
How Trump Is Pushing to Expand Presidential Power
By Charlie Savage and Lazaro Gamio Jan. 19, 2026
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In his second term, President Trump has sought to expand executive power in many ways.
A list of the different presidential powers President Trump has sought in his second term.
One area where he is centralizing his authority is over the executive branch.
He is pushing a maximalist version of the unitary executive theory, which is the idea that presidents have absolute power over executive branch decision-making โ even if Congress has enacted laws giving some independent discretion to officials at departments or agencies.
A circle chart showing the presidential powers Mr. Trump has sought for himself under the unitary executive theory.
Many of Mr. Trumpโs attempts to expand power span multiple categories.
For example, in ordering criminal investigations into his political adversaries, he is both weaponizing the government and asserting greater executive power over the Justice Department.
A venn diagram showing how some of Mr. Trumpโs efforts to expand presidential power span multiple categories.
Mr. Trump has also claimed powers that have typically resided with Congress.
A venn diagram showing Mr. Trumpโs efforts to claim powers that belong to Congress. Some of these powers overlap with the unitary executive theory.
In the case of the military, the president, as commander in chief, always holds significant power.
But Mr. Trump is pushing the bounds of that power by sending troops into the streets of American cities over the objections of governors and ordering the military to summarily kill people suspected of smuggling drugs at sea.
A venn diagram showing Mr. Trumpโs efforts to expand his military powers. Some of these powers overlap with powers that belong to Congress.
Itโs the same with immigration.
He has tried to use existing powers in aggressive new ways: expediting deportations without due process and attempting to unilaterally end birthright citizenship, which would change a longstanding understanding of the Constitution.
A venn diagram showing Mr. Trumpโs efforts to expand his immigration authority. Some of these powers overlap with powers that belong to the military.
Many presidents have pushed at the limits of their powers to achieve some particular goal.
What makes Mr. Trumpโs claims to expanded executive authority unprecedented is not just his aggressiveness, but the sheer volume of the ways he is consolidating power.
A venn diagram showing all of the different presidential powers Mr. Trump has sought in his second term, including how many of his assertions of power overlap.
In his second term, Mr. Trump is asserting that presidents can take actions that were not previously understood to be within their authority.
Kush Desai, a White House spokesman, said Mr. Trump was keeping his campaign promises, adding: โThe Trump administration will continue to legally use every lever of power granted to the executive branch by the Constitution and Congress to finally put Americans and America first.โ
Here is a more detailed breakdown of the powers Mr. Trump has sought to expand as president:
Summarily fire independent agency members
- Unitary executive theory
- Congress
What Trump did
Mr. Trump fired multiple Democratic-appointed members of independent agencies before their terms were up, including at the National Labor Relations Board and the Federal Trade Commission. He has not provided reasons for their termination.
How it violated a norm or law
Congress passed laws to create the agencies and to make them independent from direct presidential control. According to those laws, members of the commissions who oversee the agencies serve fixed terms and cannot be removed before those are up without a good cause, like misconduct.
How it would expand presidential power
Mr. Trump is trying to establish that Congress lacks the authority to create agencies within the executive branch that are not subject to the total control of presidents. This is in line with a maximalist vision of the so-called unitary executive theory, or the idea that the Constitution vests all executive power in the president, and as such, he must be able to control everything the executive branch does โ a revisionist interpretation of the Constitution pushed by some conservatives since the 1980s.
What’s next?
The Supreme Courtโs conservative majority has allowed the firings to happen while cases are moving through the courts. In oral arguments, the majority appeared ready to overturn a 1935 precedent that upheld Congressโs power to limit presidentsโ removal powers.
Read more: Conservative Project at Supreme Court Meets Trumpโs Push to Oust Officials
Summarily fire government watchdogs
- Unitary executive theory
- Congress
What Trump did
Mr. Trump systematically fired inspectors general embedded within departments and agencies across the executive branch, providing no notice or specific reason for the purge.
How it violated a norm or law
Congress enacted a law that requires presidents to give lawmakers 30 daysโ notice and a specific reason for removing an inspector general before firing one.
How it would expand presidential power
Mr. Trump is trying to establish that Congress cannot limit his ability to fire inspectors general.
What’s next?
