money doesn't always win. It makes it easier to win an election,
Starting point is 00:15:17 but nothing is the same as voting. And so it was incredibly satisfying to see Elon Musk with all that money was not enough to buy the Wisconsin election. And it means there is power, there is still power even when you're up against something as powerful as the richest man in the world. And let's take this, let's take this as Democrats and do it in each election, especially in the midterms.
Starting point is 00:15:41 That is going to come faster than we think. Oh, yeah. We're here already. and I think the Florida results are also very, very, very encouraging. These are the deepest of red states. It would be like cutting the lead in half against Marjorie Taylor Greene in the upper north, I think it's the upper north region of Georgia. We weren't going to win the Mike Waltz seat. We weren't going to win the Gates seat. Right. But the fact that they lost by only 15, and that people were like, only 15. That's, yes, because it was 30 plus with Trump.
Starting point is 00:16:15 Yeah, you're right. Yeah. And that bodes well for turnout. I mean, look, Florida, unfortunately, I mean, I was here in Florida originally years ago when it went Obama twice. And that was the last time we'll see in a long time Florida being a blue state and it's no longer purple, it's just red. It's no longer a battleground state. It's just completely converted within 10 years.
Starting point is 00:16:37 I'm not thrown in the towel and say all hope is lost and every vote, every district matters. And there's still some competitive districts within, within Florida at the congressional level. And all of the house is up in less than two years now, all. And we need the house and we need a Senate and we need to regain power. In order to counterbalance and out of control president who lurches from one constitutional crisis and one abuse of power
Starting point is 00:17:11 on a 48-hour news cycle every 48 hours. And so the fact that we were able to mobilize enough Florida Democrats and independents and dissatisfied and disaffected Republicans to have them and not be a complete and total wipeout. You know, bodes well for the midterms, you know? Look, Saturday is important. Any kind of national day of mobilization, I'm in for it.
Starting point is 00:17:39 Whether you do phone banking or emailing or writing or knocking on doors or marching in the streets or whatever it's gonna be, okay doors or marching in the streets or whatever it's going to be. Okay. Join us on the Saturday edition of Legal AF, whatever it is that where you're engaged. That is very, very important. But registering to vote and registering people to vote and not leaving it to the last minute
Starting point is 00:17:59 and making sure that you're able to navigate all of the new barriers to voting that have been put in your way and the voting that have been put in your way and the hurdles that have been put in your way over the last four years, over the last two years by Republican legislatures is important. Start it now. You know, when they say, oh, do you have the wet signature on your birth certificate?
Starting point is 00:18:22 Yes, I happen. Yes, I do. Do you, you know, it's like, can you go to DMV and you got to clear an old speeding ticket? I've been there. You know, do you have that D six form? Oh, shit, you know, a week later. So you got time, but get it done now. And there's, and there's voting between now and then that is important as a practice run as a practice run,
Starting point is 00:18:45 as a test run. Speaking of a practice test run, how much of Cory Booker's filibuster-ish thing did you watch? I mean, I got a chance to tune into some of, that was amazing. His energy level, first of all, how he could be that energetic for so long was amazing.
Starting point is 00:19:04 And you know, gosh, he had so many inspirational messages in there about how what he felt like he was doing was inadequate and how we all felt though that what he was doing meant so much. And in particular, his really call for he was doing this to protect people's healthcare, you know, from slashing Medicaid. That is the moral, ethical, right thing to do is stand up for people who are going through
Starting point is 00:19:36 health struggles, right? They're needing their heart surgeries, they're needing their cancer treatments and they're scared that, you know, project 2025, their goal is to slash Medicaid They've already eliminated Department of Education which was their goal Medicaid is next so good for Senator Cory Booker He got so much attention for that and that is what Democrats need to do is get attention because pretty much anything Trump says get attention because he's so outlandish. Like you said, constitutional, it's a constitutional crisis. It's hard to break through the noise.
