Gavin Newsom Has Lost The Plot

from the this-is-actually-important-dipshit dept

Gavin Newsom’s characterization of the Abrego García deportation as a “distraction” represents a catastrophic failure of moral clarity and constitutional understanding.

This isn’t a distraction. This is the constitutional foundation of our Republic hinging on a single case.

Let’s be absolutely clear about what’s at stake: The Supreme Court has issued a unanimous 9-0 order demanding that the administration facilitate the return Abrego García to the United States. A 9-0 ruling. In today’s polarized Court. This isn’t partisan; it’s fundamental. The President, bound by oath and the Constitution to “faithfully execute the laws,” is openly defying the highest judicial authority in the land.

If a President can simply ignore a direct, unanimous Supreme Court order with no consequences, then what remains of checks and balances? What remains of the separation of powers? What remains of the rule of law itself? This is not hyperbole—this is the actual constitutional crisis we were warned about, happening in real time.

The so-called “pragmatists” like Newsom who suggest we focus on “kitchen table issues” instead reveal a profound misunderstanding of what’s at stake. They present a false choice between economic concerns and constitutional principles—as if Americans cannot care about both their retirement accounts and whether we still have a functioning constitutional republic.

Perhaps Governor Newsom should visit Abrego García’s children—two with autism, one prone to seizures—and explain to them that their father’s wrongful imprisonment and torture in El Salvador is a “distraction” from more important matters. Perhaps he should tell these American citizens that the erroneous deportation of their father, in direct violation of his legal protections, is less important than poll-tested talking points about tariffs.

This is the Theater of Neutrality in its most shameful form—pretending that constitutional crises are merely political disagreements, that fundamental questions of rule of law are just one “issue” among many. It’s the cowardly posture that treats moral clarity as a political liability rather than a governing necessity.

What’s particularly galling is how Newsom frames this as political strategy: “Are they defending MS-13?” he asks, parroting the administration’s falsehoods even after a federal judge found that the gang allegations against Abrego García were based on a discredited database and testimony from a disgraced detective.

No, Governor. They’re defending the Constitution. They’re defending due process. They’re defending the principle that no one—not even a President—is above the law. They’re defending the idea that when the Supreme Court issues a unanimous order, it must be followed, not mocked or ignored.

Two plus two equals four. There are twenty-four hours in a day. And if we cannot summon the moral clarity to stand firmly against a President openly defying a direct Supreme Court order, then we have already surrendered the constitutional republic we claim to cherish.

The center must be held—not because it is easy, but because it is ours to hold. And holding it requires recognizing that some issues aren’t distractions but foundations. The rule of law isn’t a policy preference. It’s the condition that makes all other governance possible.

The ground approaches. And in this moment of constitutional gravity, those who cannot find their moral compass may find themselves remembered among those who stood aside while the Republic itself was undermined.

At this point, I’m not sure Gavin Newsom remembers what’s real.

Mike Brock is a former tech exec who was on the leadership team at Block. Originally published at his Notes From the Circus.

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Comments on “Gavin Newsom Has Lost The Plot”

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31 Comments
This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Anonymous Coward says:

Newsom is inadvertantly right in that it is a distraction – perhaps purposely milked. It is a distraction from all the other trafficking. It is a distraction from the 700 other things this administration does every day which are destructive and illegal and questionable at best on the low end.

But Newsom is the distraction and terrible apologist here. What an utter dick.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Arijirija says:

William Butler Yeats?

My thoughts turned immediately to W B Yeats’ poem The Second Coming, truly apt because a large number of the Trumpians are looking for a Second Coming:

Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold;\
Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,\
The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere\
The ceremony of innocence is drowned;\
The best lack all conviction, while the worst\
Are full of passionate intensity.

buttwipinglord (profile) says:

What hope do we have without organized resistance? Think they will just give up when enough “paid” protesters show up? It will be their cue to fire on the unarmed masses. Fight back physically and it will be just the same result. Declaring martial law. And without those spinless cucks the NRA and or the military unwilling to break from the Fuhrer , no organized resistance stands a chance. Think we will make it to midterms with a fair election? No. The whole fabric of our government will cease to be anything more than than mirror visage of Russia at best and at worst the worst of the PRC.

With Judges being arrested for the simple crime of not aiding the illegally ordered FBI to carry out their heinous acts, a loser in a state supreme Court race to just be able to change the rules of an election after the fact and throw out 60k votes in conviently only opposing districts. What hope of this Republic surviving until mid terms exists?

