Washington wakes today to a government under strain, a political map in motion, and a Supreme Court poised to rewrite the rules of federal power itself. Three major stories are colliding at once, each carrying consequences far beyond the day’s headlines.
A Sudden Resignation in New Jersey
Alina Habba has stepped down as acting U.S. attorney for New Jersey just days after the Third Circuit ruled she had been serving unlawfully — a sweeping rebuke that casts doubt on months of federal prosecutions.
The court’s decision, which held that the administration violated core vacancy laws in its attempt to keep Habba in the top role after her interim term expired, has already triggered challenges to indictments and paused multiple trials. Though Habba explained her exit as protecting the stability and integrity of the office, the ruling marks a rare — and potentially precedent-setting — finding that a federal “acting” appointment was invalid under the Vacancies Reform Act.
Habba is staying inside DOJ as a senior adviser, but the fallout extends far beyond one office. The ruling puts a spotlight on similar appointment maneuvers used elsewhere in the administration, raising the possibility of broader legal turbulence in the months ahead.
Texas Shifts Into High Gear
Meanwhile, the political winds in Texas have officially shifted. Congresswoman Jasmine Crockett filed to run for U.S. Senate on Monday, setting up a high-profile Democratic primary against state Rep. James Talarico — the breakout candidate who pulled in a record $6.2 million within weeks of launching his campaign.
Her entry comes as former Rep. Colin Allred abruptly bowed out, warning that a bruising primary would leave Democrats too divided heading into what is expected to become one of the most expensive Senate races of the 2026 cycle.
On the Republican side, Sen. John Cornyn faces a contentious intraparty fight against Attorney General Ken Paxton and Rep. Wesley Hunt, creating a rare scenario where both nominations are up for the taking. Early indicators suggests Texas will be a national political battleground through next fall.
A Supreme Court Ready to Redraw Washington
And above all of this looms a Supreme Court that seems poised to upend federal bureaucracy. In oral arguments Monday, the conservative majority signaled that it may back President Trump’s removal of two Democratic FTC commissioners — a move that directly challenges nearly 90 years of precedent governing independent agencies.
At issue is whether presidents can fire commissioners at will, or whether longstanding “for-cause” protections still apply. If the Court tosses or narrows the existing decision, the ruling could reverberate across dozens of agencies — from the SEC and FCC to the Federal Reserve — making them more vulnerable to political swings.
Justices Gorsuch and Roberts openly questioned whether the old precedent has any constitutional grounding left.
The Day Ahead
Taken together, these stories form a picture of an American government in transition: legal norms under strain, political alliances reshaping themselves, and institutions facing direct challenge at the highest court. The developments may ultimately define not only the next election cycle, but the balance of power inside Washington for a generation.
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