Jamelle Bouie is an opinion writer for The New York Times. He writes with exceptional insight and clarity. In this column, he explains the radical, unprecedented nature of the Supreme Court’s decision on presidential immunity. The majority claims to be “originalists,” paying strict attention to the meaning of the words of those who wrote the Constitution, but this decision clearly demonstrates their complete indifference to the original intent of the Framers of the Constitution. The Framers created a strong balance of power among the three branches of the Federal Government; this Court negates those checks and balances.
With this ruling, Trump vs. US, the six member majority of the Supreme Court has shown that they are rank partisans. Their overriding objective was to protect Trump, first, by dragging out their decision as long as possible; second, by remanding the case to a District Court, where it may require months of hearings and appeals to determine which acts are official and which are not; and third, by affirming Trump’s once-absurd claim that the President can do whatever he wants and it’s not illegal.
The Roberts Court is a disgrace.
Jamelle Bouie writes:
In 1977, nearly three years after leaving office in disgrace, President Richard Nixon gave a series of interviews to David Frost, a British journalist. Of their hourslong conversations, only one part would enter history.
“When the president does it,” Nixon told Frost, defending the conduct that ended his presidency, “that means that it is not illegal.” He went on to add that if “the president approves an action because of the national security — or in this case because of a threat to internal peace and order of significant magnitude — then the president’s decision in that instance is one that enables those who carry it out to carry it out without violating a law.” Otherwise, Nixon concluded, “they’re in an impossible position.”
Yesterday, in a 6-3 decision along partisan lines, the Supreme Court affirmed Nixon’s bold assertion of presidential immunity. Ruling on the federal prosecution of Donald Trump for his role in the effort to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election, Chief Justice John Roberts explained that the president has “absolute immunity” for “official acts” when those acts relate to the core powers of the office.
“We conclude that under our constitutional structure of separated powers, the nature of presidential power requires that a former president have some immunity from criminal prosecution for official acts during his tenure in office,” Roberts writes. “At least with respect to the president’s exercise of his core constitutional powers, this immunity must be absolute. As for his remaining official actions, he is also entitled to immunity.”
The majority divides official conduct from “unofficial conduct,” which is still liable for prosecution. But it doesn’t define the scope of “unofficial conduct” and places strict limits on how courts and prosecutors might try to prove the illegality of a president’s unofficial acts. “In dividing official from unofficial conduct, courts may not inquire into the president’s motives,” Roberts writes. “Such an inquiry would risk exposing even the most obvious instances of official conduct to judicial examination on the mere allegation of improper purpose, thereby intruding on the Article II interests that immunity seeks to protest.” In other words, the why of a president’s actions cannot be held as evidence against him, even if they’re plainly illegitimate.
Roberts tries to apply this new, seemingly extra-constitutional standard to the facts of the case against the former president. He says that the president “has ‘exclusive authority and absolute discretion’ to decide which crimes to investigate and prosecute, including with respect to allegations of election crime” and may “discuss potential investigations and prosecutions” with Justice Department officials, effectively neutering the idea of independent federal law enforcement. Turning to Trump’s attempt to pressure Mike Pence into delaying certification of the Electoral College, Roberts says that this too was an official act.
Having made this distinction between “official” and “unofficial” conduct, Roberts remands the case back to a Federal District Court so that it can re-examine the facts and decide whether any conduct described in the indictment against Trump is prosecutable.
The upshot of this decision is that it will delay the former president’s trial past the election. And if Trump wins he can quash the case, rendering it moot. The conservative majority on the Supreme Court has, in other words, successfully kept the American people from learning in a court of law the truth of Trump’s involvement on Jan. 6.
But more troubling than the court’s interference in the democratic process are the disturbing implications of the majority’s decision, which undermines the foundations of republican government at the same time that it purports to be a strike in defense of the constitutional order.
Presidential immunity from criminal prosecution does not exist in the Constitution, Justice Sonia Sotomayor observes in her dissent. The historical evidence, she writes, “cuts decisively against it.” By definition, the president was bound by law. He was, first and foremost, not a king. He was a servant of the public, and like any other servant, the framers believed he was subject to criminal prosecution if he broke the law.
And while the majority might say here that the president is still subject to criminal prosecution for “unofficial acts,” Sotomayor aptly notes that the chief justice has created a standard that effectively renders nearly every act official if it can be tied in some way, however tenuously, to the president’s core powers.
If the president takes official action whenever he acts in ways that are “not manifestly or palpably beyond his authority” and if “in dividing official from unofficial conduct, courts may not inquire into the president’s motives,” then, Sotomayor writes, “Under that rule, any use of official power for any purpose, even the most corrupt purpose indicated by objective evidence of the most corrupt motives and intent, remains official and immune.”
