“No Statutory Authority”: Another Court Has to Stop Trump From Dismantling the Government
This Isn’t Policy. It’s Power and the Pattern Is Clear.
There is a moment in every slow-motion power grab when the mask slips, when the language shifts from governance to domination, from disagreement to decree. This week, that moment came in the form of a federal judge’s blunt assessment of the Trump administration’s latest maneuver to hollow out the federal government from the inside.
“The president has no statutory authority.”
Not misguided authority. Not uncertain authority. No authority at all.
In a sweeping rebuke, U.S. District Judge John J. McConnell Jr. issued a permanent injunction blocking the Trump administration’s attempt to slash funding to multiple federal agencies in what the court found to be a deliberate effort to “dismantle” them. The ruling wasn’t just a technical correction. It was a constitutional firewall and another entry in a growing pattern where courts are forced to step in to stop a president who increasingly governs as though Congress is optional.
This case is not isolated. It is part of something larger, more deliberate, and more dangerous: an escalating strategy to bypass democratic oversight by starving institutions into submission.
And that strategy now collides with a very real courtroom consequence, one that turns theory into undeniable proof.
And the courts are no longer pretending otherwise.
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What Trump Tried to Do And Why the Judge Stopped It
At the heart of the case was an executive move to sharply cut or freeze funding for several congressionally created agencies responsible for vital public functions, including library services, small business development, and federal mediation programs. These weren’t symbolic trims. They were operational chokeholds.
The states challenging the action — led by Rhode Island — argued that the funding cuts had nothing to do with efficiency or reform. Instead, they were designed to cripple agencies that still had valid, active appropriations approved by Congress.
Judge McConnell agreed.
In a detailed 47-page opinion, the court concluded that the president simply does not have the power to override congressional spending decisions based on political priorities. Under both the Constitution and the Administrative Procedure Act (APA), the executive branch must carry out laws as written, not selectively discard them when inconvenient.
The result? The court vacated the executive action and issued a permanent injunction requiring that funds continue to flow and that the agencies remain operational.
This wasn’t a close call.
The ruling emphasized that Congress holds the power of the purse, a foundational principle designed specifically to prevent any single branch from dominating the others. When Trump attempted to cancel funding without legislative approval, he crossed from aggressive politics into unconstitutional governance.
And it’s not the first time.
The Pattern: Governing by Decree, Corrected by Court Order
This ruling does not stand alone. It echoes a familiar rhythm of judicial intervention, one where Trump’s unilateral actions repeatedly force the courts to step in and restore constitutional balance.
Over and over again, the Trump administration has attempted to govern through unilateral edicts — executive orders, emergency declarations, funding freezes, agency reshuffling — all designed to bypass the slower, more accountable legislative process.
The common thread is consistent:
Announce a sweeping action
Justify it with vague claims of efficiency or national interest
Ignore statutory limits
Force the courts to clean up the constitutional mess
Whether it’s immigration bans, regulatory rollbacks, environmental dismantling, or now the intentional defunding of federal agencies, the same playbook repeats: push until someone stops it.
And the most troubling part? The resistance isn’t coming from political opponents. It’s coming from judges citing the Constitution.
This is not a policy disagreement. This is structural erosion.
The Real Goal: Starve the System, Then Declare It Broken
Once the pattern becomes clear, the motive is impossible to ignore.
Trump and his allies frequently rail against a so-called “deep state,” but this ruling exposes the real objective: not reform, but demolition.
By cutting off funding, delaying grants, and freezing operational capacity, the administration creates dysfunction, then points to that dysfunction as proof that the agencies should be eliminated entirely.
It is manufactured failure.
Judge McConnell explicitly recognized this strategy, noting that the funding cuts looked less like oversight and more like an attempt to systematically dismantle agencies created by Congress.
This is how institutions die in democracies that drift toward authoritarianism— not with a coup in the streets, but with slow suffocation under the guise of efficiency.
And once an agency collapses, it doesn’t matter if the law says it should exist. It no longer functions.
That’s the danger.
Why This Matters Beyond Washington
Washington power plays never stay confined to Capitol Hill.
