Thank goodness for state governments. One of the vital underappreciated tales in 2025 was the function states performed in checking federal overreach. Because the Trump administration barreled by norms, guidelines and legal guidelines, state officers — generally from each events — equipped the friction to sluggish the administration’s energy seize.
President Donald Trump swept into energy with Republican management over each chambers of Congress, however he averted working with Congress as a lot as potential. He spent the primary yr of his second time period pushing the bounds of government energy. As his Chief of Employees Susie Wiles informed a Vainness Honest journalist: Trump “operates [with] a view that there’s nothing he can’t do. Nothing, zero, nothing.”
Congress could have rolled over, however on the state degree, issues performed out just about the best way America’s founders supposed. As James Madison wrote in Federalist No. 45: “The powers delegated by the proposed Structure to the federal authorities are few and outlined. These that are to stay within the State governments are quite a few and indefinite.”
Madison and his fellow visionaries settled upon a system that enshrined within the U.S. Structure the authorized authority for states to guard the freedoms of their residents and uphold the rule of legislation when the federal authorities abused its energy.
Trump gave them ample alternative to try this proper out of the gate. Between Jan. 20, 2025, and Dec. 18, 2025, he signed 221 government orders — greater than he signed within the 4 years of his first time period.
However that method infringed on many basic rights held by states. Lots of these government orders intruded upon state authority over administering elections and implementing crime. Twenty-two states sided with the District of Columbia to efficiently cease the Trump administration from federalizing the Nationwide Guard to be deployed to Washington, though the choice has been paused to permit for enchantment. Twenty-three states joined with Illinois and Chicago to oppose the administration’s federalizing of Illinois Nationwide Guard troops. And 12 states joined Oregon to problem using the president’s emergency powers to impose import tariffs on Canada, Mexico and China.
An evaluation from States United, a nonpartisan group that helps state officers and legislation enforcement leaders, discovered that no less than 33 of Trump’s orders are dealing with federal court docket challenges and 10 of essentially the most controversial dictates have both been blocked or paused whereas a court docket critiques them — from Trump ending the constitutional proper to birthright citizenship, to his order to reject absentee ballots that arrive after Election Day, to the huge deployment of Nationwide Guard troops in Democrat-run cities. Lots of the decrease court docket orders are nonetheless pending rulings within the appellate courts, however they’ve served to sluggish the velocity with which Trump can dismantle state protections.
State pushback is necessary, not solely to protect state constitutional authority, but in addition as a result of the American folks don’t approve of Trump’s method on many of those points. A Reuters/Ipsos ballot in September, for instance, discovered that 7 in 10 Democrats and half of Republicans didn’t need the president to ship armed troops into American cities except these cities face an exterior risk.
Remarkably, Alexander Hamilton predicted this 238 years in the past this month when he wrote, in Federalist No. 17, that as a result of states “will usually possess the arrogance and good-will of the folks,” they’ll use that standard help to “oppose all encroachments of the nationwide authorities.”
The conservative majority on the Supreme Court docket has demonstrated that it’s going to proceed to increase the president’s energy regardless of the boundaries supposed by the nation’s founders. Joanna Lydgate, CEO of States United, thinks the final word take a look at of Trump’s government overreach gained’t be within the courts. “We’re going to win or lose it within the court docket of public opinion,” she informed me. “On the finish of the day, the facility right here is within the palms of the American folks.”
The following problem can be for states to verify the Trump administration doesn’t try to tip the scales in November 2026, when voters will determine each seat within the U.S. Home and 33 seats within the U.S. Senate. Trump signed a sweeping government order earlier this yr to take vital election energy away from states. That introduced challenges from extra Republican states than some other Trump government order this yr. (That order has additionally been paused.) And there may be bipartisan opposition to the Division of Justice’s makes an attempt to hunt entry to voter information, with the seemingly intent of making an attempt to undermine belief in elections.
Within the final yr, the stability between state and federal energy confronted a historic take a look at. However upholding the rule of legislation additionally means ensuring there are penalties for many who undermine it. States additionally ought to launch investigations, file bar complaints towards administration attorneys who violate ethics codes by mendacity to judges and advocate for Congress to tighten the authorized loopholes the administration has exploited.
It’s been heartening to observe states step up and change into a bulwark towards federal overreach. However in 2026, there may be far more to do.