Starting point is 00:20:10 Democrats are on the right side of history. But if nobody hears us, it doesn't matter. So Senator Cory Booker broke through the noise and I hope he's just the first of many to do that. It was fantastic. I love watching it. And Corey is the right person, right Senator, for the moment. I mean, he got called out last week by Alina Hoppe during that press conference in the Rose Garden, wherever it was, where she, she gets up there as if she just realized that the role of a prosecutor is to go after criminals. Like, okay, well, welcome to planet Earth, Alina. She gets up there and as the US attorney acting interim
Starting point is 00:20:49 for New Jersey, I'm gonna be fighting crime and prosecuting criminals. Yeah, that is your job description. And in the backyard of Cory Booker, here goes the political hack part. You know, I mean, what does Cory Booker have to do with the murder rate, which is lower, by the way, in Newark or Hoboken?
Starting point is 00:21:11 I mean, what does Cory Booker have to do with, you know, the rise or fall of violent crime in New Jersey? I'll tell you what hasn't happened in New Jersey. School shooting. Okay? A bunch of other bad things haven't happened. Terrorism in New Jersey hasn't happened at the airports, at the ports, at the things that matter to our nation's economy and to our psyche.
Starting point is 00:21:34 That hasn't happened. Those are things you can hold the senator responsible for, you know, in terms of the more deliberative body. But like, he's not fixing, I mean, I know Al DeMoto, the old senator from New York, used to think he was in charge of fixing potholes on the Long Islandative body. But like he's not fixing, I mean I know Al DeMoto, the old Senator from New York, used to think he was in charge of fixing potholes on the Long Island Expressway. Like Senator pothole here, like that's not what a Senator does.
Starting point is 00:21:53 That's what your Congressperson does. You got a problem with a garbage truck that idles its engine at 3 o'clock in the morning and your baby can't sleep. You don't call the Senator Cory Booker's office. You call your local Congressperson or state representative. I mean, this whole Cory Booker thing. And he was like, great, Cory, what am I doing on the,
Starting point is 00:22:11 check my schedule. What am I doing on April Fool's Day? Am I doing anything? Can you clear out 25 hours for me on my schedule? Because I'm going to put on a very sniffy, spiffy, black suit, blue suit, and I'm going to get up there fancy, a very sniffy, spiffy black suit, blue suit, and I'm going to get up there. But the best moment is when, is when, you know, what's his name? You see already, I'm already I'm calling him what's his name. Our thank you Schumer. When Schumer,
Starting point is 00:22:38 who's, you know, took it, taken a lot of understandable incoming lately, you know, he, he tried to interject under Robert's rules with a point of order. And he's, I'm not taking any questions right now, sorry. I'm just here to tell you it's a statement. You just passed the record for the longest speech in Senate history, going back to Strom Thurmond. And I'm sure Strom Thurmond was, I haven't looked it up,
Starting point is 00:23:00 but I'm sure it had to do something with keeping black and white people separate. Yeah, it was against the Civil Rights Act, evidently. Right, right, I didn't even have to look that up. I heard Strom Thurmond in a 24-hour speech. I'm thinking, this isn't gonna come out well for black and brown people. And so to have Cory Booker beat Strom Thurmond,
Starting point is 00:23:20 that is a whole nother amazing level of deliciousness. And again, so much of the racism that Trump is, right? Yeah. Yeah, I mean, so yeah, definitely. It's also a tryout. I mean, we have debates internally about who should be the leading Democratic candidate. Cory Booker is going to want to run. Now, he's just got to get out of the primaries and do well.
Starting point is 00:23:48 But this is part of his tryouts about being a leader for the Democratic Party and for the nation. So we're going to talk about other leaders, including those in federal courts like Jeb Boesberg, whose decision to block the phony use of war powers by President Trump, to kidnap, to port, and send to El Salvador, never to be seen or heard from again without due process, people. It was affirmed by a court of appeals,
Starting point is 00:24:17 but now it's up at the Supreme Court. They've got all the pieces of paper they've asked for, and now we're just waiting on the ruling. We'll break that down. Another profile in courage, Judge Chen is heard from from San Francisco Federal Court. So many of the cases and the injunctions are coming out of that one courthouse in San Francisco.