A president who sells cabinet positions to the highest bidder is immune. A president who directs his I.R.S. to harass and investigate his political rivals is immune. A president who gives his military illegal orders to suppress protesters is immune.
These examples only scratch the surface of allowable conduct under the majority’s decision. “The court,” Sotomayor writes, “effectively creates a law-free zone around the president, upsetting the status quo that has existed since the founding.” When he uses his official powers in any way, she continues, “he now will be insulated from criminal prosecution. Orders the Navy’s SEAL team 6 to assassinate a political rival? Immune. Organizes a military coup to hold onto power? Immune. Takes a bribe in exchange for a pardon? Immune.”
The bottom line, Sotomayor concludes, is that “the relationship between the president and the people he serves has shifted irrevocably. In every use of official power, the president is now a king above the law.”
If the president is a king, then we are subjects, whose lives and livelihoods are only safe insofar as we don’t incur the wrath of the executive. And if we find ourselves outside the light of his favor, then we have find ourselves, in effect, outside the protection of the law.
Roberts says that presidential immunity from criminal prosecution is necessary to preserve the separation of powers and protect the “energy” of the executive. But the aim of the separation of powers was not merely to create exclusive spheres of action for each branch — if this were true, the Senate, which ratifies treaties and confirms executive branch appointments, would not exist in its current form — but to prevent the emergence of unchecked authority. Roberts has reversed this. Now separation of powers requires the absolute power of the executive to act without checks, without balances and without limits.
In their relentless drive to protect a Republican president and secure his power for a future administration, the conservative majority has issued a fundamentally anti-republican opinion. In doing so, it has made a mockery of the American constitutional tradition.
By the end of his time in the White House, Nixon was a disgrace. But to the conservative movement, he was something of a hero — hounded out of office by a merciless liberal establishment. One way to tell the story of the Republican Party after Nixon is as the struggle to build a world in which a future Nixon could act unimpeded by law.
Roberts has done more than score a victory for Trump. He has scored a victory for the conservative legal project of a unitary executive of immense power. Besides Trump, he has vindicated the lawlessness of Republican presidents from Nixon to George W. Bush. The Nixonian theory of presidential power is now enshrined as constitutional law.
This time when the president does it, it really won’t be illegal.

“The Roberts Court is a disgrace.”
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A Republican President incited a violent insurrection and used his office to threaten and cajole folks to use the power of their office to break the law and declare him the winner. A Republican President has the state department work with his cronies to extort a foreign county by holding up legally mandated foreign aid in return for the foreign leader smearing his political opponent. A Republican President illegally leaves office with top secret documents that belong to the country, not to him, and refuses to return them.
A Republican President is in danger of being called to account, and appeals to the Supreme Court, who says the president has immunity.
Trump’s criminal behavior in office makes Richard Nixon look like a juvenile delinquent.
The Supreme Court has now modeled itself on Russia’s corrupt court system. When the far right needs them to rule a certain way to stay in power and punish anyone who threatens their power, they simply do their bidding and then find a reason to justify it – in the Constitution, not in the Constitution but in 200 year old British law, in the Constitution but we don’t like it so it is no longer there.
It’s like Orwell’s 1984 writ large. We have always had a Constitution. We have never had a Constitution.
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Well said. This dangerous ruling is outrageous.
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In May I visited family in Southern California, and we went to the Nixon museum and library. While thr museum certainly highlights what it views as Nixon’s accomplishments, it has an extensive exhibit on Watergate. The includes excerpts of oral histories with people involved. One excerpt is from an interview with Judge Sirica’s clerk, who spoke of how stunned he and the judge were when they listened to the Nixon tapes. Their sense of disillusionment was palpable.
At least then Republicans had a sense of genuine patriotism and belief in democracy. They could not endorse what Nixon did.
What reason or excuse do McConnell, Graham and a host of GOP politicians have for supporting a venal, corrupt charlatan?
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Exactly. The Grand Older Persons Party, or GOPP, has reached the Abyssopelagic zone. And unsurprisingly, having adapted to this, they are all grotesque monstrosities.
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Birdchum,
An important observation. Trump and his lackeys have no sense of shame. He lies, and they agree with him.
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Biden needs to immediately put 4 or 6 more members on the Supreme Court. It’s not illegal…
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This requires that BOTH the House and Senate pass a law expanding the number–a law that is then signed by the President, so it’s not happening. I wish he could do this.
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A thought experiment under the new doctrine of Presidential immunity: Biden declares the six justices who concurred in this decision to be traitors,has them summarily removed and imprisoned for life in a Super max facility, and then appoints, without pesky Senate hearings, six liberal/progressive justices to SCOTUS?
In addition, arrest Martha Alito Ginni Thomas, MTG and throw them in jail for treason.
