Trump's Legal Firestorm: 549+ Lawsuits, Criminal Trials & Supreme Court Showdowns Podcast Por  arte de portada

Trump's Legal Firestorm: 549+ Lawsuits, Criminal Trials & Supreme Court Showdowns

Trump's Legal Firestorm: 549+ Lawsuits, Criminal Trials & Supreme Court Showdowns

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Donald Trump faces a barrage of court trials and legal challenges in his second term, spanning criminal cases from his first presidency and new civil suits over executive actions. According to the Brennan Center for Justice, three active criminal prosecutions persist: the New York hush money case where he was convicted of felonies in May 2024 for falsifying business records; the federal Washington case on efforts to overturn the 2020 election; the Georgia Fulton County case on the same election interference; and the Florida classified documents case.

Civil litigation has exploded, with Just Security tracking 549 cases against Trump administration actions as of early 2026, including 235 awaiting rulings and 48 blocked. Lawfare reports 298 active national security-related challenges, plus suits by the administration. Key battles include the Supreme Court's February 20, 2026, ruling in Learning Resources, Inc. v. Trump striking down sweeping tariffs on Canada, China, and Mexico, per SCOTUSblog and the Council on Foreign Relations, prompting Trump to vow new 15% levies now facing court scrutiny, as noted by the Peterson Institute for International Economics.

Other flashpoints involve executive orders targeting law firms like WilmerHale and Perkins Coie for alleged disloyalty, leading to suits over First Amendment violations and due process in D.D.C. courts; bans on gender-affirming care for minors challenged by Massachusetts; and policies on immigration detention, death penalty conditions, and mail-in ballots temporarily blocked. Rutgers Law highlights upcoming Supreme Court clashes like Trump v. Slaughter on firing protections and challenges to birthright citizenship via Executive Order 14160.

These cases test presidential power limits, with over 700 immigration rulings against new detention policies alone, per Politico via Just Security. Outcomes could reshape executive authority.

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