This is not an abstract legal battle. The agencies targeted in this ruling provide direct, everyday support to people who are just trying to survive a complicated economy.
Libraries serve communities that can’t afford broadband. Small business programs support entrepreneurs in towns that banks have abandoned. Mediation services prevent civil conflicts from becoming legal disasters.
Defund those services, and the harm doesn’t appear in a headline. It shows up at:
A shuttered local library
A denied grant
A closed community resource center
A business that never opens
This is what dismantling government looks like on the ground— not bold reform, but quiet disappearance.
The Constitutional Warning Shot
The damage felt on local ground is the natural consequence of constitutional boundaries being ignored at the top.
Make no mistake: this ruling is a warning to the executive branch and a reminder to the public.
The president is not a king.
He does not get to decide which laws to follow and which to erase based on political preference or ideological hostility. That is precisely what the separation of powers was designed to prevent.
Judge McConnell’s decision reinforces that the executive branch must execute laws, not nullify them. When Congress appropriates funds, the president’s role is implementation, not veto-by-neglect.
The permanent injunction also signals something else. The court does not trust this administration to self-correct.
And history suggests that distrust is justified.
Could This Reach the Supreme Court?
Every power struggle looks for its final arbiter, and in this system, that role belongs to the Supreme Court.
Yes, the Trump administration can appeal this ruling, and it could eventually reach the U.S. Supreme Court. However, appeals do not erase the facts already established by the record, and the injunction remains enforceable unless overturned by a higher court.
Even then, Supreme Court review is not guaranteed. Only a tiny fraction of cases are accepted, and this case would fall squarely into a volatile arena of constitutional interpretation tied to executive power.
Translation: this isn’t just Trump’s fight. It’s a test case about the limits of presidential authority itself.
This Is the Bigger Story
With appeals looming and the constitutional stakes rising, the bigger reality comes into sharp focus.
The real story isn’t just that a judge blocked Trump’s funding cuts. It’s that once again, the courts had to stop a president from attempting to rule outside the boundaries of the Constitution.
It’s that the administration’s instinct wasn’t compromise or negotiation. It was dominance. It’s that dismantling government has become a strategy, not a consequence.
Across ruling after ruling, the same theme emerges: the executive branch pushing until forced to obey the law.
That is not governance. That is erosion.
The Future of Accountability
When courtrooms become the primary guardrails of democracy, public trust inevitably strains.
This ruling provides a brief moment of institutional stability, but it does not solve the deeper issue. A government that must constantly be corrected by court order is a government under strain.
Democracy depends on leaders who respect limits, not just those who are constrained by force.
And when the public becomes numb to these warnings, authoritarian behavior stops sounding shocking and starts sounding normal.
That normalization is the most dangerous phase of all.
The Pattern Is the Point
This is not about one line-item budget dispute or a single agency quarrel. This is about whether the rule of law still governs the executive branch, or whether law has become a speed bump to be overridden by ambition.
Judge McConnell’s ruling delivered a clear message: You don’t get to dismantle democracy by starving it.
However, the fact that the message had to be delivered at all should concern every American who believes government should answer to the people, not to one man’s will.
That’s the real story we should all be paying attention to.
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Because when power goes unchecked, silence is complicity, and truth is resistance.
Sources
Kalmbacher, Colin. “‘The President Has No Statutory Authority’: Judge Rebukes and Reverses Trump Admin Funding Cuts Intended to ‘Dismantle’ Federal Agencies, Issues Permanent Injunction.” Law & Crime, November 21, 2025.
DeVooght, Destiny. “Federal Judge Says Trump Uses Executive Orders to Usurp Congress.” Courthouse News, November 21, 2025.





As for small businesses, Trump has no use for them. As an example, the expressed objective to devalue and debase the US dollar is set to destroy small businesses through higher import costs, but help large businesses in their exports to make them cheaper and mitigate tariffs placed on US imports overseas. The Muskrat said money will not be needed in the future. Maybe that's just code for the US dollar will be worthless?
This is great ! Now, I’d really like a clear examination of the compliance side of this decision.
I’ve heard a lot of decisions come out. That generally is just before I stop being able to find clear and reliable reports on actual results.