Last, execute Steve Bannon. Just because…
because, hey, presidents can do ANYTHING!
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the thought experiment fails when you consider that the ruling allows the court itself to determine what can be prosecuted and what cannot.
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Yeah, but it takes so long to wind through the court. If a President wanted, they could now cook up military trials and imprison people while the sase takes years to get through the appeals. There’s no guarantee that those arrested would be let out on bail. Especially if they’re of color
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Roberts says that presidential immunity from criminal prosecution is necessary to preserve the separation of powers and protect the “energy” of the executive.
……………………………
I’ve been saying for quite a while that Trump made a deal with each of his 3 appointees to the Supreme Court. It would go something like, “I will put you on the Supreme Court IF you support me when I need your help.”
The Supreme Court is corrupt. Why else would they give immunity to a convicted felon who is a narcissistic pathological liar?
This ruling will allow Trump to do whatever he pleases when the becomes a dictator on day one. The U.S. will survive, just like Italy survived and Russia today survives. All the Trump supporters, and the rest of us, will learn the hard way that dictators have the power to destroy our freedoms and our democracy.
This country is sick and conditions will get worse.
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Too bad President Biden is an honest, moral individual with values. With this ruling he could order the CIA’s Special Activities Division to eliminate IQ minus 45, because that traitor is a threat to the US Constitution and Biden’s order would fit the oath every president takes, every federal law enforcement officer, everyone in the US military, everyone elected to Congress, everyone sworn in to the US Supreme Court…
Wait, — the US Supreme Court!
The oath says to defend the US Constitution against all enemies both foreign and domestic. That includes six justices on the US Supreme Court.
So, that presidential hit list should have at least 7 names on it.
I do not think Traitor Trump would hesitate to order SAD to take out targets he saw as a threat to his dictatorship.
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Lloyd,
That occurred to me. With this decision, Biden could take out threats to our democracy. Maybe Leonard Leo too.
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Me too!
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I don’t think this is as much about Trump as it is about the far right democracy haters needing just one more term of Trump to codify their coup and end democracy permanently (barring a civil war or a foreign invasion of a democracy-loving power). They need Trump to achieve their modern Aryan vision of America uber alles.
If those folks get one of their own (JD Vance?) for VP, will Trump meet with a convenient accident? Is Trump worried about that? I wonder if he is concerned about choosing a VP who the power folks propping him know is one of their own.
Trump’s best shot at staying in office if he wins is to choose someone who is dangerous to the right wing neo-fascist money folks whose bought and paid for Supreme Court and federal judiciary has kept him in out of jail.
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https://m.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=1026214778875190
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This author is absolutely to the point on the Republican view of the fall of Nixon. To a person, every person I ever talked to about his resignation who supported him saw him as the victim of a liberal conspiracy. It was that belief that led Roger Ailes to start a news organization based on a conservative point of view. It has been behind every falsehood posed by Republicans ever since: sure we are lying, but all political people do it. That is why we need small government.
We thus arrive at s conservative dream: each of the first two estates have a vote, the third estate is essentially overruled. The Judges have given the Hebrew People their king, and their god has warned them they will one day regret it.
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I grew up believing that, having been born in the United States, I would also die there.
No such luck. Right now we are doomed to die in Germany, circa 1939. If Trump wins the election, the wagons will start rolling and it will be the Day of Retribution and Plunder.
When the Republicans, having destroyed the Democrats, fall upon themselves in an orgy of violence and killing, Putin will invade, to “save” us.
That was his plan all along. And Donald Trump, who lives on a diet of power, greed and flattery, will carry on, always at the sufferance of Putin.
Trump’s day will come then. Can’t have two fuhrers, after all.
We of course, will have been killed by then, or be imprisoned in death camps.
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The blog has taken a dark turn today, filled with doom and gloom. I think that’s what the dark side is hoping for. Personally, I’m pissed, and all that much more determined to do everything possible to make sure this cult doesn’t win control. I think Judge Chutkan should ignore this unconstitutional ruling and press forward with the trial. The court does not command an army to enforce the ruling; Biden does. In fact, every honest judge should be ignoring the illegal rulings of this corrupt court.
We must vote in overwhelming numbers, and with control of all three branches we can fix this problem and put in guardrails to keep us safer from right-wing political and religious extremism.
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Don,
You are right. Biden must win with a large majority, enough to expand the Supreme Court (its size is not mentioned in the Constitution). With 60 votes in the Senate, he could add 4, 6, or 8 justices and save our democracy.