Some of the inspectors general filed a lawsuit. A federal district court judge ruled that Mr. Trump violated the law in how he fired them but did not reinstate the inspectors general while waiting for the Supreme Court to address the larger issue of whether Congress can limit a president’s removal power.
Read more: Fired Inspectors General Raise Alarms as Trump Administration Moves to Finalize Purge
Summarily fire civil servants
- Unitary executive theory
- Congress
What Trump did
Mr. Trumpโs administration fired federal employees en masse, including laying off people at various agencies and targeting specific career employees for political reasons โ like Justice Department prosecutors who worked on investigations of Mr. Trump.
How it violated a norm or law
Congress has protections in place regarding firing federal workers to ensure that the workforce remains apolitical.
How it would expand presidential power
Mr. Trump is trying to establish that Congress cannot limit his ability to fire federal workers at will.
What’s next?
Federal courts have mostly allowed Mr. Trump to fire federal workers while litigation continues.
Read more: Dismissals at Justice Dept. Would Bypass Civil Service and Whistle-Blower Laws
Centralize control over independent agencies
- Unitary executive theory
What Trump did
Mr. Trump issued an executive order requiring independent agencies to submit their regulatory plans to the White House for review and to adhere to his administrationโs interpretations of legal issues.
How it violated a norm or law
Traditionally, independent agencies have handled their own regulatory planning and litigation, although this has been a norm rather than a law.
How it would expand presidential power
Mr. Trump is imposing greater White House control over the work of such agencies.
What’s next?
This has not been challenged in court.
Read more: Trump Issues Order to Expand His Power Over Agencies Congress Made Independent
Attempt to fire a Federal Reserve member
- Unitary executive theory
- Weaponization
What Trump did
Mr. Trump tried to fire a Democratic-appointed member of the board of the Federal Reserve, Lisa Cook, who had not voted to lower interest rates, something Mr. Trump wanted the Fed to do. He said the reason for her termination was allegations โ which have not been charged or proven โ of mortgage fraud.
How it violated a norm or law
As with other independent agencies, Congress enacted a law that protects members of the Fed from being fired without a cause before their terms expire. In this case, Mr. Trump did provide a reason for termination, but it is widely seen as a pretext.
How it would expand presidential power
Mr. Trump is trying to establish that courts cannot review a presidentโs reason for terminating members of independent agencies, including the Fed.
What’s next?
The Supreme Courtโs conservative majority has suggested that it sees the Fed as different from other independent agencies and has allowed Ms. Cook to remain in her position while litigation plays out.
Read more: Trump Again Escalates Power Grabs in Bid to Fire Fed Member
Direct criminal investigations
- Unitary executive theory
- Weaponization
What Trump did
Mr. Trump has ordered the Justice Department to prosecute his perceived political adversaries, including the former F.B.I. director James B. Comey and the New York attorney general, Letitia James.
How it violated a norm or law
Especially since the Watergate scandal, the norm has been that the Justice Department makes investigative and charging decisions independent of the White House.
How it would expand presidential power
Mr. Trump is asserting that a president can personally direct criminal investigations and prosecutions of people he disfavors.
What’s next?
Mr. Trump is using the Justice Department as an instrument of political vengeance. Several Trump foes who have been indicted have challenged their charges in court as malicious and selective prosecution. The Comey and James charges were thrown out on the grounds that the U.S. attorney was unlawfully appointed. The Trump Justice Department is still trying to bring cases against them.
Read more: Trump Escalates Use of Official Power to Intimidate and Punish His Perceived Foes, Trump Gets the Retribution He Sought, and Shatters Norms in the Process
Target law firms
- Weaponization
What Trump did
Mr. Trump signed orders targeting law firms that represented or hired people he does not like or who had diversity goals in hiring. He selectively lifted these orders for some firms that promised to provide free legal services for causes he favors.
How it violated a norm or law
The First and Fifth Amendments grant Americans, including law firms, the freedom to say what they want and equal protection under the law.
How it would expand presidential power
Mr. Trump is using state power to punish foes and coerce concessions.
What’s next?
Four law firms won judicial orders blocking the directives, and nine struck deals with Mr. Trump.
