Heather Cox Richardson brilliantly dissected the U.S. Supreme Court’s shocking decision about Presidential immunity. The Court abandoned the foundational principle of our country that “no one is above the law.” As she points out, even the justices reiterated that principle at their hearings. To read the sources, open the link or subscribe.
She wrote:
Today the United States Supreme Court overthrew the central premise of American democracy: that no one is above the law.
It decided that the president of the United States, possibly the most powerful person on earth, has “absolute immunity” from criminal prosecution for crimes committed as part of the official acts at the core of presidential powers. The court also said it should be presumed that the president also has immunity for other official acts as well, unless that prosecution would not intrude on the authority of the executive branch.
This is a profound change to our fundamental law—an amendment to the Constitution, as historian David Blight noted. Writing for the majority, Chief Justice John Roberts said that a president needs such immunity to make sure the president is willing to take “bold and unhesitating action” and make unpopular decisions, although no previous president has ever asserted that he is above the law or that he needed such immunity to fulfill his role. Roberts’s decision didn’t focus at all on the interest of the American people in guaranteeing that presidents carry out their duties within the guardrails of the law.
But this extraordinary power grab does not mean President Joe Biden can do as he wishes. As legal commentator Asha Rangappa pointed out, the court gave itself the power to determine which actions can be prosecuted and which cannot by making itself the final arbiter of what is “official” and what is not. Thus any action a president takes is subject to review by the Supreme Court, and it is reasonable to assume that this particular court would not give a Democrat the same leeway it would give Trump.
There is no historical or legal precedent for this decision. The Declaration of Independence was a litany of complaints against King George III designed to explain why the colonists were declaring themselves free of kings; the Constitution did not provide immunity for the president, although it did for members of Congress in certain conditions, and it provided for the removal of the president for “high crimes and misdemeanors”—what would those be if a president is immune from prosecution for his official acts? The framers worried about politicians’ overreach and carefully provided for oversight of leaders; the Supreme Court today smashed through that key guardrail.
Presidential immunity is a brand new doctrine. In February 2021, explaining away his vote to acquit Trump for inciting an insurrection, Senate minority leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY), who had also protected Trump in his first impeachment trial in 2019, said: “Trump is still liable for everything he did while he was in office…. We have a criminal justice system in this country. We have civil litigation, and former presidents are not immune from being held accountable by either one.”
But it was not just McConnell who thought that way. At his confirmation hearing in 2005, now–Chief Justice John Roberts said: “I believe that no one is above the law under our system and that includes the president. The president is fully bound by the law, the Constitution, and statutes.”
In his 2006 confirmation hearings, Samuel Alito said: “There is nothing that is more important for our republic than the rule of law. No person in this country, no matter how high or powerful, is above the law.”
And in 2018, Brett Kavanaugh told the Senate: “No one’s above the law in the United States, that’s a foundational principle…. We’re all equal before the law…. The foundation of our Constitution was that…the presidency would not be a monarchy…. [T]he president is not above the law, no one is above the law.”
Now they have changed that foundational principle for a man who, according to White House officials during his term, called for the execution of people who upset him and who has vowed to exact vengeance on those he now thinks have wronged him. Over the past weekend, Trump shared an image on social media saying that former Representative Liz Cheney (R-WY), who sat on the House Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the U.S. Capitol, was guilty of treason and calling for “televised military tribunals” to try her.
Today, observers illustrated what Trump’s newly declared immunity could mean. Political scientist Norm Ornstein pointed out that Trump could “order his handpicked FBI Director to arrest and jail his political opponents. He can order the IRS to put liens on the property of media companies who criticize him and jail reporters and editors.” Legal analyst Joyce White Vance noted that a president with such broad immunity could order the assassination of Supreme Court justices, and retired military leader Mark Hertling wrote that he was “trying to figure out how a commander can refuse an illegal order from someone who is issuing it as an official act.”
Asha Rangappa wrote: “According to the Court, a President could literally provide the leader of a hostile adversary with intelligence needed to win a conflict in which we are involved, or even attack or invade the U.S., and not be prosecuted for treason, because negotiating with heads of state is an exclusive Art. II function. In case you were wondering.” Trump is currently under indictment for retaining classified documents. “The Court has handed Trump, if he wins this November, carte blanche to be a ‘dictator on day one,’ and the ability to use every lever of official power at his disposal for his personal ends without any recourse,” Rangappa wrote. “This election is now a clear-cut decision between democracy and autocracy. Vote accordingly.”
Trump’s lawyers are already challenging Trump’s conviction in the election interference case in which a jury found him guilty on 34 counts. Over Trump’s name on social media, a post said the decision was “BRILLIANTLY WRITTEN AND WISE, AND CLEARS THE STENCH FROM THE BIDEN TRIALS AND HOAXES, ALL OF THEM, THAT HAVE BEEN USED AS AN UNFAIR ATTACK ON CROOKED JOE BIDEN’S POLITICAL OPPONENT, ME. MANY OF THESE FAKE CASES WILL NOW DISAPPEAR, OR WITHER INTO OBSCURITY. GOD BLESS AMERICA!”
In a concurring opinion, Justice Clarence Thomas, whose wife was deeply involved in the effort to overturn the 2020 presidential election, also took a shot at the appointment of special counsels to investigate such events. Thomas was not the only Justice whose participation in this decision was likely covered by a requirement that he recuse himself: Alito has publicly expressed support for the attempt to keep Trump in office against the will of voters. Trump appointed three of the other justices granting him immunity—Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh, and Amy Coney Barrett—to the court.