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Hope birthday went well Diane
Been comical. You all thought 1-2 years ago Trump had 0’chance. Trump is going down. All you see now is Trump will not be going down and Trump will be next president. Tough for many of you. Trumps selections Barrett sided against conservatives that’s a great pick. No democratic appointment would side with republicans and be what a judge should be impartial . At least with immunity, Biden, Obama, and Clinton might not be imprisoned .
unhinged left like Harry Sisson that paid troll, wants trump executed like Kathy griffin wanted his head and the off broadway plays killing Trump .
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That these six rogue Just Asses consider themselves experts on Constitutional law is an utter joke. They just undid what the founders tried to accomplish. In a single decision, they created Kings of the United States.
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Don’t lump us all together. Trump has terrified me for 12 years now. I have never thought that he had no chance. His cult of personality would vote for him even if he was dead.
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This comes from Robert Reich. It’s part of what ‘the King’ will do if elected. I can imagine that Trump’s verbiage will get ever more violent now that he knows the Supreme Court has given him immunity.
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…Trump has repeatedly called for the imprisonment of his political opponents, often singling out members of the Jan. 6 committee.
Over the weekend, Trump circulated two posts on his social media website that presumably reflect his thinking.
One singled out Liz Cheney, the former Wyoming congresswoman, and called for her to be prosecuted by a type of military tribunal reserved for enemy combatants and war criminals, which would strip Cheney of her right to due process. “Elizabeth Lynne Cheney is guilty of treason,” the post said. “Retruth if you want televised military tribunals.”
The other post included photos of fifteen former and current elected officials that said, in all-capital letters, “they should be going to jail on Monday not Steve Bannon!” The list included President Biden, Vice President Kamala Harris, Senators Mitch McConnell and Chuck Schumer and former Vice President Mike Pence, and members of the House committee that investigated the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol, including Ms. Cheney and the former Illinois congressman Adam Kinzinger, another Republican, and the Democratic Representatives Adam Schiff, Jamie Raskin, Pete Aguilar, Zoe Lofgren and Bennie Thompson, who chaired the committee.
The posts were still up on Trump’s Truth Social profile yesterday afternoon.
Liz Cheney responded with her own social media post, saying “Donald — This is the type of thing that demonstrates yet again that you are not a stable adult — and are not fit for office.”
The Trump campaign responded to Cheney with a statement claiming that “Liz Cheney and the sham January 6th committee banned key witnesses, shielded important evidence, and destroyed documents” related to their investigation.
I don’t believe Sotomayor and her fellow dissenters from yesterday’s opinion were engaging in fearmongering on the basis of extreme hypotheticals. Do you?
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HARRIS TIES TRUMP
The latest CNN/SSRS poll, reported in The Washington Post which says that this poll “is a quality, well-regarded poll,” shows that Biden is losing to Trump by a huge six-percent margin — but that Vice President Kamala Harris is in a dead heat with Trump, just two points behind and well within the poll’s margin of error.
All of the other Democrats — Newsome, Whitmer, and Buttigieg — touted as replacing Biden on the Democratic ticket are shown losing to Trump by the same six-percent margin as Biden.
The CNN/SSRS poll also shows that Harris is favored over Biden by the critical swing voters: women, non-white voters, and under-45 voters.
The CBS News/YouGov poll found that 72 percent of all voters said Biden “does not have the mental and cognitive health to be president.” These numbers are not disputed by the Biden campaign. With numbers like that, Biden cannot win even if every loyalist Democrat votes for him.
And major donors are saying they recognized in Biden’s performance some of the deterioration they have observed in smaller meetings and donor events. So, Biden must not be the Democratic Party candidate for President in the November election.
America is long, long overdue for a woman President.
Long overdue.
Within the next few weeks, Biden should resign as President, citing health reasons, some of which are clearly evident. That would give Harris national exposure as America’s first woman President and would ignite women of all ethnic backgrounds to want to see her continue as President. That block of voters would tip the election in her favor over Trump.
Biden has indeed been a good President; and he is a fundamentally good and moral person. Nevertheless, in the world of practical politics, he is all too likely to lose to despicable Trump who would bring our republic to its knees.
On Tue, Jul 2, 2024 at 7:00 AM Diane Ravitch’s blog < comment-reply@wordpress.com> wrote:
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Let’s see…based on the Supreme Court’s immunity ruling, Trump’s attorneys are now arguing that Trump’s actions to discredit and reverse the 2020 election results were official presidential actions that were done in order to defend what Trump says were the actual 2020 election results in his favor. So….
If Trump wins the 2024 election in November, according to the Supreme Court ruling Biden can while he is still President until January 2025 declare that the 2024 election was fraudulent and can take official presidential action to reverse the results of the election and imprison Trump as a threat to our republic because Trump has said that he will be a dictator if he is elected.
What goes around, comes around.
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Dark Lords Cheney and Barr always wanted an imperial executive. The Extreme Court just handed them that.
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