Bald man in dark suit and aviator sunglasses speaking outdoors at the White House, trees and blue sky in background.
REUTERS

The Trump Administration Came Closer to Suspending Habeas Corpus Than Anyone Realized

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The Scharf-to-Wiles memo is dated April 29, 2025. Ten days later, on May 9, Miller told reporters that suspending habeas corpus was “an option we are actively looking at.”

That sequence is the spine of new reporting from New York Times reporters Jonathan Swan and Maggie Haberman in “Regime Change: Inside the Imperial Presidency of Donald Trump,” published by Simon & Schuster on June 23, 2026. It expands on their June 15 New York Times article, “Frustrated by Courts, Trump Weighed Suspending a Constitutional Right.”

Bald man in dark suit and Ray-Ban aviator sunglasses speaking outdoors, green trees and blue sky in background.
Outside the White House in Washington, D.C., on June 25, 2026, Stephen Miller — serving as Deputy Chief of Staff — addresses a group of reporters. Photo by Evan Vucci / Reuters.

Swan told “Morning Joe” the idea was “far more seriously entertained than people realized at the time.” The memo, written in what Swan called “very loyal language,” laid out why crossing that line would be a mistake, and the administration ultimately did not formally suspend the right.

Swan went further in his own analysis. He said that “in a certain way” habeas rights have effectively been suspended, because thousands of immigrants are in detention without hearings, and that at the lower-court level the administration is, in his words, “not obeying all these court orders.” That is Swan’s characterization, not an established fact. The administration disputes claims that it has ignored court orders, and the underlying legal disputes are ongoing.

Man in blue suit and red tie holding a black umbrella at an airport tarmac, looking directly at camera.
President Donald Trump holds an umbrella while speaking to members of the media at Reading Regional Airport in Reading, Pennsylvania, on June 23, 2026. Credit: White House / Molly Riley.

Swan said the picture shifts over the course of the book. He agreed that in the first 6 months courts, universities and others were “scrambling,” and that by the second half the system and the judges had “awakened” and were “on their front foot.”

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Bald man in dark suit and aviator sunglasses speaking outdoors at the White House, trees and blue sky in background.
REUTERS
Bald man in dark suit and Ray-Ban aviator sunglasses speaking outdoors, green trees and blue sky in background.
Outside the White House in Washington, D.C., on June 25, 2026, Stephen Miller — serving as Deputy Chief of Staff — addresses a group of reporters. Photo by Evan Vucci Reuters.
Man in blue suit and red tie holding a black umbrella at an airport tarmac, looking directly at camera.
President Donald Trump holds an umbrella while speaking to members of the media at Reading Regional Airport in Reading, Pennsylvania, on June 23, 2026. Credit: White House Molly Riley.