In a dissent in which Justices Elena Kagan and Ketanji Brown Jackson concurred, Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote that because of the majority’s decision, “[t]he 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.”
“Never in the history of our Republic has a President had reason to believe that he would be immune from criminal prosecution if he used the trappings of his office to violate the criminal law. Moving forward, however, all former Presidents will be cloaked in such immunity. If the occupant of that office misuses official power for personal gain, the criminal law that the rest of us must abide will not provide a backstop. With fear for our democracy,” she wrote, “I dissent.”
Today’s decision destroyed the principle on which this nation was founded, that all people in the United States of America should be equal before the law.
The name of the case is “Donald J. Trump v. United States.”

While it is assumed that The Supreme Court is above politics, Roberts’ right wing members are partisan and biased. Their decisions tend to be based on personal bias, not the rule of law, precedent or The Constitution. They appear to concoct their narrative, and then construct some legal bolderdash to justify their position. This renegade court an insult to truth and justice, and Justice Sotomayor called them out for their outrageous decision in her insightful dissent.
“Sotomayor called out the majority’s lack of legal reasoning, writing: “argument by argument, the majority invents immunity through brute force” and calling the majority’s conclusions “utterly indefensible.”
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Both Thomas and Alito should have recused themselves because their wives are active Trump partisans.
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Diane: Those two SCOTUS wives are worse than hangers-on at a rock concert where Trump is concerned. Stupid little girls who think they’ll get what they need by doing for the guitarist exactly what you are thinking right now. I cringe and am sickened at the sight of them. CBK
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Well, I guess we’ll have to stop imprisoning U.S. presidents now for things like starting wars based on lies and creating torture camps and insider trading and….
Oh, sorry, nevermind .
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You make an excellent point, Dienne. In a just world, . . .
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. . . this is what “off kilter” looks like.
And from the other thread about the New York Times, the editors think democracy is an abstraction they can talk about . . . as if its loss wouldn’t cut their feet out from under them and shut them up forever.
And they still call themselves journalists. “Democracy dies” when its journalists (and the voters) have no idea what enables the principle of freedom, in this case, of the press, to continue. CBK
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So much for being originalists…
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It’s legal “smoke and mirrors.”
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Given the decision on Trump v. US, can we not say that, given the concurrence of the Court, the President could make a treaty without the “advice and consent” of the Senate? It an official act.
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Traitor Trump already did that when he made a secret treaty with the Taliban, ending the Afghan war by giving them back that country, without the “advice and consent” of the Senate.
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If this was true, the NYT would surely be covering this important news like it is covering the important news that Biden’s severely declining cognition is a clear and present danger and the only debate is whether Biden should step down now or later.
This is just an “opinion” and as NYT journalists are so proud of saying, there is another view that is just as equal and valid that they have been explaining in every news story that they write. That equally valid view is that the Supreme Court issued a perfectly normal decision that has little or no importance to any voter. In fact the NYT is not even covering it as news anymore, except in their analysis informing readers that Trump’s justices are more centrist than the other Republican-appointed justices.
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What the six fascist US Supreme court justices did was unconstitutional.
Still, they also opened a door for President Biden and or the DOD to save the Constitution. Now Biden has nothing to worry about if he declares Martial Law to save the US Constitution.
“Further, martial law suspends all existing laws, as well as civil authority and the ordinary administration of justice. In the United States, martial law may be declared by proclamation of the President or a State governor, but such a formal proclamation is not necessary.”
The President’s Oath of Office every president starting with George Washington swore to support:
“I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will faithfully execute the Office of President of the United States, and will to the best of my ability, preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States.”
The Oath that officers in the military swore to uphold:
“I ___, do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic; that I will bear true faith and allegiance to the same; that I take this obligation freely, without any mental reservation or purpose of evasion; and that I will well and faithfully discharge the duties of the office on which I am about to enter. So help me God. (Title 5 U.S. Code 3331, an individual, except the President, elected or appointed to an office of honor or profit in the civil service or uniformed services)”
The military officer’s oath is different than the one the troops, who are not officers, take. They have to obey the president and/or their officers. The officers do not have to obey the president.
Here’s Why Trump Has Lost Support with the Military | TIME
More than 70% of active-duty military officers do not support or approve of Traitor Trump.
I think if President Biden decided to declare martial law to save the country, the military would support him.
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Now that the Supreme Court has ruled executive immunity official for all official acts, why doesn’t Biden test it. Short of using Seal Team 6 and eliminating people, he could simply take those six Supreme Court Justices and Donald J. Trump and have them arrested and held at GITMO for being a clear and imminent danger to the Republic and Constitution.
Just for a couple of months so that our great Justices would have a little quality time to think over the ramification of their decision.
I have no doubt that the Donald will not have reservation about making people disappear permanently. He has committed treason. Why is Biden so timid?
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This would be hilarious.
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It seems the Justices don’t realize that in creating a monarch, there may come a day when their services are no longer needed. Hubris.
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So what a high crime or misdemeanor is is now the decision of the Supreme court and not the House and senate? it sounds to me like the court has almost eliminated the legislative branch as a check on either the executive and judicial branches. So much for the rule of law.
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Quite the irony, isn’t it. A lawless supreme court.
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