Retired Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer said Wednesday that it would be incorrect to try impeach Judge if you don’t like their decision.
“It has been confirmed that for more than two centuries, improper each is not an appropriate response to the differences in judicial decisions,” Breyer said. Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts was interviewed by CNN’s Wolf Blitz.
Blitzer asked Breyer about the president’s phone number Donald Trump Impotence Judge James Boasberg issued a 14-day restraining order on Saturday to prevent the deportation of members of the Trend Alagua gang, and Trump was designated as a “foreign terrorist organization.”

President Donald Trump and U.S. District Court Judge James Boasberg. (Getty Image)
Trump invoked the Foreign Enemy Act passed by Congress in 1798, which allowed people who were illegally evacuated from the country to expel Tren de Aragua.
But Breyer said Trump’s phone number And others including Rep. Brandon Gill, R-Texas are not suitable.
“You keep moving forward in the legal process,” Breyer said.
However, he added that Roberts’ statement against the objection of the call to impeachment was appropriate, which reads completely: “It has been determined, and it has been determined that impeachment is an inappropriate response to disagreements in judicial decision-making. There is a normal appeal review process for this purpose.”
Trump administration criticizes immigrant deportation flights

Venezuelan immigrants were deported from the United States and arrived at Simon Polivar International Airport in Venezuela on Thursday, February 20, 2025. (AP)
Breyer said that since the vast majority of Americans are not lawyers, Roberts’ statement is needed.
“They are not judges,” Breyer said. “They don’t know. It’s a useful and educational statement.”

Retired Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer said it would be wrong to try impeach Judge if you don’t like their decision. (Photo: CNN screenshot)
Breyer was nominated by President Bill Clinton and confirmed in 1994 until his retirement in 2022, when he was taken over by Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson.
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