SCOTUS: Trump has 'Absolute Immunity' on Official Acts

SCOTUS: Trump has 'Absolute Immunity' on Official Acts
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The Facts

  • The US Supreme Court (SCOTUS) Monday ruled 6-3 along ideological lines that presidents have broad immunity from prosecution — sending former Pres. Donald Trump's criminal case related to his alleged efforts to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election back to the lower court.

  • Chief Justice John Roberts, writing for the majority, said the president is "not above the law," but the court found former presidents can never be prosecuted for acts related to the core powers of their office, and they can presume immunity for acts related to their official duties.


The Spin

Pro-Trump narrative

As Trump already knew, the president can't be prosecuted for carrying out acts that are within the executive branch powers granted to him in the Constitution. So now everyone knows this, and the special counsel's case will be dead on arrival at the lower court. Trump did nothing wrong and the special counsel was enlisted to do nothing more than hurt the former president's current campaign.

Anti-Trump narrative

SCOTUS, with its conservative majority powered by three Trump nominees, has now guaranteed that no president — including Trump in a potential second term — will have any legal checks against potential criminal behavior. In effect, SCOTUS granted immunity beyond even what Trump's lawyers argued he had. This could push the US toward dictatorship.


Metaculus Prediction


Public figures in this story


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