The Supreme Court’s decision to take up
The justices on Wednesday said they will hear arguments in late April, putting the case on a slower track than Special Counsel
“This could delay his trial, perhaps significantly,” said
The timing is potentially crucial. Polls indicate a conviction of Trump could undercut the Republican frontrunner’s bid to reclaim the White House. And should Trump win election and become president before the matter is resolved, he could order the Justice Department to drop the case. Trump, who is facing four indictments, has pushed to delay any trial until after the election.
Smith had
Smith’s office declined to comment Wednesday. Trump said he was pleased about the decision and started fundraising about an hour after the news.
“Without Presidential Immunity, a President will not be able to properly function,” Trump said in a post on social media.
Four Prosecutions
The Supreme Court has never taken up the question of whether a former president is immune from criminal charges for actions taken while in office. The case will be the court’s second unprecedented Trump showdown this year, joining a clash over the ability of
On Wednesday, Illinois became the third state to bar Trump from the Republican primary ballot, but a judge paused the decision to allow him to appeal, which he said he would quickly do.
Earlier:
The Washington election interference case is one of four criminal prosecutions Trump is facing, including a similar election case under state law in Georgia. Trump is set to go to trial March 25 in New York state court in a criminal case centering on alleged hush-money payments to porn star
Trump has used court appearances to drive home his message, often speaking to the press outside courtrooms before and after hearings. But his legal troubles have also hamstrung his reelection campaign. More than $27 million from Trump-affiliated fundraising committees went to pay legal fees in the last six months of 2023, rather than toward his political activities.
More than half of voters in seven swing states say they wouldn’t vote for Trump if he were convicted of a crime,
Weeks of Delay
The schedule set out by the court is less aggressive than the one it adopted for the Colorado
The justices — who have a 6-3 conservative majority as a result of Trump’s three appointments as president — deliberated for almost two weeks after Trump filed his second and final brief before deciding to intervene. The high court in December
Robert Mintz, a former federal prosecutor, predicted that US District Judge
She “has shown every indication to get this case moving as quickly as possible,” he said on Bloomberg Radio. “I think we will see her bringing the parties in and setting a very aggressive schedule to bring this case to trial.”
But
“It may not happen because of timing, timing that is completely in the Supreme Court’s control,” he said.
At the Supreme Court, Trump is challenging a federal appeals court decision letting him be prosecuted for allegedly trying to remain in power illegally. The 3-0 ruling, from a panel with two judges appointed by Democrats and one by a Republican president, said Trump’s immunity claim would give him “unbounded authority to commit crimes that would neutralize the most fundamental check on executive power — the recognition and implementation of election results.”
‘Extraordinary’ Claim
Trump’s lawyers
Trump contends he was acting within his official capacity as president during the lead-up to the Capitol assault. He points to a 1982 Supreme Court ruling that said, with regard to civil suits, presidents have complete immunity for actions taken within the “outer perimeter” of their official duties.
Special Counsel Smith called Trump’s immunity claim “extraordinary,” saying it would upend long-held understandings about presidential accountability and the Constitution, particularly given the nature of the allegations. Smith said that “from the inception of the nation,” all presidents have understood that they could be prosecuted for any criminal violations after they left office.
“The charged crimes strike at the heart of our democracy,” Smith argued. “A president’s alleged criminal scheme to overturn an election and thwart the peaceful transfer of power to his successor should be the last place to recognize a novel form of absolute immunity from federal criminal law.”
The case is Trump v. United States, 23A745.
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Sara Forden
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