Sen. Kennedy FURIOUSLY DESTROYS Bidenâs A.G Sally Yates After Her Arrogant Response to his Questions
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đ„ Constitutional Showdown: Senator Kennedy Roasts Sally Yates in Fiery Hearing
A Senate hearing featuring Senator John Kennedy (R-LA) and former Acting Attorney General Sally Yates escalated into a constitutional showdown when Kennedy challenged Yatesâs decision to refuse to defend President Trumpâs executive order on immigration. With his signature mix of Southern wit and legal precision, Kennedy dismantled Yatesâs rationale, focusing on the fundamental principle of the separation of powers and who ultimately determines the constitutionality of government action in America.
The exchange, which quickly went viral, was framed by commentators as a âmasterclassâ in legislative questioning, exposing what critics perceive as a problematic overreach of personal and political judgment into the Department of Justiceâs core legal duties.
The Pre-Trial: Establishing Political Bias
Senator Kennedy opened his questioning not on law, but on personality, immediately setting a tense tone by pressing Yates on her personal feelings toward the President she refused to serve.
Kennedy:Â âYou donât like Donald Trump, do you?â (0:03)
Yates:Â âI donât likeâI donât respect the manner in which he has carried out the presidency.â (0:05â0:08)
Kennedy:Â âOkay. You despise Donald Trump, donât you?â (0:10â0:11)
Yates:Â âNo, I I donât despise anyone, Senator.â (0:12â0:14)
This brief but critical exchange served to establish the narrative for Kennedyâs later critique: that Yatesâs legal position was potentially rooted in personal political antipathy, rather than solely in legal principle. Yates attempted to diffuse the tension by suggesting Kennedy might be âfrustrated with the language,â but Kennedy quickly countered: âIâm not frustrated. Iâm happy as a clamâ (0:20â0:22).

The Core Conflict: Who Decides What Is Unconstitutional?
The heart of the confrontation focused on Yatesâs decision to instruct Department of Justice (DOJ) lawyers not to defend the Presidentâs executive order because she âbelieved it was unconstitutionalâ (2:10â2:16, 4:30â4:32).
Yates explained that her concern was over intent, arguing that defending the order would require DOJ lawyers to âargue that the executive order had nothing to do with religionâ and was not done âwith an intent to discriminate against Muslimsââan argument she did not believe was âgrounded in the truthâ (2:50â3:07).
Kennedy then cornered her with a foundational question of American law:
âAt what point does an act of Congress or an executive order become unconstitutional? When I think itâs unconstitutional or you think itâs unconstitutional or a court of final jurisdiction says itâs unconstitutional?â (6:17â6:28)
Yates maintained that the Attorney General has a responsibility to say ânoâ if he or she believes the President is asking them to do something âunlawful or unconstitutionalâ (6:29â6:41).
Kennedy delivered the definitive response that sent the room into silence and murmurs:
âWho appointed you to the United States Supreme Court?â (5:34â5:37, 8:37â8:40)
Kennedyâs point was direct and legally sound: under U.S. law, Acts of Congress and Presidential orders are generally âpresumed to be constitutionalâ until a court of final jurisdiction rules otherwise (5:46â5:49, 8:54â8:58). He argued that Yates essentially gave herself the authority of the judiciary, replacing legal process with personal conviction. This critique was summarized perfectly by a commentator: âAmerica runs on law, not feelings. Feelings are for Hallmark cards, not courtroomsâ (9:01â9:07).
Allegations of Political Double Standards
Kennedy further pressed Yates on whether her decision was a principled legal stand or purely a political decision wearing a robe (9:17â9:20). He brought up the precedent of the DOJ refusing to defend the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA), which Yates confirmed (3:44â3:59).
While the refusal to defend DOMA occurred under a different administration and involved a different legal analysis, Kennedy implied a pattern of politically motivated selectivity: âSeems like yâall only refuse to defend laws when a Republican signs themâ (9:25â9:29). This line of attack suggested that the principles Yates claimed to uphold were applied unevenly based on the political party of the officeholder.
The Russia Pivot: Seeking Definitive Answers
In a sudden shift, Kennedy pivoted to the topic of Russian interference in the 2016 election, again using his questioning to push the witnesses toward definitive, rather than speculative, conclusions.
Kennedy asked both Yates and former DNI James Clapper if the Russians âattempted to influence the outcome of the election?â Both replied with an unequivocal âYes, sir. Absolutelyâ (6:54â7:00).
Kennedy then pressed: âDid do you believe that the Russians did in fact influence the outcome of the election?â (7:00â7:04)
Clapper responded by stating the intelligence community âcould not make that callâ as they lack the âauthority, the expertise or the resources to make that judgmentâ (7:06â7:15), noting only that they saw âno evidence of influencing voter talliesâ (7:16â7:21). Yates added: âI donât know the answer to that. I think thatâs part of the problem is weâll never knowâ (7:27â7:31).
Kennedy closed this segment with a classic quip, summarizing the intelligence conclusion as: âSo they tried, but didnât succeed. Kind of like my first dietâ (10:00â10:07).
Conclusion: Law vs. Personal Conviction
Senator Kennedy successfully steered the hearing away from a simple policy disagreement over an executive order and into a profound debate over the role of law and personal conviction in the executive branch. His central argument remained clear: while the Attorney General must refuse an unlawful order, an action is only definitively unconstitutional when the judicial branchâthe designated âcourt of final jurisdictionââsays so.
By challenging Yatesâs constitutional authority with his pointed, humorous, and legally precise questions, Kennedy defended the principle that the US government âis run on law,â not the personal âfeelingsâ or ideological disagreements of unelected officials.
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