Justice Jackson scorns Trump over 'attacks' on judges
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Left: MIAMI, FL-MARCH 10: U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson is seen during an Evening with Ketanji Brown Jackson at Chapman Conference Center at MDC Wolfson Campus on March 10, 2025 in Miami, Fla. (Photo by Alberto E. Tamargo/Sipa USA)(Sipa via AP Images). Right: President Donald Trump talks about transgender weightlifters as gives a commencement address at the University of Alabama, Thursday, May 1, 2025, in Tuscaloosa, Ala. (AP Photo/Mike Stewart).

The U.S. Supreme Court on Friday blessed plans by the Trump administration to give the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) access to sensitive Social Security Administration (SSA) data.

Acting on an application for a stay, a majority of justices voted to overturn an injunction issued in mid-April by Baltimore-based U.S. District Judge Ellen Hollander, a Barack Obama appointee, barring DOGE from accessing the non-anonymized personal data at issue.

The district court previously issued a temporary restraining order barring DOGE staffers from accessing the data as well as demanding they “disgorge and delete” any personally identifying data in their possession and remove any software or code the group may have installed or altered on SSA computer systems. A long series of failed attempts to overturn the blocks raised by Hollander ensued.

In late April, the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals denied a stay and agreed to hear the appeal en banc – before the full appellate court. Sitting en banc, the court denied the government’s stay request but scheduled additional briefing on the matter slated for July.

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Now, the government can turn over the SSA data to DOGE until the litigation fully plays out at the lower court level.

Writing in dissent, Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, joined by Justice Sonia Sotomayor, took the government to task for what she sees as the lack of an “emergency” in the government’s request.

“The Government wants to give DOGE unfettered access to this personal, non-anonymized information right now—before the courts have time to assess whether DOGE’s access is lawful,” the dissent reads. “In essence, the ‘urgency’ underlying the Government’s stay application is the mere fact that it cannot be bothered to wait for the litigation process to play out before proceeding as it wishes.”

The dissent also makes sure to implicate her colleagues for the sudden rush to grant the Trump administration its requested relief.

“That sentiment has traditionally been insufficient to justify the kind of extraordinary intervention the Government seeks,” Jackson continues. “But, once again, this Court dons its emergency-responder gear, rushes to the scene, and uses its equitable power to fan the flames rather than extinguish them.”

The dissent expends considerable energy on arguing the Trump administration failed to show “irreparable harm” – a term of art which means a problem that cannot be solved by money alone, either at the time or down the line – a factor necessarily considered by courts when deciding whether to stay injunctive relief.

Here, Jackson says, the government has failed.

From the dissent, at length:

Stepping back to take a birds-eye view of the stay request before us, the Government’s failure to demonstrate harm should mean that the general equity balance tips decisively against granting a stay. On the one hand, there is a repository of millions of Americans’ legally protected, highly sensitive information that—if improperly handled or disseminated—risks causing significant harm, as Congress has already recognized. On the other, there is the Government’s desire to ditch the usual protocols for accessing that data, before the courts have even determined whether DOGE’s access is lawful. In the first bucket, there is also the state of federal law, which enshrines privacy protections, and the President’s constitutional obligation to faithfully execute the laws Congress has passed. This makes it not at all clear that it is in the public’s interest for the SSA to give DOGE staffers unfettered access to all Americans’ non-anonymized data before its entitlement to such access has been established, especially when the SSA’s own employees have long been subject to restrictions meant to protect the American people.

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