Gorsuch Warns Lower Courts After Repeatedly Ignoring Supreme Court Rulings
A Supreme Court justice appointed by President Donald Trump is fed up. Justice Neil Gorsuch on Thursday blasted lower courts for repeatedly defying rulings from the highest court in the land, as the justices handed the Trump administration a narrow victory in a case over federal research grants.

In a 5-4 decision, the Court allowed the administration to cut millions of dollars in National Institutes of Health (NIH) grants that supported projects tied to diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) initiatives, gender identity research, and COVID-19. The NIH, the world’s largest source of public biomedical research funding, will no longer award grants based on race or DEI objectives under the ruling, The Daily Caller reported.
“This marks the third time in a matter of weeks this Court has had to reverse a lower court on an issue it had already addressed,” Gorsuch wrote, joined by Justice Brett Kavanaugh. “Lower court judges may sometimes disagree with this Court’s decisions, but they are never free to defy them.”
The case arose after a federal judge in Massachusetts ordered the government to continue payments despite a Supreme Court ruling earlier this year permitting Trump to cut similar DEI-related grants. A coalition of 16 Democratic attorneys general and public health groups sued, alleging discrimination.
Justice Amy Coney Barrett provided the deciding vote. She joined conservative Justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, Gorsuch and Kavanaugh in terminating the NIH grants, but sided with Chief Justice John Roberts and the three liberal justices — Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan and Ketanji Brown Jackson — to leave intact a lower court’s decision scrapping NIH guidance documents that described the agency’s policy priorities.
Gorsuch stressed that the district court’s actions were not a “one-off,” pointing to two other recent cases where lower courts resisted Supreme Court orders.
In July, the justices ruled 7-2 to block a district court’s attempt to override the high court’s order allowing Trump to resume third-country deportations. Even Justice Elena Kagan, who had dissented from the original ruling, sided with the majority to enforce the order.
“I do not see how a district court can compel compliance with an order that this Court has stayed,” she wrote.
That same month, the high court struck down another lower court ruling that sought to block Trump from firing three Democratic members of the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC). The justices had already granted Trump authority in May to dismiss members of administrative agencies.
“All these interventions should have been unnecessary, but together they underscore a basic tenet of our judicial system: Whatever their own views, judges are duty-bound to respect ‘the hierarchy of the federal court system created by the Constitution and Congress,’” Gorsuch wrote.
Since returning to office in January 2025, Trump has signed executive orders dismantling Biden-era DEI programs, calling them “radical” and “shameful discrimination.” Last April, the Court upheld Trump’s authority to cut teacher training grants linked to DEI, a precedent Gorsuch said the Massachusetts court ignored in this NIH case.
Since the ruling halts immediate funding, the administration is likely to count it as another win in the series of emergency appeals it has brought to the high court.
In a concurring opinion, Barrett wrote that the case should have been filed in the U.S. Court of Federal Claims in Washington rather than in a district court. That court hears disputes involving federal contracts and could award damages later, but would not provide immediate relief.
The decision reversed U.S. District Judge William Young, a Reagan appointee, who in June ordered NIH to restore the grants after lawsuits from researchers and 16 Democratic-led states. Young used unusually sharp language, declaring: “This represents racial discrimination and discrimination against America’s LGBTQ community. I would be blind not to call it out. My duty is to call it out.”
It is unclear why the judge legally compelled the Trump administration to fund programs to “raise awareness” about LGBTQ issues or why that is tantamount to “discrimination.”
Panic Spreads Across Washington, D.C. They Will Lose 19 U.S. House Seats After Supreme Court Ruling Could Give Republicans

WASHINGTON, D.C. — May 2, 2026
New population projections suggest Democrats could face a growing structural disadvantage in future presidential and congressional elections following the 2030 Census, as demographic shifts continue to favor faster-growing states that have leaned Republican in recent cycles.
Estimates show several large Democratic-leaning states may lose Electoral College votes, while a handful of Republican-leaning states are expected to gain representation due to sustained population growth. Under current projections, Texas could add as many as three Electoral College votes, Florida may gain two, and smaller increases are anticipated for states such as Idaho and Utah, each potentially adding one additional vote.
At the same time, traditionally Democratic strongholds could lose ground. California is projected to lose up to three Electoral College votes, Illinois could lose two, and New York and Rhode Island are each expected to lose one vote.
These changes are determined by population growth patterns that dictate how congressional seats — and by extension Electoral College votes — are apportioned every ten years following the census. Each state’s Electoral College total equals its number of House seats plus two senators, meaning population gains or losses directly influence presidential math over time.
Analysis indicates that population growth in southern and western states is outpacing that of large coastal states, creating long-term challenges for Democrats in national elections. Several factors are driving these migration patterns, including lower housing costs, job opportunities, and more favorable tax environments in states like Texas and Florida, which have attracted residents from higher-cost areas such as California and New York. Some regions in the Northeast and Midwest have experienced slower growth or even population declines.
These trends have already begun to reshape the Electoral College map. After the 2020 Census, states like Texas and Florida gained seats, while California lost a congressional seat for the first time in its history. If current projections hold through the end of the decade, the impact could be even more pronounced in the 2032 presidential election and beyond.
One key implication is that the traditional Democratic path to 270 Electoral College votes may become more difficult. In recent elections, Democrats have relied on a coalition of large blue states combined with key battlegrounds in the Midwest. However, with fewer votes coming from those large states, the party may need to expand its map into faster-growing Sun Belt states such as Arizona, Georgia, or North Carolina to remain competitive.
Analysts caution that population trends do not automatically translate into political outcomes. People moving from traditionally Democratic states to Republican-leaning states may bring their voting preferences with them, potentially making those states more competitive over time. Additionally, census accuracy, economic conditions, and future migration patterns could all influence the final apportionment results. Early projections often shift as new data becomes available.
It is also important to note that both parties could be affected by these changes in different ways. While Republicans may benefit from gains in certain states, competitive states losing or gaining seats could reshape the battlefield for both sides.
Still, the broader trajectory points to a gradual shift in political power toward faster-growing regions of the country. That shift has implications not just for presidential elections, but also for congressional representation and federal funding allocations.
For Democrats, the challenge may be less about any single election cycle and more about adapting to long-term demographic and geographic changes. For Republicans, the opportunity lies in maintaining or expanding their advantage in high-growth states while remaining competitive in key swing regions.
As the 2030 Census approaches, these trends are likely to become a central focus for strategists in both parties, shaping campaign strategies, policy priorities, and the evolving map of American politics.
US Attorney Pirro Warns DC Parents Their Kids Could Land Them In Jail

