Social media individuals advised White House therapist Alina Habba to “go back to law school” following her most current wild protection of Donald Trump’s activities because his go back to the White House last month.
Habba, a lawyer, on Tuesday railroaded on Martha MacCallum’s Fox News reveal versus what she referred to as “rogue” government courts that have actually ruled versus the head of state’s orders.
They do not have the authority to test the commander-in-chief, she said.
“Our founding fathers created a document, the Constitution. There’s a separation of powers for a reason,” claimed Habba.
“The executive branch is the ultimate authority on federal issues,” the legal representative included, neglecting that the legal, executive and judicial branches exist to hold each various other to account and make certain checks and equilibriums.
A user-generated area note on X, previously Twitter, fact-checked Habba’s remarks.
It read: “The executive branch is not the ultimate authority on federal issues and has not been for over two centuries. The judiciary, including lower federal courts, have power to rule on the legality of conduct the executive branch.”
Habba’s insurance claim attracted blowback on social media sites:
Alina Habba recommends the Trump management can resist court orders: “There’s a splitting up of powers for a factor. The executive branch is the supreme authority on government concerns.”
This is what a constitutional dilemma resembles
pic.twitter.com/CG2mW9WTkn— Republicans versus Trump (@RpsAgainstTrump) February 12, 2025
Wrong dumbass. The Constitution is the supreme authority. The executive branch is co-equal to the judicial and legal branch.
check out the damn Constitution https://t.co/AlIbpRwlaj— Brian J. Karem (@BrianKarem) February 11, 2025
A center schooler discovering civics for the very first time would certainly understand that’s the specific reverse of what splitting up of powers requires. https://t.co/0NIwDgSGxC
— Dylan Williams (@dylanotes) February 11, 2025
Alina, dear, return to regulation institution.
Or, at the very least read Marbury v.Madison
Also, quit speaking since every single time you do, you ridicule on your own. https://t.co/SpKX0pCqov— Elizabeth de la Vega (@Delavegalaw) February 11, 2025