Former President
The US Court of Appeals for the DC Circuit on Friday rejected Trump’s argument that because he was president at the time, he was shielded from suits over his actions leading up to the Jan. 6, 2021, riot and his comments to a rally of supporters that morning. The majority said Trump could try to claim immunity again later in the case, but not at this early stage.
The ruling is a significant setback for Trump as he fights criminal charges that he conspired to overturn the 2020 election results. His
The appeals court noted in Friday’s opinion that its analysis dealt with when a president could be immune against certain types of civil claims, not the issue of immunity against criminal prosecution.
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DC Circuit Chief Judge
“That is a sweeping proposition, and one that ultimately sweeps too far,” Srinivasan wrote.
Trump’s immunity bid failed at this stage because he had argued that his status as a candidate didn’t matter as long as he was also the president, the court held. But the judges said that as the case moved forward, Trump could try to revive the immunity fight by presenting evidence that the Jan. 6 rally speech and other post-election activities laid out in the lawsuits were “official actions.”
Trump spokesperson Steven Cheung said in a statement that the ruling was “limited, narrow and procedural.”
“The facts fully show that on January 6 President Trump was acting on behalf of the American people, carrying out his duties as president of the United States,” Cheung said.
Joe Sellers, a lead attorney for the plaintiffs who sued Trump, said in a statement that they look forward to pressing ahead with the case.
“Today’s victory brings us a crucial step closer to holding the former president accountable for the harm brought on members of Congress and on our democracy itself,” Sellers said.
The bulk of Srinivasan’s opinion was joined by his colleagues on the panel, Judge
Trump’s lawyers can now petition the full DC Circuit bench to reconsider Friday’s ruling or ask the US Supreme Court to intervene. Meanwhile, he’s expected to continue to fight the civil cases brought by police officers and Democratic members of Congress if they move to trial.
Srinivasan on Friday made clear that the court wasn’t ruling on the core question of Trump’s responsibility for the Jan. 6 attack. The court also signaled potential future fights ahead, including Trump’s claim that his post-election activities were protected under the First Amendment.
Trump was
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In the civil cases, US District Judge
The Justice Department
Srinivasan wrote that the court rejected that approach because it would require digging into First Amendment questions the majority hadn’t addressed yet. He also said that tying a president’s immunity against being sued for officials acts to whether the speech is constitutionally protected was an “uneasy” fit.
The government’s position may let a president escape being sued over speech that was constitutionally protected but outside the scope of their duties, the judge wrote. And on the other hand, Srinivasan said, it could open the door to lawsuits against a president over speech that was otherwise “delivered in an official capacity,” such as during a State of the Union address.
The
(Updates with statement from Trump spokesperson.)
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Peter Blumberg
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