Welcome to the Fascist States of America.

And here I thought the giant blood soaked shit stain on our history of the first term was bad. Surviving being a frontline medical worker during Covid and the bat shit selfish conspiracy addled twats was bad.

Universe help us all.

ML2 (profile) says:

Re:

As far as I can tell the North Carolina State Supreme Court election result has not been thrown out, so stop talking like it has. A good chunk of everything else you have written is catastrophizing. Organized protest is important for building further support, it’s not at all clear that the military would go through with enforcement of martial law if declared, and even if some of it did, that’s not a guarantee that elements of the military loyal to Trump would win the resulting violent ferment.

You wouldn’t comply in the moment, so stop complying in advance by granting fascists victories in battles that have yet to even start.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
MrWilson (profile) says:

Remember this when Newsom is the next Democratic candidate for president hailed as the only hope against Trump. I’m not telling you not to vote for him because any Democrat or even a fucking doorstop will be a more moral choice than Trump’s 3rd term or whoever the GOP trots out to replace him (it won’t be Vance).

But remember this that Newsom might possibly be marginally better than Biden, but will largely be a return to the same old thing instead of a shift in a positive direction towards actual progress. We’ve lost so much ground of late on civil liberties and human rights that people will be grateful for anything less than the cruelty-backed machinations of authoritarians, but we deserve more.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Bilateralrope (profile) says:

What’s particularly galling is how Newsom frames this as political strategy: “Are they defending MS-13?” he asks, parroting the administration’s falsehoods even after a federal judge found that the gang allegations against Abrego García were based on a discredited database and testimony from a disgraced detective.

This is where he tells what he really thinks. He doesn’t want us to ignore Abrego García because there are more important issues.

He wants us to ignore Abrego García because he supports what’s happened to him. But he knows better than to say that out loud, so he calls it a distraction.

Remember this any time someone calls an issue a distraction. Look for a pattern in which issues get called distractions and which don’t.

Bilateralrope (profile) says:

Re: Re:

That is a good question. That deportation is proof that if the Trump administration is allowed to skip due process for anyone, they will be skipping the part that figures out who gets due process.

If that handwritten note is genuine, that means that there was a disagreement between the parents about where the girl should go. One that ICE decided without talking to the father. I’ll be surprised if the note is genuine.

Also, when you bring up that article again, make sure that even people who don’t click the link know that she is a US citizen.

Ehud Gavron (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re: DUE PROCESS is done process.

@Bilateralrope

That deportation is proof that if the Trump administration is allowed to skip due process for anyone, they will be skipping the part that figures out who gets due process.

I can check into a hotel. You can check into the same hotel. You may get the penthouse suite. I may get the “run of the house” room if I’m not walked to the nearest cheap property because “we’re all booked up, Sir.” (with tears in their eyes like generals.)

Due process requires egalitarianism, fairness, and an identified process.

That’s all gone.

Go figure out “when” we’ll have a constitutional crisis, because we’re all mired in it and we don’t have 4WD.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
That One Guy (profile) says:

Do you want dems to lose the next election too? Because this is how you do that

The point of a distraction is to draw attention away from the important stuff by dangling something attention-grabbing but ultimately less important, so it’s telling that Newsom considers human trafficking, the regime outright ignoring no less than a unanimous decision from the US Supreme Court, and the fact that all of this was without due process to be less important than the ‘real’ issues.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re:

No, this is what less than half the people who cast a ballot, and less than a quarter of the entire U.S. population, voted for. Trump’s didn’t-even-get-50% popular vote victory was neither a landslide nor a mandate of approval from the entire country.

Ehud Gavron (profile) says:

Re: Re: KING me

@Stephen T. Stone

No, this is what less than half the people who cast a ballot, and less than a quarter of the entire U.S. population, voted for. Trump’s didn’t-even-get-50% popular vote victory was neither a landslide nor a mandate of approval from the entire country.

Tell that to the Republican congressmen standing in line between velvet ropes waiting to [kiss the ring] (SHD).

Apparently he won by such a huge “mandate” that it’s unbelievable anyone would dare question dear leader. 2% was it? Ermagod.

But those who watch, listen, and follow critical thinking… that he hasn’t sent to 3rd world countries yet… what can we do?

