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Federal judges are frustrated by defiance from the Trump administration and fuzziness from the Supreme Court
Federal judges are frustrated by defiance from the Trump administration and fuzziness from the Supreme Court
Published: September 5, 2025 8:48am EDT
John E. Jones III
President, Dickinson College
In an emergency hearing before Judge Sparkle Sooknanan on Aug. 31, 2025, lawyers for a group of unaccompanied migrant children from Guatemala asked her to stop the Trump administrations deportation of hundreds of them back to Guatemala. Concerned that the Trump administration might not follow her order to stop, the judge emphatically repeated her order that temporarily barred the deportations. And then she said something unusual:
I am trying to do the best I can to fulfill my obligation as an Article 3 judge
The Conversations senior politics editor, Naomi Schalit, talked with former federal judge John E. Jones III, now president of Dickinson College, about the meaning of the term Article 3 judge, why Sooknanan might have used it, and why recent discussions of politics and law in the news have included notably more references to Article 1, Article 2 and Article 3, normally terms reserved for discussions of constitutional law.
What is the Article 3 that Judge Sooknanen referred to?
....Its quite clear that the course that the Trump administration has taken in the many lawsuits against its policies is to say, We will obey the Supreme Court of the United States, but were going to pick and choose the lower court opinions that we deign to follow. And of course, Judge Sooknanans comment invoking the phrase Article 3 was meant to say that, the same as a Supreme Court justice, she is a fully vetted and confirmed jurist chosen by the president and confirmed by the Senate. Thats whats known as an Article 3 judge, authorized under Article 3 of the Constitution.
So, inferentially, what shes saying is, I mean what I say, your administration cant ignore it as you appear to have done with federal Judge James Boasberg, whose order you appear to have defied to return immigrants you deported. Im going to do belt and suspenders and be very clear about this and not give you wiggle room because it is not an option for you to disobey the order of an Article 3 judge.
....(snip)....
And back to Article 3 news: Theres been some charged back-and-forth between federal judges and two Supreme Court justices over criticism of lower court judges. And 10 federal judges criticized anonymously the Supreme Courts handling of the Trump cases in the so-called shadow docket because the rulings were so brief they couldnt take direction from them. Is this all normal?
Theres rank frustration on the part of lower court judges. The Supreme Court is forcing lower court judges to decipher meaning from Supreme Court decisions as if theyre the Rosetta stone. They are so abbreviated and less than clear that its maddening. Having toiled in the lower courts, the worst situation you could have is a lack of guidance from higher courts, and then you have to guess. When you have to guess, you make mistakes, and thats the frustration you see.
I think there is a duty on the U.S. Supreme Court to not rubber-stamp lower court judges, of course, but also to have some comity with lower court judges who are struggling through this plethora of cases that have arisen because of the Trump administration flooding the zone. ....................(more)
https://theconversation.com/federal-judges-are-frustrated-by-defiance-from-the-trump-administration-and-fuzziness-from-the-supreme-court-264616