Starting point is 00:24:37 From the beginning, the first temporary restraining order. Let's see if I don't want to play stumpedina. Why is it the birthright citizenship? Where Judge Kofenor. Ding, ding, ding, ding. Ding, ding, ding, ding, ding out of San Francisco. Johnny, Salty, what do we have for her? We have a legal layup home game. So Judge Kofenor, five days into the administration,
Starting point is 00:24:57 boom, birthright citizenship, San Francisco. Judge Alsop, rehire those probationary employees, San Francisco. Judge Alsop, rehire those probationary employees, San Francisco. Now we've got Judge Chen. We're going to talk about Judge Chen and his protection of those that need protection, those under temporary protective service status, including Venezuelans and people from Haiti.
Starting point is 00:25:19 And then we're going to dive back into the United States Supreme Court with a very important issue about whether Planned Parenthood is going to live or die. I mean, at least in terms of public and federal funding. But we've got that moment that I know everybody's so excited about. I am. I always am.
Starting point is 00:25:35 It's that moment in time where we get to congratulate the fact that we have sponsors. Because let's be frank, a lot of podcasts don't. But the ones that survive and the ones that thrive and the ones that remain independent are the ones that need sponsors. And the good part about the sponsors is, I wanna make this clear to everybody, the sponsors don't tell us what to say.
Starting point is 00:25:54 If a sponsor told us what to say, and if there was a version in a smoke-filled room, like a bunch of sponsors wearing suits and smoking big fat cigars, and they're like, hey, you like your podcast, but you got to cut down on the law and politics part or the law part. Don't go after Trump so much. We'd be like, I picture this as a zoom call, like click, like, and we had fired clients, fired sponsors. It's well known. Go on, minus up stack. You'll learn all about it. But the ones that are here, they know who we are, what we are, they know four years of legal AF.
Starting point is 00:26:29 If they didn't know, they just go to our library and our playlist. And yet they wanna be here, they encourage us, we encourage them. So if you have disposable income, these are products that we've all tested out and we like and we enjoy. And Jordy, one of the brothers puts it all together for us. And we do thumbs up and
Starting point is 00:26:46 thumbs down like I don't want to do that. I don't like that product. But these are the ones that survived. And it helps us survive. So let's take let's take a brief timeout and and hit our sponsors. We gave Lily our border collie lab mix her forever home after she was rescued from the floods of Tennessee. And ever since we've been looking for the right brand of dog food that would manage her weight, extend her life, ensure that it's healthy, but make it easy for us to prepare. We tried it all. Make it yourself. Mix it yourself. Lug 50 pounds of freezer bags around yourself. You name it. We
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Starting point is 00:30:08 and boost your confidence from head to toe with Lumi. Welcome back. Thank you to our pro-democracy sponsors. They help things run here. Keep the lights on at the Midas Touch Network and on Legal AF. Another way to support us is, have you heard the news? We have a new YouTube channel. It's not that new anymore, Dina.
Starting point is 00:30:26 You've been there from the very, very beginning, but it's six months plus. It's called Legal AF MTN. We wear that badge proudly. That's Legal AF Midas Touch Network. I curate it in collaboration with the Midas Touch Network. Come over there now. You can find the link for it down below.
Starting point is 00:30:41 We're up to eight, I think it's eight now, eight videos a day at the intersection of law and politics. It should be your go-to place to learn what's happening at that burning intersection because of Donald Trump. And we have some amazing contributors. And you got Adina Sayegh-Dahl here, regular legal contributor on Midas Dutch, but does some amazing work that you can only find
Starting point is 00:31:04 exclusively on Legal AF, the YouTube channel. And she and I also do a show once a week called Unprecedented at the Intersection of Law and Politics and the Supreme Court. And that's a weekly show. You can catch us over there in a playlist over there. And then we've got Court Accountability Action. Wow, Lisa Graves served three different branches
Starting point is 00:31:23 of government, including in the Department of Justice. She runs True North Research, and she works hand in glove with Court Accountability Action, which focuses from the minute they get up in the morning until they go to bed at night, focuses on corruption and money corrupting our federal court system up to the United States Supreme Court,
Starting point is 00:31:42 led by Alex Aaronson. We got Mike Sacks over there as well. They bring on some amazing interviewees. They just had Senator Sheldon Whitehouse. Oh yeah, I saw that. Oh yeah, we got another one. I don't even wanna steal the thunder yet. There's another amazing one coming up tomorrow
Starting point is 00:31:58 that Alex just put up on our channel, in our little chat channel, which I can't wait for. And they're great for bringing on these amazing guests and and some of those guests turn into contributors I mean eventually turn into contributors and then we got Shan Wu used to be at one point in his life back in the day he was the attorney he was the general counsel for the attorney general the Clinton administration white collar criminal defense lawyer at his own right, has a brand that we call Under Color. He basically has a nightly video with us. Dean is there, I'm there, and then we just brought on
Starting point is 00:32:31 from various other Midas platforms. We brought on Dave Arenberg, ding ding, Florida lawman, and former state attorney for Palm Beach County, and Melba Pearson, who used to work for the ACLU in a very high level position, had been a lawyer there, and now they're doing daily videos for us as well with those unique points of view.