Read more: Trumpโs Order Targeting Law Firm Perkins Coie Is Unconstitutional, Judge Rules, Inside Elite Law Firms, Protests and Quitting After Trump Deals
Target universities
- Weaponization
What Trump did
Mr. Trump conditioned the distribution of federal research grants to major universities on whether they would agree to crack down on what he portrayed as antisemitism during protests against Israelโs treatment of Palestinians, and to end admissions and faculty hiring practices he portrayed as discriminatory against conservatives and white men.
How it violated a norm or law
The First Amendments grant Americans, including universities and students, freedoms of speech and association. Congress had also already approved the grant money.
How it would expand presidential power
Mr. Trump is leveraging the executive branchโs role in distributing federal research funding to coerce his preferred political changes at universities.
What’s next?
Some universities struck deals, but others are suing.
Read more: Inside Trumpโs Pressure Campaign on Universities
Dismantle government agencies
- Congress
- Unitary Executive Theory
What Trump did
Mr. Trump has hollowed out several agencies established by Congress, including the U.S. Agency for International Development, the Education Department and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
How it violated a norm or law
Congress has declared that these departments or agencies shall exist by law and has granted them funding to operate.
How it would expand presidential power
Mr. Trump is trying to establish that the president is the ultimate decider of how the executive branch is structured, including over whether agencies Congress created and funded should even exist.
What’s next?
These agencies still technically exist but have largely been dismantled. For instance, the remnants of U.S.A.I.D. have been folded into the State Department, even though by law it is an independent entity. Courts have also largely allowed this to happen while litigation continues.
Read more: Federal Financial Watchdog Ordered to Cease Activity, Trump Signs Order Aimed at Eliminating Education Dept. โOnce and for Allโ
Nullify a law
- Congress
What Trump did
Mr. Trump ordered the Justice Department not to enforce a law banning TikTok from operating in the United States unless its Chinese owner sells it, and to tell tech firms that it is lawful for them to continue to provide services to the app.
How it violated a norm or law
The Constitution says presidents must โtake care that the laws be faithfully executed.โ
How it would expand presidential power
While the executive branch has authority to deprioritize enforcement of particular laws, Mr. Trump has claimed a broader power to set this law aside entirely and assert that defying it is lawful. This was all based on a vague claim that the law interfered with Mr. Trumpโs constitutional responsibilities. Notably, the law had just been unanimously upheld by the Supreme Court.
What’s next?
There is no lawsuit directly over this issue, and no one appears to have standing to sue.
Read more: Trump Claims Sweeping Power to Nullify Laws, Letters on TikTok Ban Show
Unilaterally impose import taxes
- Congress
What Trump did
Mr. Trump imposed tariffs on the imports of goods from nearly every country in the world.
How it violated a norm or law
The Constitution says Congress, not the president, has the power to regulate commerce with other countries and to impose taxes and duties.
How it would expand presidential power
Mr. Trump has claimed that an emergency powers law allows him to impose import taxes at his own discretion.
What’s next?
There is a lawsuit now pending before the Supreme Court, and in oral arguments, the court appeared skeptical of Mr. Trump’s claims.
Read more: Key Justices Cast a Skeptical Eye on Trumpโs Tariffs
Bypass the confirmation process
- Congress
What Trump did
Mr. Trump has installed loyalists as top federal prosecutors in key offices without going through the Senate confirmation process.
How it violated a norm or law
There are laws that allow presidents to temporarily fill vacant U.S. attorney positions with โactingโ or โinterimโ appointments. But these laws set limits on who can be in such a role or how long it can last. Mr. Trump has tried to get around that in several ways, such as by replacing an interim U.S. attorney with another one before his or her 120-day term was about to expire, after which a court could have picked the successor.
How it would expand presidential power
Mr. Trump is seeking to indefinitely bypass the Senate confirmation process for who gets to wield the powers of a U.S. attorney.
What’s next?
Several judges have declared Mr. Trumpโs moves to be illegal, including ruling that Alina Habba and Lindsey Halligan were not lawfully appointed as acting or interim U.S. attorneys in New Jersey and Virginia. The Justice Department has appealed the ruling in the Halligan case.
