Oddly enough, there is considerable bipartisanship at the State level when faced with federal overreach. This is because State power and federal power are in conflict—for the federal government to have more, the States must have less. And the States don’t like this one bit.
This again shows the brilliance of the founding fathers. Even at the federal level, when the president is of the same party as both houses of congress, while they might get along on overall policy goals, when it comes to a conflict between the powers of the branches, they are often at loggerheads—the desired state, as far as the founding fathers were concerned.
And this is exacerbated in the fight between federal and State power, so much so that right now, blocs of the States are forming around all sorts of anti-federal issues, loosely called the 10th amendment movement, as an umbrella term.
We have been politely admonishing our legislators about the activist judiciary for decades without result. It is time such pleasantries to halt. Bring in the paddleboard and change some attitudes.