Starting point is 00:32:53 And don't be fooled by Florida lawman, he talks about a lot of things, it's the intersection of law and politics with his background and his experience. So that's Legal AF, let's get back to the Legal AF podcast. So why don't you kick it off, Dina, and I'll follow your lead about the ACLU's filing
Starting point is 00:33:11 at the Supreme Court, Roberts, do you make anything of the fact that he didn't enter an administrative stay when it first came in? And what do you think is gonna happen with this court about whether the war power is gonna be ripped away from Donald Trump to stop these illegal deportations? Yeah, so this has to do with the Aliens Enemies Act
Starting point is 00:33:34 that barely was used before. Trump decides it's a great idea, brushes it off, deport people as we know, including fathers with zero connections to gangs, right? That they accidentally deported and aren't bringing back. So this is going in front of the Supreme Court because the Circuit Court cited saying basically that they could not, that Trump could not use this act, this War Powers Act to deport. And so Trump is asking the Supreme Court to intervene.
Starting point is 00:34:05 The ACLU filing an amicus brief with the Supreme Court citing that, basically asking the Supreme Court to not allow Trump to use this act to deport people. I mean, we saw in real time and the fact that they are accidentally deporting people, as you said, I think in the top of the show, is really good evidence for why this should not be used. And I don't see too much into the fact
Starting point is 00:34:33 that Chief Justice Roberts didn't do an administrative say. I think that it is, you know, that is a different question than maybe when they fully look at it a little bit more, whether or not they're going to be able to side with Trump or not on this. is a different question than maybe when they fully look at it a little bit more, whether or not they're going to be able to side with Trump or not on this. And we know that Trump is asking for this to be heard on an emergency basis, which doesn't so that doesn't mean that's going to be like a fully fleshed out trial going to the Supreme Court as you would see other things.
Starting point is 00:35:01 But we talk about the Supreme Court a lot. And so it's sometimes hard for me to say what I'm hoping the Supreme Court would do versus what they will actually do. But the more that Trump is disrespectful to our laws, the more that he is reckless with our laws, I think it will allow Chief Justice Roberts and Justice Amy Coney Barrett in particular
Starting point is 00:35:26 to side with the liberals and kind of rein Trump in. I'm certainly hoping that's going to be the case here. The fact that the circuit court is felt the same way, you know, I think shows evidence. It would typically show evidence that the Supreme Court will see it the same way. The circuit courts, you know, are supposed to see the law in a correct way, if that makes sense. Not that often that a Supreme Court should overturn a circuit decision. So I think certainly in this case, Trump seems to be overstepping his legal parameters for sure.
Starting point is 00:36:00 I agree with you. I think they're going to ultimately side with Jeb Boasberg, who, let's just frame this for a second. Okay. You're not talking about, I mean for our audience, we're not talking about a permanent block of the use of the Alien Enemies Act by Donald Trump. That is for the trial judge to ultimately determine in a preliminary injunction setting a summary judgment setting and a Final injunction setting that does not happen. I know this case seems like it's been around for a long time I was joking with the with our producer salty. He's like, oh alien enemies act again. We're Yes. Yes, it's that important. It's that oh the Civil War again Right. Yes, it's that important. But but that, oh, the Civil War again. Right? Yes, it's that important.
