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Last week’s Supreme Court ruling on Trump-era tariffs didn’t declare tariffs unconstitutional.
They didn’t say the President lacks trade authority.
They didn’t say Congress delegated too much power.
Instead…
They said they were “uncomfortable.”
And in doing so, they may have quietly replaced constitutional separation of powers with something far more dangerous:
👉 Government by injunction
👉 Litigation-driven policy
👉 Judicial pre-clearance of executive action
When courts refuse to draw clear constitutional lines, the rule doesn’t disappear — it gets outsourced to:
• Compliance committees
• Risk officers
• District courts
• Emergency stay calendars
• And whichever five justices feel comfortable that day
This episode breaks down:
⚖️ What the Court actually ruled
📉 Why markets hate ambiguous precedent
🏛️ How gray-area decisions create downstream policy paralysis
📜 The Commerce Clause confusion around tariffs
🌎 Why every major country uses tariffs as industrial policy
📉 And how popularity-based rulings create decades of litigation chaos
From Wickard v. Filburn
To Korematsu
To NFIB v. Sebelius
We’ve seen this before.
Short-term moderation.
Long-term doctrinal disaster.
📞 Call in and weigh in:
866-LAST-GAY (866-527-8429)
Did the Court protect the Constitution?
Or just protect its reputation?
00:00 Cold Open – When Institutions Choose Popularity
01:45 Supreme Court Blocks Trump Tariffs Explained
04:20 No Test, No Rule, No Doctrinal Anchor
07:15 Governing by Litigation Risk
10:50 Government by Injunction
14:30 Justice Roberts’ “Meaningful Connection” Problem
18:45 Concurrences Without Limits
22:10 Gorsuch & Thomas on Delegated Authority
26:30 Why Courts Must Be Binary
29:40 Wickard v. Filburn & Regulatory Gray Zones
33:20 Korematsu & Institutional Moderation
36:40 NFIB v. Sebelius Revisited
40:15 Litigation-Driven Governance
44:00 Retail Theft Policy Whiplash
47:10 Immigration Enforcement Cycle
50:20 Cash Bail Reform Reversal
54:30 Tariffs vs Taxes
58:45 Tariffs as Industrial Policy
01:03:10 Administrative State vs Trade Authority
01:08:30 The Post-2016 “Receipts Era”
01:12:40 Agency Fees vs Congressional Tariffs
01:16:55 Popularity → Policy Paralysis
01:20:20 Ed Meese Reminder
01:22:10 Final Thoughts & Call-In
#SupremeCourt
#TrumpTariffs
#TradePolicy
#Constitution
#SeparationOfPowers
#AdministrativeState
#Tariffs
#SCOTUS
#PoliticsPodcast
#GovernmentOverreach
#EconomicPolicy
#CommerceClause
#LastGayConservative
#PublicPolicy
#JudicialReview
By The Last Gay ConservativeLast week’s Supreme Court ruling on Trump-era tariffs didn’t declare tariffs unconstitutional.
They didn’t say the President lacks trade authority.
They didn’t say Congress delegated too much power.
Instead…
They said they were “uncomfortable.”
And in doing so, they may have quietly replaced constitutional separation of powers with something far more dangerous:
👉 Government by injunction
👉 Litigation-driven policy
👉 Judicial pre-clearance of executive action
When courts refuse to draw clear constitutional lines, the rule doesn’t disappear — it gets outsourced to:
• Compliance committees
• Risk officers
• District courts
• Emergency stay calendars
• And whichever five justices feel comfortable that day
This episode breaks down:
⚖️ What the Court actually ruled
📉 Why markets hate ambiguous precedent
🏛️ How gray-area decisions create downstream policy paralysis
📜 The Commerce Clause confusion around tariffs
🌎 Why every major country uses tariffs as industrial policy
📉 And how popularity-based rulings create decades of litigation chaos
From Wickard v. Filburn
To Korematsu
To NFIB v. Sebelius
We’ve seen this before.
Short-term moderation.
Long-term doctrinal disaster.
📞 Call in and weigh in:
866-LAST-GAY (866-527-8429)
Did the Court protect the Constitution?
Or just protect its reputation?
00:00 Cold Open – When Institutions Choose Popularity
01:45 Supreme Court Blocks Trump Tariffs Explained
04:20 No Test, No Rule, No Doctrinal Anchor
07:15 Governing by Litigation Risk
10:50 Government by Injunction
14:30 Justice Roberts’ “Meaningful Connection” Problem
18:45 Concurrences Without Limits
22:10 Gorsuch & Thomas on Delegated Authority
26:30 Why Courts Must Be Binary
29:40 Wickard v. Filburn & Regulatory Gray Zones
33:20 Korematsu & Institutional Moderation
36:40 NFIB v. Sebelius Revisited
40:15 Litigation-Driven Governance
44:00 Retail Theft Policy Whiplash
47:10 Immigration Enforcement Cycle
50:20 Cash Bail Reform Reversal
54:30 Tariffs vs Taxes
58:45 Tariffs as Industrial Policy
01:03:10 Administrative State vs Trade Authority
01:08:30 The Post-2016 “Receipts Era”
01:12:40 Agency Fees vs Congressional Tariffs
01:16:55 Popularity → Policy Paralysis
01:20:20 Ed Meese Reminder
01:22:10 Final Thoughts & Call-In
#SupremeCourt
#TrumpTariffs
#TradePolicy
#Constitution
#SeparationOfPowers
#AdministrativeState
#Tariffs
#SCOTUS
#PoliticsPodcast
#GovernmentOverreach
#EconomicPolicy
#CommerceClause
#LastGayConservative
#PublicPolicy
#JudicialReview