Read more: Trump Loyalist Asserts She Can Keep U.S. Attorney Title
Order military boat attacks
- Military
- Congress
What Trump did
Mr. Trump directed the U.S. military to destroy boats suspected of smuggling drugs for certain cartels and gangs. To date, the operation has killed 123 people in 35 strikes.
How it violated a norm or law
Domestic and international law forbids the military from deliberately targeting civilians who pose no imminent threat, even if they are suspected of crimes. That is murder in peacetime and a war crime during armed conflict.
How it would expand presidential power
Mr. Trump has claimed the right to order the summary extrajudicial killings of suspected drug runners by asserting that he has โdeterminedโ there is an armed conflict with a secret list of 24 cartels and gangs he has deemed terrorists, even though drug trafficking is not an armed attack and Congress has not authorized any such war. A Justice Department memo that remains classified says the attacks are lawful based on Mr. Trumpโs premise that there is an armed conflict, and says the presumed drugs aboard the vessels are a lawful military target because the โdesignated terrorist organizationsโ could use the proceeds to fund their purported war efforts.
What’s next?
There is currently no litigation. Congress launched a limited oversight inquiry.
Read more: The Peril of a White House That Flaunts Its Indifference to the Law, Memo Approving Boat Strikes Is Said to Rely on Trumpโs Claims About Cartels
Seize Venezuelaโs leader
- Military
- Congress
What Trump did
Without congressional authorization, Mr. Trump ordered the U.S. military to invade Venezuelan territory and arrest its president.
How it violated a norm or law
Critics argued that as a matter of domestic law, the use of ground forces and major fighting for what was effectively a regime-change operation required congressional authorization, and that as a matter of international law, the incursion violated the United Nations Charter.
How it would expand presidential power
Mr. Trump is seeking to establish โ or reinforce, since President George H.W. Bush took a similar action in Panama in 1989 โ that a president could unilaterally deploy ground forces to fight inside another country’s territory and seize its leader without congressional authorization and notwithstanding the U.N. Charter.
What’s next?
Venezuela’s deposed president, Nicolรกs Maduro, is facing a criminal trial on drug trafficking charges in New York. Venezuela’s future remains uncertain.
Read more: Can the U.S. Legally โRunโ Venezuela After Maduroโs Capture? Hereโs What to Know.
Bomb Iran
- Military
- Congress
What Trump did
Without congressional authorization, Mr. Trump ordered the U.S. military to bomb Iranian nuclear sites.
How it violated a norm or law
While administrations of both parties have taken the position that presidents can unilaterally authorize limited strikes, bombing Iran had been seen by some โ like Joseph R. Biden Jr., when he was running for president in 2019 โ as risking such a major regional conflict that it would require congressional authorization unless in response to an imminent attack.
How it would expand presidential power
Mr. Trump is trying to establish the authority to unilaterally launch a military attack on a major regional power like Iran without any imminent threat to the United States or its allies.
What’s next?
The situation has not developed into a full-fledged war with Iran, but amid mass protests in Iran, Mr. Trump is purportedly weighing further military action.
Read more: Was Trumpโs Iran Attack Illegal? Presidential War Powers, Explained.
Use troops on domestic soil
- Military
What Trump did
Mr. Trump has ordered troops under federal control into the streets of Democratic-controlled U.S. cities, including Los Angeles and Washington, D.C., in the name of protecting immigration agents and suppressing crime.
How it violated a norm or law
A longstanding norm, backed by the Posse Comitatus Act, bars the use of federal troops on domestic soil for policing purposes with narrow exceptions for suppressing an insurrection.
How it would expand presidential power
Acting on a desire he was stopped from carrying out in his first term, Mr. Trump is sending troops into American cities to assert control.
What’s next?
A federal judge ruled in September that Mr. Trump had illegally used troops for policing purposes in Los Angeles. An appeals court stayed his order while it reviewed it. Before it issued a decision, the judge ordered the deployment to end, and the appeals court allowed that ruling to take effect. Mr. Trump pulled the troops out of Los Angeles.
Read more: L.A. Ruling Complicates Trumpโs Threats to Send Troops to More Cities
Federalize the National Guard
- Military
What Trump did
Mr. Trump took control of Californiaโs National Guard over the objections of its governor and sent it into Los Angeles. He similarly sought to take over state militias in Illinois and Oregon, for deployment in Chicago and Portland, over the objections of their governors.