Starting point is 00:36:45 But my point is, this is all about the trial judge developing the proper record and making a decision. We're only in the temporary injunction mode. And the temporary injunctions are not usually reviewable at a appellate court level because they're too early in the process. Only generally when it gets up to a preliminary injunction, which is a couple of weeks away, he's holding a hearing, apparently the judge here is holding a hearing on the 8th of April and then he'll issue an order thereafter.
Starting point is 00:37:20 This is only about whether from now until the 10th or 12th of April, he this decision is going to be blocked or not. Now, they want to get an early preview to see if the Supreme Court will bail him out here on the Trump administration side. They want the Supreme Court to declare that when a president declares or proclaims a war and that he's using war powers and foreign policy, but that's not reviewable by a federal court. And that is a scary world for us all to live in if that were true. According to most judges, at least three judges of the three that heard the matter at the DC Circuit Court of Appeals
Starting point is 00:38:02 don't believe that's true. I mean, the Trump lawyer, Judge Walker, ruled in favor of Trump on some other issues, but he thought it was reviewable. You can look at the exercise of war power, like for Donald Trump, it's my core constitutional power, and it can't be reviewed. Every war power, Franklin Delano Roosevelt's war powers were reviewed, Truman's war powers were reviewed,
Starting point is 00:38:27 everybody during a real war, especially now. And the words in the statute about whether this is an enemy incursion, a predatory incursion, whether this is a war or this is just a migration, which is what Judge Henderson called it, are all up for grabs. So the only issue right now is that for like another week, the easiest out is that the Supreme Court says, this is too early, it's too early.
Starting point is 00:38:50 This is not reviewable at this moment, finish up down there. And then when you're done, go back up through the Court of Appeals and then we'll see you in a month or two. But the fact that they took it and wanted briefing doesn't necessarily mean it's not gonna end up the exact way I just said.
Starting point is 00:39:06 It could be, and we've seen this happen in the last few months. They asked for one more brief they did. ACLU filed the brief and laid out all the reasons why you don't want to send people to the deepest, darkest prisons of El Salvador without any due process. Because even the Trump administration admits they can't get him back. Now they say that's a good thing. Trump says that's a good thing, can't get it back. It's outside the jurisdiction of the court. See? No. That means that you've sent people out of due process by your own hand, your own creation, and that's a bad thing. And that's what the court's going to decide. My gut is this week we we're gonna get a one-liner that says the application is denied.
Starting point is 00:39:51 And that's all they have to say. Yeah. And that's it. Now maybe somebody like Alito or Thomas, spill some ink and do a dissent. I think that's how it's gonna come out. Cause I don't think Amy Coney Barrett and Roberts. I think it's gonna be six to three, certainly five to 4, in favor of not blocking the injunction.
Starting point is 00:40:09 What do you think? Yes. No, I agree with that too, for sure. I mean, first of all, we don't even have a declaration of war against Venezuela. The idea that somehow this is on solid legal ground is such a stretch. And so, like you said, at this point, right, the Trump administration
Starting point is 00:40:26 could still kind of legally prove their point through trial or before trial and all of our evidentiary hearings and motions. But at this point, it's such a stretch to say that Trump can deport people without deep process, you know, to a country regarding a country that we have not even declared war from. If this were true, you know, then this really is not a democracy anymore. So I do not see them, the Supreme Court, stepping in and saving him here at this point. Yeah, I totally agree with you.
Starting point is 00:40:57 I think we're going to know more in the next few days. But in the meantime, and you and I will catch up on it on unprecedented. When we come back from our next break, we'll talk about Judge Chen and other Venezuelans, these documented ones, who are fighting to stay in this country and try to pursue the American dream. They own homes, they raise families,
Starting point is 00:41:17 they pay billions of dollars in taxes and social security. They are more educated and less likely to commit crime than the average American. And yet Donald Trump sees them and taxes and Social Security. They are more educated and less likely to commit crime than the average American. And yet Donald Trump sees them because he conflates them with, trende a ragua, we must send them all, they're scum. These are words that showed up in the actual order
Starting point is 00:41:37 of Judge Chen using Christine Gnomes and Donald Trump's own words against them in issuing the nationwide injunction. We're gonna talk about that. And then you and I'll return back to the United States Supreme Court about this new case coming out of South Carolina about planned parity being cut off from funding from Medicare and Medicaid which could impact 72 million people in America who depend on that. And we'll cover all that. But first another word from our sponsors. I'm always on the lookout for ways to strengthen immunity and gut health, improve my fitness and metabolism, and enhance my skin and hair radiance. Well, I recently discovered Armra colostrum.
