Exasperated judge smacks DOJ lawyer's defense of Trump's behavior

Exasperated judge smacks DOJ lawyer's defense of Trump's behavior
U.S. President Donald Trump speaks during the signing ceremony for an executive order on mail ballots, in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, D.C., March 31, 2026. REUTERS Evan Vucci

U.S. President Donald Trump speaks during the signing ceremony for an executive order on mail ballots, in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, D.C., March 31, 2026. REUTERS Evan Vucci

Frontpage news and politics

Politico reports a lawyer for the Justice Department stammered into a freeze when asked to justify President Donald Trump’s unconstitutional power grab.

A pretrial Thursday conference over Maurene Comey’s lawsuit against the Trump administration for her termination last summer delivered a cringy moment for the attorney, when she was asked about the problematic end-game of giving Trump power to fire federal employees over issues as gamey as their blood relations. In Maurene Comey’s case, Comey argues that her relation to embattled former FBI head James Comey was the trigger for her firing.

Comey, a longtime federal prosecutor in Manhattan, was abruptly fired without explanation via a letter citing only the Constitution’s Article II, which outlines the powers of the president, as the basis for her firing. She alleged in her lawsuit that she lost her job “solely or substantially because her father is former FBI Director James B. Comey, or because of her perceived political affiliation and beliefs, or both.”

DOJ lawyer Karen Lesperance argued before the court at the pretrial hearing that Comey’s firing was valid “even if there were political motivations.”

But then Politico reports “U.S. District Judge Jesse Furman pressed Lesperance on whether there are any limits to the president’s Article II powers. Could the president, for example, decide to fire people in order to achieve an ‘all-white executive branch? Or all-Black?’ he asked.”

“Lesperance stammered in response,” reports Politico, eventually saying, “I can’t answer on behalf of the government.”

Judge Furman replied: “You’re here representing the government.”

The Comey case highlights the broader constitutional crisis surrounding Trump's use of Article II powers to purge federal employees.

Legal experts have warned that unchecked presidential firing authority threatens the independence of federal agencies and civil service protections established over a century ago. The DOJ's inability to articulate limits on Trump's termination powers—as demonstrated in Judge Furman's courtroom—suggests the administration may be pushing constitutional boundaries further than previous administrations.

Maurene Comey's lawsuit is one of several challenges to Trump's personnel decisions. Her case raises fundamental questions about whether the president can fire federal employees based solely on family relationships or political beliefs, rather than job performance. The judge's hypothetical about an "all-white" or "all-Black" executive branch underscores the stakes: without clear limits on Article II powers, presidents could theoretically use mass firings to reshape the federal government along partisan or discriminatory lines, undermining the civil service system designed to insulate government from pure political control.

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