Morning Wire - Evening Wire: Trump’s SCOTUS Victory & Newsom Sues Fox | 6.27.25
Episode Date: June 27, 2025The Supreme Court hands Trump a major win, the DOJ says Abrego-Garcia will be deported, and the Trump Administration investigates an eminent domain battle brewing in New Jersey. Get the facts first on... Evening Wire. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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The Supreme Court
hands Trump a major win.
The DOJ says
Abrego Garcia will be deported
and the Trump administration
investigates an imminent
domain battle
brewing in New Jersey.
I'm Georgia Howe
with Daily Wire,
executive editor John Bickley. It's Friday, June 27th, and this is Evening Wire.
President Trump has been handed a significant victory by the Supreme Court. Daily Wire Deputy
Managing editor Tim Rice has the latest. The court ruled six to three today that lower courts in
most cases can issue injunctions, but not universal ones. The decision marks a major shift in
how executive actions can be challenged. Writing for the majority, Justice Amy Coney-Barritt
said federal courts lack broad authority to block presidential orders nationwide unless specifically granted by Congress.
Here's George Washington University Law Professor Jonathan Turley.
Justice Barrett is saying that the only way for justice is exercise this type of universal injunction in some of these cases is equitable relief.
But she does not find evidence that that type of relief was granted to these judges.
So they indicate that the administration is likely to prevail on this issue.
All of that is going to be awfully good.
news for this administration. They have been really hit with these sort of
Lillipution attacks. All these individual district judges effectively freezing
federal policy and programs across the country. The ruling stems from challenges to Trump's
birthright citizenship order and is expected to reshape how legal battles over executive power
unfold. The decision could impact hundreds of lawsuits filed against executive actions Trump has
taken. Here's the president speaking on the ruling. These judges have attempted to dictate
the law for the entire nation.
In practice, this meant that if any one of the nearly 700 federal judges disagreed with the policy
of a duly elected president of the United States, he or she could block that policy from going into effect or at least delay it for many years, tied up in the court system.
I'm grateful to the Supreme Court for stepping in and solving this very, very big and complex problem, and they've made it very very serious.
simple. In another ruling, the High Court cited with Maryland parents, allowing them to opt their
children out of public school lessons involving LGBTQ themes if that content conflicts with
their religious beliefs. Daily Wire reporter Moreda Lorty has more. Six to three decision is seen
as a major victory for religious freedom advocates. Writing for the majority, Justice Samuel
Alito said public education cannot be conditioned on parents accepting instruction that undermines
their faith. The case centered on Montgomery County schools using
books with LGBTQ characters and themes in early grades. The parents, Muslim and Christian,
argued the lessons violated their religious rights after the school system stopped offering
opt-outs. The ruling could reshape parental rights in classrooms nationwide. The court also
upheld a law in Texas requiring age verification on pornographic websites.
California Governor Gavin Newsom is suing Fox News. The governor claims the network falsely
accused him of lying about a phone call with the president during the infamous L.A.
riots last month. During that time, Trump was asked at a press conference, when was the last time he
spoke to the governor? A day ago, called him up to tell him, got to do a better job, he's doing a bad
job, causing a lot of death and a lot of potential death. Newsom reposted that clip saying,
quote, there was no call, not even a voicemail. Americans should be alarmed that a president
deploying Marines onto our streets doesn't even know who he's talking to. Trump, however, had receipts.
supplied Fox News with call logs from his phone, showing a call that went unanswered and another
that lasted 16 minutes. Newsom claims Fox used deceptive edits and false assertions to mislead viewers
and damage his reputation. The governor is demanding a retraction and on-air apology. Fox has not
commented on the lawsuit. Trump is accusing Democrats of leaking sensitive intelligence about U.S.
airstrikes on Iran. Trump said in a social media post Thursday that the leak falsely portrayed the
strikes as less effective and called for prosecution, though he didn't name specific individuals.
The leak is now under FBI investigation. This comes after CNN and the New York Times reported
that the strikes may only have delayed Iran's nuclear program by months. But Trump and his
national security team say the facilities were obliterated. Hamas is preparing attacks on American
contractors helping to distribute aid in Gaza. A senior official in the Trump administration has told
the Daily Wire that attacks against the U.S.-backed Gaza humanitarian foundation are a growing
concern. Hamas has been credibly accused of stealing humanitarian aid to support their own war effort.
The GHF was created to provide aid to Hungary Gazans more securely.
In a joint statement with other terror groups, Hamas warned aid workers that, quote,
all collaborators, thieves, and criminal armed gangs are legitimate targets.
The DOJ says alleged MS-13 gang member Kilmar Abrago-Garci
will be deported after his release from jail, but not to his native El Salvador.
Daily Wire reporter Amanda Press-Ajacomo has the latest.
A federal prosecutor said Thursday that the Trump administration plans to expel him to a third
country, though no timeline has been set.