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Starting point is 00:46:32 and helping them for their drive for five, five million can help us for our drive for one million over on the Legal AF YouTube channel, which is at Legal AF MTN. Eight videos a day guaranteed every day at the intersection of law and politics, including those with Dina Sayegh-Dahl. No, your eyes are not deceiving you.
Starting point is 00:46:53 That's Dina Sayegh-Dahl sitting in for Karen Fricminic-Nifilo and a regular contributor on all things legal on everything Midas and of course on Legal AF. So Dina, why don't you take the lead about Judge Chen and the temporary protective status that is given, it has been given to 1.7 million people including those from Venezuela and Haiti going back to the 1990s and right out right before they, Mayorkas, the Homeland Security Director, Secretary for Biden, extended the status, but then it was attempted to be revoked
Starting point is 00:47:32 by Kristi Noem four days into her tenure. And now these people were facing deportation. Why don't you talk about who these people are, what the judge find in that case and what the national injunction is. There are so many disturbing Trump orders and actions and this is certainly one of them. So Judge Chen, a ninth circuit or ninth district judge,
Starting point is 00:47:55 as we know the judges in the ninth circuit, kind of the Western region, kind of save us many times. They tend to be liberal and here this judge kind of saving hundreds of thousands, more than a million, as you say, people who have temporary protective status. This particular order had to do with 350,000 Venezuelans. This is how many people legally were able to stay here. And Department of Homeland Security, as you said,
Starting point is 00:48:25 Kristi Noem was trying to revoke it. And he found that the revocation was arbitrary, capricious, unlawful, the same terminology we have seen in the judge's orders about basically all of the Trump actions with Doge, they're firing, you know, not following the law, just basically deciding that they want to do what they want to do and they don't care what the law says. And it's one thing when you're doing it to grants, how awful that is, of course, because a lot of people depend on the grants. But this is basically separating families, deporting, you know, father, sons, daughters, grandmothers, I mean, children.
Starting point is 00:49:07 It's like the most depraved thing possible and this judge stepping in and stopping it. And we are not just talking about the 350,000. As you say, there's 1.2 million. There's 500,000 Haitian immigrants that are under this protective status that they're going after next. So, you know, when Trump talks about, like, the Venezuelan gangs and the criminals, I mean, you know,
Starting point is 00:49:32 there were people out there who believed it for some reason. But we, I think the rest of us, understood that he is going after brown people. And the easiest brown people to kick out of this country are the ones who are on let's say the The most flimsy, you know legal have have received legal status most recently, right? Or in this temporary status, right? It's much harder to kick out a citizen But he might go there at some point, but he's starting out kicking out people who are legally here
Starting point is 00:50:04 But don't look like he wants them to look, right? So I think we cannot ignore that fact that he's going after, you know, there's people with temporary protective status that aren't coming from countries where they end up with brown skin, but this is clearly the countries he's going after. And just kind of as a side note, you know, we've been talking a lot about the big firm attack. When I was at one of the big firm I was at, I'm not even gonna say their name because I don't even wanna put it out there.
Starting point is 00:50:31 Trump hasn't gone after them yet. One of the pro bono things we did, one of the pro bono things I did was help people get asylum protection. And the amount of legal process somebody has to go through to get asylum is, you know, you don't just land here and then say a story and are given asylum.
