Europa wird stärker – und genau deshalb will Trump es spalten! -> das ist das eigentlich verrückte. Der aktuelle #uspresident wollte Amerika wieder Groß machen, inzwischen hat er zu großen Teilen alle anderen stärker gemacht und die #usa schwächer 🤔 Erschreckend ist, wie fast immer, die Zeche zahlen die kleinen Leute #uscitizen 🫣

https://youtube.com/watch?v=_loZrSltV3c&si=Q89l6kXN6tPYL1nv

Europa wird stärker – und genau deshalb will Trump es spalten!

YouTube

DONALD TRUMP über Europa: Der Lack ist ab! Heftige Reaktionen auf die Sc...
https://youtube.com/live/H1Q1jxAATP4?si=I8PXT1DHWRrVpGod

Davon ausgehend das der amtierende #uspresident alles anprangert was er oder die #usa selbst tut ...🤔

DONALD TRUMP über Europa: Der Lack ist ab! Heftige Reaktionen auf die Schelte aus den USA

YouTube

Munz: Ukraine-Wahl passt Russland nicht ins Konzept - Kreml-Reaktion auf...
https://youtube.com/watch?v=CKFDuxyGBj8&si=SoFz7hWfB-Yx0dna

So langsam muss es doch jeder verstehen, außer der amtierende #uspresident 🤔 Egal was die anderen machen, solange es nicht genau daß ist was #putin will ist es schlecht und wird von #russia nicht akzeptiert 🤔 #russiaukrainewar

Munz: Ukraine-Wahl passt Russland nicht ins Konzept - Kreml-Reaktion auf Selenskyj-Plan | ntv

YouTube

@Utneighbourofet

Der Grandpa von US-Präsident Trump betrieb vermutlich ein Bordell, und wurde aus Bayern ausgewiesen. Der Opa dürfte alles verkörpern, was Trump heute so vehement bekämpft.

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/donald-trumps-grandfather-banished-germany-records-reveal-freidrich-kallstadt-a7430636.html

#trump #grandfathertrump #uspresident #DonaldJTrump #bordell #brothel #moral #dienstag #usa

Donald Trump's grandfather was banished from Germany, records reveal | The Independent

President-elect's relative pleaded to stay in the country — but was refused

The Independent

 Trump will 2026 Deutschland besuchen 

Bundeskanzler Merz sagte heute, dass US-Präsident Trump vielleicht 2026 nach Deutschland reist. Dann wolle man auch dessen 'Heimatort' besuchen.

Einer von Trumps Großvätern ist in Kallstadt (Rheinland-Pfalz) geboren. Weshalb dies den Ort zu Donald Trumps 'Heimatort' macht, bleibt Merz' dunkles Geheimnis.

https://www.spiegel.de/politik/deutschland/donald-trump-will-laut-friedrich-merz-2026-deutschland-besuchen-wahrscheinlich-a-273e3500-e617-4cf2-92d6-bab9c9c72bd3

#merz #FriedrichMerz #cdu #csu #trump #donaldtrump #politik #innenpolitik #außenpolitik #deutschland #Deutschlandbesuch #notrump #faschismus #diktatur #dienstag #rheinland_pfalz #rheinlandpfalz #kallstadt #trumpsopa #BleibZuHause #trumpstayhome #notrump2026 #trump2026 #potus #uspolitics #USPräsident #uspresident

Ankündigung von Kanzler Merz: Trump will 2026 Deutschland besuchen – wahrscheinlich

Kommt der US-Präsident im kommenden Jahr nach Deutschland? Dem Kanzler zufolge hat Donald Trump ihm einen Besuch angekündigt. Einen Termin gibt es indes noch nicht.

DER SPIEGEL

USA: Nationalparks streichen Gratiseintritt an »schwarzen« Feiertagen - DER SPIEGEL

Da fällt einem doch die Entscheidung leicht wann man nicht in die Nationalparks der #usa geht. #uspresident #Natinalpark

https://share.google/2eCp02wSWhAvgjW80

Gebühren für US-Nationalparks: Kein Gratiseintritt mehr an »schwarzen« Feiertagen – dafür an Trumps Geburtstag

An bestimmten Tagen dürfen US-Bürgerinnen und -Bürger kostenlos in ihre Nationalparks. Für kommendes Jahr gibt es allerdings einige Änderungen.