Abrago Garcia faces human trafficking charges and was previously sent to El Salvador
before being returned to the U.S. earlier this year by a court order.
The DOJ says he'll face trial before deportation.
His legal team is asking a federal judge to block any removal attempts before a hearing next month.
The case has drawn national attention amid legal battles over immigration and public safety.
An Egyptian man who kicked a law enforcement dog off the ground has been deported.
The man was traveling through Dulles Airport on Tuesday with over 100 pounds of undeclared foreign food
when the dog alerted customs and border protection officers.
The man reacted by kicking the 25-pound beagle named Freddie.
with enough force to lift him into the air.
CBP officers arrested the man who pleaded guilty in a court appearance on Thursday to harming animals used in law enforcement.
The man was ordered to cover the canine's veterinary fee and was deported back to Egypt yesterday afternoon.
Freddie is expected to make a full recovery.
Closing arguments continue in the trial of Sean Diddy Combs.
The lead defense attorney accused the prosecution of exaggerating claims of wrongdoing and described Diddy's freak-off parties as part of a swinger lifestyle.
The defense emphasized the consensual relationship between Diddy and the prosecution star witness Cassie Ventura and denied any coercion or sex trafficking.
The defense's arguments are expected to conclude Friday afternoon.
A billionaire is promising millions to any candidate capable of beating self-described democratic socialist Zoran Mamdani.
Bill Ackman said on social media he is gravely concerned about New York City after Momdani's victory, offering hundreds of millions of dollars to any candidate.
it who can beat him. The hedge fund manager says Mom Donnie won because he ran a good campaign against
bad competition, not because New Yorkers love socialism. Akman said a socialist mayor would be
devastating to the city. Mom Donnie's past career as a rapper has come back to haunt him. During a
live interview on CNN, Mom Donnie appeared uncomfortable as he watched the video. He's been in the New York
Assembly for four years and before that he was an aspiring rapper under the name Mr. Cardamom.
Listen.
Once you do it, it's out there.
It never comes back.
It's there.
I didn't think it was going to be on CNN.
Mom Donnie defended his background and said he will hire the best and brightest as mayor.
Ticks are spreading into new regions as warmer winters allow them to stick around longer.
Experts say ticks are now appearing across the northeast, Midwest, and beyond, bringing diseases like lime, rocky mountain spotted fever and even red meat allergies.
entomologists claim climate change and expanding human development are fueling the rise.
They urge precautions, wearing long clothes, using tick repellents, and checking for ticks after spending
time outdoors.
The Trump administration is pushing back on a New Jersey town that wants to seize a 175-year-old
family farm.
The two brothers who own the farm have been in a months-long battle against the Cranberry
Township, which is looking to build state-mandated affordable housing on the land.
Imminent domain grants power to the government to take private property for public use
if the owner receives just compensation.
The brothers have reportedly declined offers of up to $30 million for the farm.
Department of Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins says she's looking into the situation
and that the administration desires to protect family farms at all costs.
Anna Winter, the decades-long editor-in-chief of American Vogue, has announced she's stepping down.
During her 37 years at the magazine, Winter ran daily.
operations and elevated up-and-coming fashion designers. She even served as a strong inspiration for
Merrill Streep's character in The Devil Wears Prada. Despite her smashing success for the company,
Roger Lynch, Chief Executive of Condonast, says she's been working three jobs and that it made
sense for her to step away. Winter will now serve as Condonast's Global Chief Content Officer
and Global Editorial Director of Vogue. Pro-Life Diaper Company Every Life has launched in South Korea.
with the world's lowest fertility rate. The diaper company is partnering with a massive church there
and is hosting an international diaper drive. The U.S.-based brand says its mission is more than
commerce. It's a cultural movement to revive family values. Here's what EveryLife CEO, Sarah Gable
Seafurt, told Morning Wire. We feel that our message that strong families build a strong
nation is going to shift hearts and minds that South Korea is worth fighting for and the best days
are yet to come.
Every life warns that without a return to pro-family ideals, the West may face the same
population crisis.
And TSA replied to a viral ex-post this week, in which a user joked that while transportation
security might want a valid identification, his Waffle House ID was the realist ID.
The post garnered over two million views, and TSA responded to it by saying that the real
ID doesn't comply with federal rules and would not be accepted.
Many ex-users weighed in, asking where they could get one of the special Waffle House IDs,
or expressing their jealousy of the person behind the post.
On May 7th, real ID requirements went into effect and now require travelers to obtain the new
identification with a star in the upper right corner.
Those of your drive home updates this evening.
To learn more about these stories, go to Dailywire.com.
And in case you missed it this morning, we covered some major stories, including new intelligence
on the damage to Iran's nuclear facilities, RFK, Yanks Funding.
from a global vaccine group and New York City Reels after its socialist candidate victory.
Thanks for tuning in. We'll be back tomorrow morning with a weekend edition of Morning Wire.