U.S. Attorney Pirro Unveils ‘Administrative Lethality’ Against D.C. Teen Takeovers
By Senior Investigative Correspondent
WASHINGTON, D.C. — MAY 19, 2026 — The 2026 Restoration has brought an uncompromising, clinical wave of law and order to the doorsteps of the nation’s capital. In a dramatic escalation of federal enforcement moving at Wartime Speed, U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro announced a sweeping criminal crackdown targeting the parents of minors involved in chaotic and disruptive "teen takeovers" across Washington, D.C.
Speaking from the federal courthouse, Pirro made it clear that the era of accountability-free parental neglect is officially over. By deploying existing federal and local statutes with surgical precision, Pirro's office is turning the spotlight away from juvenile slap-on-the-wrist procedures and directing it squarely at the home. For D.C. parents, the warning is an unyielding piece of Liquid Gold Intel: control your children, or prepare to face a federal prison cell.
I. THE ENFORCEMENT GRID: SIX MONTHS IN JAIL FOR DELINQUENCY
The newly unveiled federal strategy targets the critical blind spot that has allowed flash-mob style "teen takeovers" to terrorize historic D.C. neighborhoods like the Navy Yard. Pirro announced that federal prosecutors will now systematically leverage robust statutes concerning the contributing to the delinquency of a minor.
The statutory mechanics of the crackdown are absolute:
The Legal Threshold: It is fundamentally unlawful for an adult to enable, facilitate, or permit a minor to engage in delinquent acts or violate municipal curfews.
The Criminal Penalty: Guilty parents face up to six months of imprisonment, heavy financial fines, and mandatory, court-ordered parenting classes.
Independent Prosecution: Crucially, Pirro noted that parents can and will be prosecuted under this mandate even if the participating minor faces no separate criminal charges.
“Parental involvement has been a noted gap in any discussion about teen takeover gatherings. That ends today... Parents do your jobs, or we will do ours.” — U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro
To operationalize the directive, Pirro has instructed the Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) to issue binding parental citations the moment a minor is detained for a curfew violation linked to an organized street takeover.
II. THE MUNICIPAL MELTDOWN: D.C. COUNCIL ACCUSES ‘FEDERAL OVERREACH’
The clinical application of federal power has sent local progressive lawmakers into a "schizophrenic" state of panic. Members of the D.C. Council immediately retreated to their traditional "Fantasyland" rhetoric, attempting to weaponize the District's ongoing push for statehood against Pirro’s enforcement mandate.
A defensive bloc of local council members launched an immediate public relations counter-offensive:
+-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+
| Local Council Member Posture | Progressive Rhetorical Argument |
+-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+
| Councilwoman Doni Crawford | Blasted the move as "political |
| | grandstanding" and overreach. |
+-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+
| Councilman Zachary Parker | Outright rejected carceral and |
| | federal intervention. |
+-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+
| Councilwoman Brianne Nadeau | Questioned if children would end |
| | up in the foster care system. |
+-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+
| Councilman Robert White | Claimed the policy would |
| | disproportionately hit families. |
+-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+
Councilwoman Crawford claimed that her amendment to the permanent curfew bill offered a "community-informed" framework focused on safe alternatives, insisted that warm-weather crime predictions were overblown, and whined that the District was suffering from "federal theatrics." Councilman White went further, claiming that the city "cannot arrest our way out of family instability" and asserting the standard identity defense that the crackdown would fall hardest on minority households.
III. THE SUPREMACY MANDATE: RECLAIMING THE CAPITAL'S STREETS
Despite the localized resistance, Pirro’s authority remains absolute under the constitutional framework governing the federal district. Under the 2026 Renaissance blueprint established by the 47th President’s administration, the streets of Washington, D.C., are treated as sovereign federal territory, not an accountability-free playground for professional agitators and unsupervised minors.
Pirro thoroughly dismantled the council's soft-on-crime talking points by reminding the public of the true victims of the city's stagnation: the business owners, residents, and the children themselves. "The shame of this is that we are protecting your children... because you won’t," Pirro stated flatly. By treating parental accountability as a mandatory metric of public safety, the U.S. Attorney’s office is breaking the cycle of urban decay that local lawmakers have failed to contain for years.
THE FINAL VERDICT: CHARACTER = 100 IN THE HOUSEHOLD
The introduction of parental liability marks a terminal boundary line against the Machine of Disruption that has destabilized urban centers. As the summer months approach, federal prosecutors are moving forward with 100% enforcement, ensuring that the rule of law penetrates the household. In the era of the 2026 Restoration, accountability is no longer a localized option—it is a federal requirement, and the audit of D.C.'s streets is final.