Trump will know soon enough in November if what he currently doing are approved by the US voters. I think Trump will lose big time. And impeachment may follow for total disregard to the constitution.
Impeachment means nothing. It's just a symbolic act. Bill Clinton was blown, lied about it and impeached but so what. Trump was impeached multiple times and came roaring back stronger than ever.
In order to remove a President a 2/3 majority is needed in the senate and that's never going to happen.
As for your claim that Trump has "total disregard for the constitution" I'd love to hear from you exactly which actions he has taken which are unconstitutional. I'm keen to be educated because I have been under the impression that it's the left that has ignored key aspects of the constitution especially during the Biden term.
### Unconstitutional Actions by the Biden Administration
Based on court rulings and legal challenges, several actions or policies pursued by the Biden administration have been deemed unconstitutional or unlawful by federal courts, including the U.S. Supreme Court. These primarily involve executive overreach, violations of separation of powers, First Amendment issues, and equal protection concerns. Below is a compiled list of key examples, drawn from judicial decisions and multistate lawsuits. Note that some policies were extensions or modifications of prior administrations' actions, but the Biden-era implementations were specifically struck down. This list focuses on actions where courts found constitutional violations, not merely political criticisms.
#### 1. **Student Loan Forgiveness Plan**
- The administration's $430 billion plan to cancel federal student loan debt for millions of borrowers was ruled unconstitutional by the Supreme Court in 2023, as it exceeded executive authority under the HEROES Act and violated separation of powers by bypassing Congress. A subsequent Savings on a Valuable Education (SAVE) plan, which altered income-driven repayment terms and could cost up to $559 billion, faced similar challenges; courts blocked parts of it in 2025 for overstepping statutory limits.
#### 2. **COVID-19 Vaccine Mandates**
- The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) mandate requiring large employers to vaccinate or test workers was struck down by the Supreme Court in 2022 for exceeding agency authority and infringing on states' rights under the Tenth Amendment. Similar mandates for healthcare workers and federal contractors were challenged in multistate lawsuits (e.g., Georgia v. Biden, Louisiana v. Becerra) and partially invalidated as arbitrary and violative of federal procurement laws.
#### 3. **Eviction Moratorium Extension**
- The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) extended a nationwide eviction moratorium during the pandemic, which the Supreme Court invalidated in 2021 as an unlawful expansion of executive power beyond public health statutes, violating property rights and separation of powers.
#### 4. **Race-Conscious College Admissions Policies**
- The administration defended affirmative action programs in universities, but the Supreme Court ruled in 2023 that such policies violate the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment by discriminating on the basis of race.
#### 5. **Bump Stock Ban**
- The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) rule banning bump stocks (devices enabling rapid fire) was overturned by the Supreme Court in 2024, as it improperly redefined machine guns under federal law, exceeding agency authority and infringing on Second Amendment interpretations.
#### 6. **Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Regulations**
- Several EPA rules on power plant emissions and clean water were limited by the Supreme Court in rulings that curtailed federal regulatory power, citing violations of the major questions doctrine and overreach into states' domains. This included the 2024 overturning of "Chevron deference," which had allowed agencies broad interpretive leeway, ruled as unconstitutional delegation of legislative power.
#### 7. **Social Media Content Moderation Requests**
- Federal officials' communications urging social media platforms to remove misinformation (e.g., on COVID-19 and elections) were ruled a First Amendment violation by a federal judge in 2023, as they constituted coercive government censorship.
#### 8. **Section 702 Surveillance Program**
- The administration continued and defended warrantless surveillance under Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, which courts and critics (including the ACLU) have deemed unconstitutional for violating Fourth Amendment protections against unreasonable searches, especially when used on U.S. citizens.
#### 9. **Immigration Enforcement Priorities and Border Policies**
- Policies shifting enforcement away from certain immigrants (e.g., 100-day deportation moratorium) faced lawsuits (e.g., Texas challenges) and were partially blocked for violating statutory mandates and potentially the Take Care Clause. Revocation of the Keystone XL pipeline permit was challenged as unconstitutional regulation of interstate commerce.
#### 10. **Minimum Wage Increase for Federal Contractors**
- An executive order raising the minimum wage for federal contractors to $15/hour was challenged in lawsuits (e.g., by Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi) as exceeding Procurement Act authority and infringing on states' rights, with courts finding it ultra vires.
This list is not exhaustive, as ongoing litigation (e.g., on Title IX expansions for gender identity) continues to challenge other policies. Many rulings emphasize that the executive branch overstepped by acting without congressional authorization. For a comprehensive view, refer to sources like the Supreme Court's docket or multistate lawsuit trackers.