Supreme Court betrays conservatism with disastrous Trump presidential immunity ruling | Opinion

Date:

Share post:


The Supreme Court’s decision Monday in Donald Trump’s immunity case is a 119-page distillation of everything that is wrong with our politics. History will judge harshly the decision that creates an imaginary “absolute immunity” for a president’s official acts.

The Republican majority opinion in the Trump immunity case is a disaster of anti-constitutional thinking that fails to live up to the originalist standards that the conservative justices have so persuasively and arduously set as the course for our nation’s highest court. It is a betrayal of the idea that no man is above the law.

The dissent that brings to bear persuasive originalist thinking on the case that makes crystal clear that Trump should face criminal indictment like any other American, opens with a bald-faced lie.

If the public ever grasps how sharply the Republican members of the court have abandoned their own standard of judicial decision-making and how openly the Democratic members have descended into “resistance” fantasy land, the Supreme Court’s reputation as the most-trusted branch of government may never recover.

The biggest problem with the majority’s position is that it makes up immunity out of whole cloth. As the dissent argues, the Constitution plainly contemplates the criminal prosecution of a president for wrongdoing when it says the process of impeachment does not protect anyone covered by the impeachment clause from future criminal liability. That includes presidents.

Moreover, the founders knew about immunity for the head of government. King Charles whom they so despised had it. In order to distinguish the president of the United States from a king, Alexander Hamilton wrote in The Federalist Papers that the president “would be amenable to personal punishment and disgrace.”

Without regard to the founders’ vision, the Supreme Court has literally given Trump permission to jail his political opponents or accept bribes for official acts while in office without fear of prosecution when he leaves.

The dissent signed by Justices Elena Kagan, Sonia Sotomayor and Ketanji Brown Jackson launches into its commendable originalist case that Trump is liable for his criminal misconduct, but starts with a lie: “The (majority decision of the) Court gives former President Trump all the immunity he asked for and more.”

Indeed, that is the one silver lining today. The majority did not give Trump the absolute immunity that he asked for. For some presidential powers, those most loosely connected to the office, immunity is a “rebuttable presumption” and for “unofficial” acts, perhaps inciting a mob to storm the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, the justices offer even less protection.

That means lower courts will have a chance to determine the facts of the cases and make rulings about whether Trump should face a criminal trial for his attempt to overthrow the democratic election of 2020.

There’s little chance this will happen before November’s election so the ultimate deciders of Trump’s fate remain the voters. That’s little consolation with Trump increasingly likely to win as a decrepit President Joe Biden crumbles before us day by day.

A dissent has one job: to provide the plainly just view that will someday rally reformers and save the republic we all love so much. That didn’t happen today.

David Mastio, a former editor and columnist for USA Today, is a regional editor for The Center Square and a regular Star Opinion correspondent. Follow him on X: @DavidMastio or email him at dmastio1@yahoo.com 





Source link

Alexandra Williams
Alexandra Williams
Alexandra Williams is a writer and editor. Angeles. She writes about politics, art, and culture for LinkDaddy News.

Recent posts

Related articles

Who are the favourites to be the next Tory leader?

Jeremy Hunt has ruled himself out of the race to be the next leader of the Conservative...

Why the S&P 500 is poised to rocket 100% in 5 years

The bull run in stocks may have further room for a stampede."We are in the early innings...

Warren Buffett said that he could end America's deficit problem 'in five minutes' — here's what he would do

There’s growing concern about a looming debt crisis in America. High-profile financial figures such as Bridgewater’s Ray...

An Ohio parent joined LifeWise Academy to post its curriculum online. Now it's suing him

A Hilliard-based nonprofit provider of Christian instruction to public schools has sued a former Ohio man for...

China anchors 'monster ship' in South China Sea, Philippine coast guard says

MANILA (Reuters) - The Philippine Coast Guard (PCG) said on Saturday that China's largest coastguard vessel has...

Hamas agrees to proposal on talks to free Israeli hostages 16 days after first phase, Hamas source says

DUBAI/CAIRO (Reuters) -Hamas has accepted a U.S. proposal to begin talks on releasing Israeli hostages, including soldiers...

Doctors And Nurses Are Revealing The Biggest "Health Misconceptions" That More People Should Know

A while back, a Reddit thread went viral where one user asked the internet, "Doctors and nurses...

Mount Everest's highest camp is littered with frozen garbage, and cleanup is likely to take years

KATHMANDU, Nepal (AP) — The highest camp on the world’s tallest mountain is littered with garbage that...