Judge Rules Alina Habba’s Role as U.S. Attorney in New Jersey Was Illegitimate

Alina Habba, once Trump’s personal lawyer, had been serving as the acting U.S. Attorney for New Jersey. But a federal judge just threw a wrench in that arrangement, calling her tenure unlawful.
Alina Habba
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When the Law Becomes a Chessboard, the People Always Lose

Alina Habba, best known as one of Donald Trump’s personal lawyers, was supposed to be the top federal prosecutor in New Jersey. Now a judge has ruled her appointment unlawful, saying her time in office ran out weeks ago. What should be a boring bit of legal housekeeping has turned into a political circus.

The Trump administration tried to keep Habba in place after her 120-day interim term expired. Instead of going through the Senate like the law requires, officials pulled a backdoor move, firing the judge-appointed replacement and sliding Habba back into the role. A federal judge just called foul, ruling that she never had legal authority after July.

Here’s the controversy: Habba was already a polarizing pick. Supporters saw her as a loyal fighter who wasn’t afraid to take on Democrats. Critics saw her as unqualified, pointing out that her biggest credential was defending Trump in his legal battles. The ruling feeds both sides. Her defenders will call it “judicial activism,” her opponents will say it’s proof of corruption at the highest level.

The bigger problem is what this mess does to trust in the justice system. Every case she touched after July could now be challenged. Defendants are already lining up to say their prosecutions should be thrown out. The government, meanwhile, is appealing the ruling and doubling down. That means months of chaos in New Jersey’s federal courts while prosecutors, judges, and defendants all argue over who really has the authority to bring charges.

The truth is simple: this isn’t just about Habba. It’s about a system where political loyalty matters more than rules, and where both parties bend the law when it suits them. The losers aren’t politicians. The losers are ordinary people who depend on the courts to be fair, stable, and legitimate.

Habba’s case isn’t just another headline about Trump world. It’s a warning sign of what happens when politics eats the law alive.