Seriously. I ask this of everyone. I’m on the same page as you, but WHAT CAN I DO ABOUT IT?

E
P.S. My congressmen have aides that take my calls. Here are the number of callbacks I’ve received from anyone who could stand in Congress: 0.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:

WHAT CAN I DO ABOUT IT?

You probably can’t do anything about Trump and his bullshit. (Well, not without doing something that is 110% illegal and can’t be mentioned here.) But what you can do is find people who need help and help them. Trans people in particular need a lot of help right now, so look into charities and such that help trans people.

Calling your reps is a good thing to do, too. Even if they ignore the content of your calls, they can’t ignore the volume of such calls. That means encouraging your friends to call their reps is also a good move.

Protests also have an effect. Not only do they normalize dissent, but when aimed at the right target (e.g., Tesla), they can have a profound effect on said target. Yelling at the bastards doesn’t always make them change their minds, but it works often enough that taking part in protests if and when you can is a good thing.

And plenty of resources exist on the Internet that can help you find more ways to take action and help others. Look for ideas there and do what you can, when you can.

You are an individual. Alone, you are practically powerless. But when you’re with other people, you can stand stronger⁠—the more, the merrier, as the saying goes. At a bare minimum, find something to do that will allow you to connect with other people; ain’t no one coming to save us but us.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Leah Abram (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:2

Trans people in particular need a lot of help right now, so look into charities and such that help trans people.

Trans people in NYC have Callen-Lorde, which is a non-profit health clinic and pharmacy serving the LGBTQIA+ community. They really helped me out with my gender transition and unlike other trans people, I didn’t have any horrifying experiences with medical gatekeeping. The care they offered is sublime and worthy of your dollars! Their website is here: https://www.callen-lorde.org

Ehud Gavron (profile) says:

BEGGED question number N+1

If a President can simply ignore a direct, unanimous Supreme Court order with no consequences…

The begged question revolves around the word “unanimous”. Please allow me to rephrase to emphasize:
If a President can simply ignore a direct Supreme Court order with no consequences…

Nobody has ever required a court order to be unanimous. It’s a court order. By adding that word we beg the question of whether a plurality or majority MAY (or may not) be sufficient.

I’m not a lawyer and I don’t do UPL… so given that I’d love to have a TD reader who IS a lawyer opine.

If the sitting POTUS does not respond to an order of the court… is that not that bright-line constitutional crisis that the pussies claim “is on its way” but we know it’s already here? Does it require a “unanimous” or “majority” or “plurality” for the ORDER OF THE COURT to be required?

Just asking for a fwend.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

If the sitting POTUS does not respond to an order of the court… is that not that bright-line constitutional crisis

In this case the line is not as bright because they have plausible deniability. The guy is a Salvadorian national; El Salvador has no obligation to return him.

Yes, we could use various means to pressure El Salvador to return him. But I don’t think a court, even the Supreme Court, can really order the executive branch to do that, because then you’re getting into matters of foreign policy and diplomacy.

Ehud Gavron (profile) says:

Re: Re: RETURNING KIDNAPPED PEOPLE

El Salvador has no obligation to return him.

There would be nobody to “return” if ICE hadn’t kidnapped him, renditioned [yeah I know it’s not a word] him, and shipped him off to El Salvador and agreed to PAY El Salvador to “house” him there in their prison.

Your entire argument is beyond stupid. It’s like saying “Well they can’t just pull the nail out of your head!” Somebody put a nail in a nail gun and shot it in my forehead and you want to say it can’t be pulled out.

This isn’t about a kids’ “he started it she started it” thing. The US federal government took a guy who was rightfully in the US and put him in a foreign prison.

The question is not who can or cannot order him back. It’s WHY THE FUCK IS HE NOT BACK YET AFTER 45+ DAYS.

And if any of this upsets and confuses you, say where you live and The A-Team-Van will kidnap you and black-hood you and take you somewhere awful and deny you phone and internet access and then see what your stupid right-wing crap opinion on rights is.

The hypocrisy of the stupid just won’t stop.

Anonymous Coward says:

If a President can simply ignore a direct, unanimous Supreme Court order with no consequences,

There is a consequence, impeachment. But, if the President’s political party holds the majority, and hence makes the president impeachment proof, then, all these court decisions become advisory.

Best to become informed as the the enabling act.
https://rall.com/comic/fascism-is-so-much-simpler-than-democracy

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