Starting point is 00:50:53 And this is not exactly the same situation because it's a different status, but I just want people to realize it is very difficult to be granted things like TPS, to be granted things like asylum. Somebody has to show up, they have to have a lawyer. In this case, I was a pro bono lawyer, but they had to show up, they have a lawyer,
Starting point is 00:51:13 they have hearings, they have to submit documentations, they have to testify. The other side can argue why they shouldn't stay. There's a whole process here. And so these people, these hundreds of thousands of people have shown up, have gone through that due process, have proved to a court and a judge why they should be allowed to stay,
Starting point is 00:51:34 have been granted that legal status. And then Kristi Noem with just like assigning a statement thinks she can take that all away. And that's why Judge Chen said no, because in this country it's not that easy to take away people's rights. Absolutely. And Judge Chen also questions whether she has the ability under the statute and the inherent authority
Starting point is 00:51:53 to revoke her predecessor's order. He doesn't think that she does. He also thinks that she has violated, as with the Trump administration, equal protection under the law, because when they make statements like these are scum from shithole countries that we need to get off the streets that are all gang members and murderers and released from prisons and mental hospitals, courts do a funny little thing called strict
Starting point is 00:52:17 scrutiny to make sure that this is not racially or discriminatorily motivated and they're not going to pass that test either. So thank you for standing up for those. I know people who are in the temporary protective status. I live here in Florida. I know many people in the proud Venezuelan community. Donald Trump should know many people in the proud Venezuelan community
Starting point is 00:52:38 because his golf course, Doral, is jokingly referred to by people living there as Doralzuela. It is a heavy amount of Venezuelans. There was another town here in Florida when I first got here 20 years ago that was, it's known as Weston. It was known as Westonzuela.
Starting point is 00:52:55 It's a hardworking group. And the judge also quoted stats that he said were unrefuted by the Trump administration. Unrefuted because they can't. That the people in the temporary protective status, especially from Venezuela, are harder working, generate more taxpayer dollars, are more likely to be college graduates,
Starting point is 00:53:12 and commit less crimes than the average American. That's not the kind of person you send back to the Garden of Eden that is the Maduro, Venezuela, where seven million people have left that country since 2013, because it is so terribly economically, emotionally, and otherwise for people. And for, and I find it the height of hypocrisy, and it's going to get caught at the Ninth Circuit, but it finally goes to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals for the Trump administration to tell one
Starting point is 00:53:38 court that Venezuela has been taken over by a criminal narco terrorist gang so that the declaration proclamation of war is appropriate because Maduro is basically, you know, is being manipulated by the trend to our Agua group. And then at the same time say it's safe for everybody to go home, no more need for the temporary protective status because your home country is great. Does anybody think Haiti is a great place to return to right now?
Starting point is 00:54:09 People that are from Port-au-Prince and other places. And there's a huge proud Asian community here in Miami as well. So this is just the checklist, like you said before, like the Project 2025 list. You know, it's just this and the human toll and the human dimension does not matter. I think it gets affirmed by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, 3-0.
Starting point is 00:54:29 I think we're then, we're going to have to see what the United States Supreme Court does. And I think it kind of folds into this entirety of if they rule against Trump on the Alien Enemies Act, they're going to rule against them and rule for Judge Chen on this particular case. But we'll have to follow that as well. Why don't we switch gears now, and you wanted to take the lead
Starting point is 00:54:52 on the United States Supreme Court about Medicare and Medicaid being cut off since 2018 in South Carolina, and what happened at the oral argument today? So the interesting thing is this is not about abortion per se, right? I mean, Medicaid money cannot be used by Planned Parenthood to give women abortion. That's already kind of off the table.
Starting point is 00:55:17 We are talking about using Medicaid money, giving it to Planned Parenthood to provide just regular healthcare to women, right? They say that four out of 10 women who go to Planned Parenthood, that is their most recent healthcare appointment. I'll, you know, a lot of people go there, as you said on the top of the show,
Starting point is 00:55:40 for cancer screening, for, you know, family planning, certainly, but for regular checkups. This is who they go to. This is their point of contact. This is their healthcare. And so what happened was South Carolina decided that they wanted to not give the Medicare funding to Planned Parenthood. And the lawsuit said, you are taking away the doctor that I want to see, right?