DER SPIEGEL

Roberts and Kagan prepare for another showdown on executive power – CNN Politics

Politics 9 min read

Roberts and Kagan prepare for another showdown on executive power

By Joan Biskupic, CNN Chief Supreme Court Analyst, Dec 5, 2025 See all topics

Associate Justice Elena Kagan, left, and Chief Justice John Roberts. Getty Images / Reuters

Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Elena Kagan are well matched, rhetorically forceful opposites. And they have been clashing for more than a decade over an increasingly relevant question of presidential power: How easy should it be for the president to fire the heads of independent agencies?

That issue, to be aired at the Supreme Court on Monday, has grown more salient as President Donald Trump has attempted to remove multiple officials, including at the Federal Trade Commission, National Labor Relations Board and Federal Reserve.

Their first faceoff occurred in 2009 before Kagan had even joined the court, as she was serving as US solicitor general, standing in the well of the courtroom, with Roberts looking down from the center chair. They tangled over a 1935 precedent that protects agency independence and that now hangs in the balance, Humphrey’s Executor v. United States.

Since his days as a young lawyer in the Ronald Reagan administration, Roberts has argued for vast executive power, including the authority to fire individuals who lead administrative agencies. “Without such power,” Roberts wrote in the 2009 dispute over a corporate auditing board, “the President could not be held fully accountable for discharging his own responsibilities; the buck would stop somewhere else.”

Kagan, in contrast, believes the constitutional separation of powers allows Congress to establish and safeguard certain areas of administrative independence. And she has relied on Supreme Court rulings, including the 1935 milestone, that have allowed Congress to prevent the president from removing independent administrators without sufficient grounds.

Monday’s case was brought by former Federal Trade Commissioner Rebecca Slaughter, who received a March 18 email from Trump saying her “continued service on the FTC is inconsistent with my Administration’s priorities.” (Under the law governing the FTC, commissioners can be removed only for “inefficiency, neglect of duty, or malfeasance in office.”)

The court’s ruling will extend far beyond Slaughter and the FTC and have vast consequences for specialized regulation in an array of financial, environmental and public safety spheres.

In an early phase of Slaughter’s lawsuit, in September, the Roberts majority reversed a lower court order that would have allowed Slaughter to stay in her post. The move was consistent with Roberts’ opinions that have steadily eroded the reach of Humphrey’s Executor v. United States and signaled he considers it a dead letter.

Related article Supreme Court flicks at First Amendment concerns with state’s subpoena of faith-based pregnancy centers

“The majority may be raring to take that action,” Kagan observed as she dissented from that September action. “But until the deed is done, Humphrey’s controls, and prevents the majority from giving the President the unlimited removal power Congress denied him.”

More broadly, the eventual ruling could build on other decisions providing Trump more power as he carries out his second term agenda. Last year, Roberts and his fellow conservatives granted Trump substantial immunity from prosecution as it expanded the concept of a president’s “conclusive and preclusive” authority. Then, earlier this year, the court freed the administration from lower-court nationwide orders against his various policy initiatives.

These decisions have dissolved constraints on the president, and if the court were to reverse the 1935 case, the president would be further unburdened by congressional legislation barring him from removing agency officials without sufficient grounds.

Vanderbilt University political science professor John Dearborn, who has studied the Reagan era development of a “unitary executive theory” and Roberts’ writings, told CNN, “He’s had these kinds of ideas for a long time, that the only way that agencies are accountable is if the president has the power to fire people.”

‘I didn’t say anything bad about Humphrey’s Executor’

Before joining the bench, Roberts and Kagan were first-rate oral advocates with their own, respective, steady and tenacious styles. Roberts served as a deputy US solicitor general during the George H.W. Bush administrations and then appeared frequently at the court in private practice. He argued a total 39 cases before the high court.

Kagan, who hadn’t previously argued a case at the high court, was named US solicitor general in 2009 by President Barack Obama. She went on to argue six cases, including the presidential-removal controversy, before Obama nominated her to the bench in 2010 to succeed retiring Justice John Paul Stevens.

Continue/Read Original Article Here: Roberts and Kagan prepare for another showdown on executive power | CNN Politics

Tags: Chief Justice Roberts, CNN, CNN Politics, Conservative, Executive Branch, Executive Power, Independent Administrators, Justice Kagan, Liberal, President, Remove Officials, Showdown, Sufficient Grounds, U.S. Congress, U.S. President

#ChiefJusticeRoberts #CNN #CNNPolitics #Conservative #ExecutiveBranch #ExecutivePower #IndependentAdministrators #JusticeKagan #Liberal #President #RemoveOfficials #Showdown #SufficientGrounds #USCongress #USPresident