50501 FRIDAY BRIEFING | FEBRUARY 27, 2026
A ruling that should have mattered. A speech that shouldn't have. A budget that tells the truth. And the state being made into an example.
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SUMMARY
The Supreme Court struck down presidential tariff authority 6-3 while a replacement tariff appeared the same day. The longest State of the Union in history was delivered during an active government shutdown and fact-checked in real time. And in Minnesota, the âdrawdownâ left hundreds of ICE agents still operating, $259.5 million in Medicaid frozen, and families afraid to leave their homes for months.
MONDAY: The Court Said No. And Trumpâs Workaround.
Six justices agreed that a 1977 emergency sanctions law doesnât contain the word âtariffâ for a reason. Roberts authored the majority opinion and grounded it in a simple principle when Congress wants to hand over a power this enormous, it has to say so explicitly. It canât be inferred from vague language about regulating imports.
Instead, before markets reopened, a new proclamation appeared citing a Cold War-era trade provision designed for currency crises under a monetary system the U.S. abandoned in the 1970s.
The rate started at 10%, hit the statutory ceiling of 15% by Saturday, and the administration publicly stated the goal was to keep tariff revenue functionally identical to what the Court just invalidated.
Household costs land somewhere between $600 and $1,300 depending on how long the replacement tariffs last.
The ruling was constitutionally significant and the response was even more revealing. What the country watched was a president demonstrating that legal defeat is a logistics problem, not a stopping point.
If the Supreme Court can rule 6-3 that something is unconstitutional and the executive branch can replicate it the same afternoon, what does âunconstitutionalâ mean anymore?
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TUESDAY: Weâre Never Broke for War
In 2003, a multi-billion-dollar military spending package went from presidential request to signed law in twenty-two days and that same session of Congress spent months fighting over prescription drug coverage for seniors.
Voting for defense spending carries almost no political risk. Voting for expanded domestic programs carries plenty. Urgency is selectively applied depending on what label gets attached to the dollar.
The phrase âwe canât afford itâ is a statement of priority.
And priorities are chosen.
Think about the last time someone told you âwe canât afford thatâ about healthcare, schools, housing and think about how fast Congress moved $78 billion in 2003. What in your community would transform lives nearly instantly if it received that same three-week urgency?
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WEDNESDAY: SOTU Was Heavy on Spectacle, Light on Truth
Gold-medal hockey players got a bipartisan standing ovation which served as a runway for everything that followed inflated statistics, attacks on the opposition, and a public declaration that the Courtâs tariff ruling wouldnât change his approach.
Fuel prices didnât match AAA averages, grocery cost declines were overstated, construction job numbers were inflated by roughly 60%. The âlargest tax cut in historyâ ranked sixth by independent analysts. And the claim of no unauthorized border crossings in nine months was contradicted by the governmentâs own data.
Rep. Al Green was physically removed after displaying a message responding to a video the President shared depicting the Obamas as primates. Multiple lawmakers tried to seize the sign from his hands.
Epstein trafficking survivors sat in the gallery as guests of Democratic members. The speech never acknowledged them.
A congressman held up a sign stating basic human dignity, that Black people arenât apes, and elected officials tried to rip it from his hands. In the United States Capitol. In 2026. What does it tell us about where we are that that statement required an act of defiance?
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THURSDAY: Donât Look Away From Minnesota
A Bush-appointed federal judge compiled nearly one hundred instances in which immigration agents disregarded judicial directives in a single month. He noted the list was almost certainly incomplete.
A separate judge stated publicly that the vast majority of people brought before his court had lawful status.
A government attorney was held in civil contempt. Another described arriving with no training and no guidance.
Hundreds of agents remain. On-the-ground observers describe operations shifting toward communities with less visibility. Some families havenât left their homes in three months.
Now $259.5 million in federal healthcare reimbursements are being withheld from the state which was announced the same day the state attorney general held a public event highlighting over a year of bipartisan anti-fraud work. This funding serves one in four residents.
A new federal lawsuit alleges legal observers are being classified using language associated with violent extremism. A former agency attorney testified that officer training was cut by over 40%, including constitutional law and use-of-force instruction.
Two American citizens, Renee Nicole Good and Alex Pretti, have been killed during this operation.
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SAVE THE DATE: MARCH 28 2026
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Folks, we are deep in the big muddy, very deep. We sink further each day, caught up in the wretched workings of this amoral administration. The glimmer of hope is an overwhelming defeat for the Republicans in November. Trump will do everything he can to thwart our success. There is certainly that danger. Even so, we must vote in numbers so massive there's nothing he can do but be a loser again. And oh how he hates to lose. Let's do it!