How it violated a norm or law
Since the civil rights era ended, the norm has been that presidents only federalize a National Guard at the invitation of and with the consent of state officials.
How it would expand presidential power
Mr. Trump is seeking to establish that he can take federal control of a stateโs National Guard at will and without the consent of a stateโs governor.
What’s next?
While an appeals court allowed Mr. Trump to take over the California National Guard, lower courts blocked his attempts to deploy National Guard troops to Portland and Chicago. The Supreme Court in December issued a preliminary order blocking the Chicago deployment for the time being, and Mr. Trump has abandoned, for now, his attempt to do so. But he could still try again using a different law known as the Insurrection Act.
Read more: Did a Supreme Court Loss Embolden Trump on the Insurrection Act?
Hold migrants at Guantรกnamo Bay
- Military
- Immigration
What Trump did
Mr. Trump sent migrants arrested in the United States to the militaryโs war-on-terror prison at the naval base at Guantรกnamo Bay, Cuba, where military guards handled them with nominal involvement from Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents.
How it violated a norm or law
The executive branch does not have clear authority to transfer people arrested on U.S. soil for immigration reasons to the prison in Cuba, and detaining migrants is a civilian law enforcement task, not a military one.
How it would expand presidential power
This is blurring the lines between domestic civilian law enforcement and military detention powers.
What’s next?
A district court judge has certified a class-action lawsuit.
Read more: Can Migrants Be Lawfully Transferred to Guantรกnamo? Hereโs What to Know.
Expedite deportations with a wartime law
- Military
- Immigration
What Trump did
Mr. Trump used the Alien Enemies Act, a wartime deportation law, to send planeloads of Venezuelan migrants to a notorious prison in El Salvador without due process hearings.
How it violated a norm or law
The act allows for expedited removals only when there is a declared war or a foreign government is invading the United States.
How it would expand presidential power
Mr. Trump tried to expand his ability to summarily deport people by stretching what counts as an invasion and by claiming that a Venezuelan prison gang is purportedly tied to that countryโs government, a claim that the U.S. intelligence community thinks is false.
What’s next?
The Supreme Court held that even if this law applies, people still have a right to hearings. Lower courts have cast doubt on whether it applies, saying illegal immigration does not count as the kind of invasion covered by the law. Litigation continues, but for now there have been no further Alien Enemies Act deportations.
Read more: Supreme Court Retains Block on Using Wartime Law to Deport Venezuelans, Appeals Court Blocks Trumpโs Use of Alien Enemies Act to Deport Venezuelans
Cancel student visas over disfavored speech
- Immigration
What Trump did
Through Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Mr. Trump is canceling student visas and deporting people for political expression that the administration does not like โ namely, criticism of Israelโs treatment of Palestinians.
How it violated a norm or law
The First Amendment protects the rights of noncitizens who are lawfully on U.S. soil.
How it would expand presidential power
Mr. Trump tried to expand his ability to suppress free speech and deport noncitizens for political expression he disfavors.
What’s next?
In September, a federal judge ruled that the Trump administration had violated the First Amendment rights of international students and professors by revoking the visas of people involved in pro-Palestinian activism. Litigation continues over what the remedy should be, and the case has not yet been appealed.
Read more: Judge Rules Trump Unlawfully Targeted Noncitizens Over Pro-Palestinian Speech
Seek to end birthright citizenship
- Immigration
What Trump did
Mr. Trump has instructed the government that babies born on U.S. soil to undocumented parents should not be given documents that treat them as citizens, like Social Security cards.
How it violated a norm or law
The 14th Amendment has long been understood to grant citizenship to almost everyone born on U.S. soil.
How it would expand presidential power
Mr. Trump is trying to unilaterally rewrite the meaning of the 14th Amendment, without a constitutional amendment or even congressional legislation.
What’s next?
Courts have blocked this policy, which will come before the Supreme Court soon.
Read more: Trump Administration Asks Supreme Court to Allow End of Birthright Citizenship
Editor’s Note: Read the rest of the story, at the below link.
Continue/Read Original Article Here: Trump Tests Presidential Power: Venezuela Operation, Iran Bombing and More – The New York Times
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