Starting point is 00:56:08 I have a doctor at Planned Parenthood that I've been seeing and I can no longer see that doctor because I'm under Medicaid and now you can no longer see this doctor under Medicaid. And so they were suing. And the question really at the Supreme Court was, I don't wanna say an archaic question, but the question was really more of a legal question,
Starting point is 00:56:31 which was, does that patient have a legal right to sue for their choice of doctor or not? Is this obligation, Medicare has an obligation to allow patients to choose their doctor, a right? And that was what the question was, and there was a little bit of discussion around it with the justices. Or the South Carolina tried to argue that they don't have a right to sue, patients don't have a right to sue, they can just file an administrative complaint, right? You know, the reason why there's lawyers,
Starting point is 00:57:07 POBAC as you know, is because we get things done, right? I mean, the idea that cities and states and corporations just do the right thing without a lawsuit, I mean, that basically never happens. That's why there are so many lawyers out there is because nothing quite makes a change than a lawsuit. But basically that was South Carolina's argument was can't you just go through the administrative system and request this choice of doctor. The problem of course even Justice Gorsuch pointing out
Starting point is 00:57:35 at the oral argument is the governor is in charge of the administration around this and so you're back to square zero. So you had a little bit of attention because the Republicans never like to give citizens another opportunity to sue the government. They don't want more lawsuits against the government, but you had Justice Amy Coney Barrett, even Chief Justice Robert and Gorsuch kind of all agreeing a
Starting point is 00:58:03 little bit with the liberal justices that, you know, aren't you taking away somebody's right to see a doctor of their choice and not liking that. So we might, and I say might because, just because, we can glean a lot from oral arguments, but that doesn't mean the decision. But it did seem like there was a majority who did want patients to be able to choose a doctor of their choice. And
Starting point is 00:58:32 if that's the case, it's a glimmer of hope there for Planned Parenthood. Yeah. You know, it was so hard to sort out that oral argument that went on for about an hour and a half or so about where everybody's going to kind of land on this. I think it does turn once again, as we've said, not a broken record on Amy Coney Barrett. You know, I think Roberts is probably there about whether there's a private right of action related to this. And if, and I think if he slides over, that's only four votes. We need one more. I just don't see Gorsuch finding it based on some commentary that he made. Kavanaugh usually goes a lot of... For sure no. Kavanaugh is a no. For sure no. So we're left to Amy Goney Barrett. It's Amy Goney Barrett once again,
Starting point is 00:59:14 and it matters. I'm not saying the planned power is going to go out of business if they lose this kind of funding, but it will just embolden other states to do the exact same thing. 23, 24, other states will follow the lead here of South Carolina. And I know one place you can go to keep track of it all, unprecedented on Legal AF, the YouTube channel with Dina Zayagdala and me. We've reached the end of another fascinating episode, I hope, of Legal AF here at the midweek.
Starting point is 00:59:45 You can also come over to our, there it is, our YouTube channel and you can catch Dina Syagdahl. We got a new one going up tomorrow for her new hot take that she just did with us. And of course with that show. And catch the other, oh god, we had almost 10 contributors now that I'm curating the content for over on Legal AF, the YouTube channel.
Starting point is 01:00:04 We have all these great sponsors. We've got Midas Touch and the YouTube channel and their sub stack. I got a sub stack. You got a sub stack? Dina? I need to start a sub stack. I need to start a sub stack. I got a sub stack. Yeah. It's Michael Popak. It's the Michael Popak sub stack. That's awesome. And we've got some great stuff going on there as well. But thank you for always. bucks up stack. That's great stuff going on there as well. But thank you for always filling in sounds so lukewarm. You don't fill in. You just are the contributor today that we love and we love having you on here. So until our next, I got one with Saturday with Ben. I got another Legal layup on Saturday. And of course the hot takes on Midas Touch and on Legal AF, but thank you for being here. We're humbled by our success.
Starting point is 01:00:49 It's all tied to you. Midas is top, I think number one in the world in podcasts and a little known fact is we're in the top 12. Sometimes we hit, we even hit the top 10. I think we hit the top eight, hit top eight a few weeks ago. So we're right, we're right there with them, tracking with our big brothers.
Starting point is 01:01:05 So until our next report, I'm Michael Popock with Dina Sykdall-Siddiqian for Karen Friedman at Kniflo. Shout out to the Midas Mighty and the Legal A efforts.

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