Are Trump's Executive Orders Legal?

特朗普的行政命令合法吗?

Fresh Air

艺术

2025-02-17

44 分钟
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Constitutional scholar, historian, and New York Times staff writer Charlie Savage joins us this President's Day to talk about the scope of executive power. Savage takes us through the legal challenges, the power of Congress and the Supreme Court, and how previous presidents have pushed the bounds. TV critic David Bianculli reviews Star Trek: Section 31 and Planet Earth: Asia. Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoices NPR Privacy Policy
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  • This is FRESH air.

  • I'm Tonya Moseley.

  • Since the inauguration, we've experienced a dizzying onslaught of actions from the Oval Office.

  • So we're devoting this President's Day to understanding the scope of President Donald Trump's power as he continues to break laws, use billionaire Elon Musk to dismantle the government and circumvent Congress.

  • Since taking office, President Trump has issued dozens of executive orders, memos and proclamations to change policies in immigration law.

  • He's expanded on the record of his first term and is acting on the promises he made during his campaign, actions that will redefine the United States, like taking away birthright citizenship, urging millions of federal workers to resign and dismantling efforts to prevent foreign influence in our elections.

  • Legal scholars and experts agree that we are in a constitutional crisis.

  • We explore what that is and what power Congress and the American people have against President Trump's executive authority.

  • Our guest today, Charlie Savage, has studied and written about presidential power for two decades.

  • His 2007 book, the Return of the Imperial Presidency and the Subversion of American Democracy, is about the Bush Cheney administration's efforts to expand the president's power.

  • Savage is also a constitutional scholar and wrote in 2015 Power an investigative Account of national Security and legal policymaking under President Obama.

  • Savage is a staff writer for the New York Times, where he writes about national security and legal policy.

  • We recorded this conversation with Savage last week.

  • Charlie Savage, welcome back to FRESH air.

  • Thank you for having me.

  • Okay, Charlie, so today will be kind.

  • Of like a civics lesson and hopefully a grounding to understand the scope of.

  • Presidential power and what actions are legal or illegal.

  • Many legal experts, as I mentioned, agree.

  • That we are in a constitutional crisis.