🔥 HE GOT IT! Trump Just Won the Battle NOBODY WAS WATCHING!

Justus Knight – RR News Update! June 26th, 2026

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DESCRIPTION

#SupremeCourt, #ImmigrationPolicy, #Asylum

Trump’s Capitol confrontation, Republican divisions, and recent Supreme Court rulings are raising new questions about executive authority, congressional power, and how constitutional decisions may shape the next phase of Washington politics.

Everyone focused on the political drama inside Congress—but was that really the biggest story? In this episode, Justus Knight examines the connection between the recent Capitol confrontation and the Supreme Court’s latest rulings, exploring how the balance of power between Congress, the presidency, and the judiciary could shape American government long after the headlines fade. Rather than reliving the shouting match, we look at the constitutional questions beneath it and why they matter.

CHAPTER MARKERS

00:00 — What If the Trump Senate Fight Wasn’t the Story?
02:50 — Everyone Watched the Trump Show
04:00 — The Question Nobody Asked
05:50 — Nine People Were Quietly Moving
07:30 — The Real Victory Revealed
09:30 — Congress Fights, Courts Decide
10:40 — What Everyone Missed – The Supreme Court Rulings
16:15 — The Power Beneath the Headlines
17:50 — So Who Really Won? The Constitutional Answer

19:15 – The Supreme Court Victory – Two Rulings
23:00 — Headlines Fade. Precedent Doesn’t.

Pinned Comment

Which matters more in the long run: a political victory in Congress… or a constitutional victory in the courts?

HASHTAGS

#TrumpPower, #SupremeCourt, #ExecutivePower, #SCOTUS, #TrumpVsGOP, #CongressVsTrump, #PresidentialPower, #ImmigrationRuling, #ConstitutionalPower, #JustusKnight

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I love you all, until next time, Godspeed and God Bless,

Justus Knight


REFERENCES :

Reuters – Trump’s Power Takes Center Stage in U.S. Supreme Court’s Home Stretch
https://www.reuters.com/legal/government/trumps-power-takes-center-stage-us-supreme-courts-home-stretch-2026-06-24/

Reuters – U.S. Supreme Court Sides With Trump in Asylum-Processing Case
https://www.reuters.com/world/us-supreme-court-sides-with-trump-asylum-processing-case-2026-06-25/

Reuters – U.S. Supreme Court News (June 2026 Coverage)
https://www.reuters.com/legal/supreme-court-of-the-united-states/

The Guardian – Supreme Court Lets Trump Turn Back Asylum Seekers at U.S.-Mexico Border
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/jun/25/supreme-court-ruling-asylum-seekers-us-mexico-border

The Guardian – U.S. Supreme Court Allows Trump Administration to Strip Haitians and Syrians of Protected Status
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/jun/25/supreme-court-haitians-syrians-temporary-protected-status

Axios – Supreme Court Backs Trump on Stricter Asylum Rules
https://www.axios.com/2026/06/25/supreme-court-trump-asylum-border

Supreme Court of the United States – Opinions and Orders
https://www.supremecourt.gov/

Associated Press – Supreme Court coverage (search hub)
https://apnews.com/hub/supreme-court

COMMUNITY POST

What’s the bigger source of long-term power in Washington?

🤔 They all depend on each other

🏛️ Congress

⚖️ Supreme Court

🦅 The Presidency

MEDIUM ARTICLE

While Everyone Watched the Fight, the Rules May Have Changed

Washington loves a good fight.

A shouting match in the Senate? Instant headlines.

Republicans arguing with Donald Trump? Cable news gold.

Political insiders leaking details from closed-door meetings? That’s enough to fuel a week’s worth of panel discussions and social media outrage.

But what if everyone was looking in the wrong direction?

This week, the biggest story may not have been the confrontation inside Congress at all. It may have been what was quietly happening a few blocks away inside the Supreme Court.

That isn’t because court decisions generate better television. They don’t.

It’s because they often outlive the politicians making the headlines.

While cameras focused on senators debating executive authority and foreign policy, the Supreme Court issued a series of immigration-related decisions that were widely viewed as favorable to the Trump administration. Among them were rulings allowing the administration to move forward with ending Temporary Protected Status for certain groups and reinstating the “metering” policy that can limit access to asylum processing at the southern border.

Whether someone applauds or criticizes those outcomes depends on their political philosophy.

But there is another question worth asking.

What do these cases say about presidential authority?

That’s where the conversation becomes much bigger than immigration.

For years, every administration has wrestled with the same institutional reality: Congress writes laws, federal agencies enforce them, lower courts review them, and the Supreme Court ultimately decides how the Constitution and federal statutes apply.

When the Court weighs in, it is not merely settling one political dispute. It is defining the legal boundaries within which future presidents may operate.

That’s why this week’s rulings deserve more attention than the typical partisan scorecard.

Congress can argue.

Congress can investigate.

Congress can hold hearings.

But Supreme Court precedent often shapes government long after the television cameras have moved on.

That doesn’t mean the Court always agrees with the White House. It doesn’t. In fact, the Court has also rejected or limited administration actions in other cases, depending on the legal issues before it. But on several recent immigration disputes, the Court has largely allowed the administration’s policies to move forward while litigation continues, reinforcing the importance of executive authority in those contexts.

This distinction matters.

Political victories are temporary.

Constitutional interpretations can influence future administrations of either party.

That is why the Senate confrontation and the Supreme Court decisions should not be viewed as isolated events.

One represented the political battle.

The other may influence the legal battlefield for years to come.

Perhaps the biggest mistake we make in modern politics is assuming the loudest story is automatically the most important one.

Sometimes the real shift happens quietly.

Sometimes the people changing Washington aren’t standing behind podiums or microphones.

They’re writing opinions that will still be cited long after today’s political arguments have faded from memory.

Headlines disappear.

Campaigns end.

Majorities change.

Court precedents often remain.

And that may prove to be the most significant story of the week.



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