#DonaldTrump has full presidential immunity due to #TrumpVUnitedStates, so he can't be tried INSIDE the U.S., but since killing the survivors of the Venezuelan boat strike is a #WarCrime, he CAN be tried by international law. Then let's do that. He can't pardon himself internationally.

But I know, #DenHague will probably not do it

#uspol #politics #PeteHegseth #PeteHegsethWarCrimes #VenezuelanBoatAttack #VenezuelanBoatSinking #VenezuelanBoatStrike #VenezuelanBoatStrikeSurvirorsKilling #Trump

Milwaukee County Circuit Judge Hannah Dugan's argument on judicial immunity lacks foundation, according to a piece in Lawfare.

https://www.lawfaremedia.org/article/judge-dugan--charlie-chaplin--and-the-claim-of-judicial-immunity-from-criminal-prosecution

In my opinion, regardless of what I think of this specific case, broad judicial immunity for actions which are at best on the periphery of a judge's duties is a bad idea.

#HannahDugan #JudicialImmunity #TrumpVUnitedStates #CharlieChaplin #Law #Lawfare

Judge Dugan, Charlie Chaplin, and the Claim of Judicial Immunity From Criminal Prosecution

The Wisconsin circuit court judge’s recent judicial immunity claim lacks merit, though she may find some support in the dubious prosecution of the famous actor.

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Not to put too fine a point on it, but reiterating that because of the #SCOTUS ruling in #TrumpVUnitedStates, the only peaceful means we have of stopping this administration is impeachment, conviction, and removal from the house, and even then, he wouldn't face criminal prosecution.

Americans are famous for our firearms, but they are mostly in the hands of Trump supporters (incl. police and military), thanks to the Democratic Party, so there's not likely to be an armed domestic revolt. …

A law professor and former federal prosecutor looks at the Supremes' ruling on presidential immunity and finds it wanting.

' [The] Court’s broad and sloppy analysis risks engendering dangerous conduct by any future president who shows a lack of restraint or a penchant to test boundaries. It is remarkable that the majority stooped to criticize the lower courts for a lack of thoroughness ... when the majority opinion is so slapdash ... '

#USSupremeCourt #TrumpVUnitedStates #PresidentialImmunity

This Independence Day feels different from the others. The United Kingdom delivered a reminder today from across the Atlantic that people do not have to subject themselves to sustained misrule, while here in the United States the Supreme Court chose Monday to hold that American presidents deserve a level of lifelong supremacy above the law normally associated with British monarchs.

I have no real stake in U.K. politics, but as a fan of accountability for elected representatives, I enjoyed seeing British people vote by an overwhelming majority to end 14 years of increasingly-chaotic Conservative rule that left the country objectively poorer and more isolated.

When political leaders fail their constituents, they should be held accountable. And if Labour botches its turn in charge, that party should expect no different.

But six members of the U.S. Supreme Court now believe that when it comes to a president’s compliance with the law, accountability gets flushed into the Potomac if a president’s lawbreaking fell under their “official duties.”

The elastic framework Chief Justice John Roberts crafted in his profoundly dishonorable Trump v. United States opinion rules any president “absolutely immune from criminal prosecution for conduct within his exclusive sphere of constitutional authority” and allows “presumptive immunity” for “acts within the outer perimeter of his official responsibility.”

Roberts and his co-conspirators–Justices Samuel Alito, Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh, and Clarence Thomas signed on with all that absurdity, with Justice Amy Coney Barrett partially concurring while disagreeing that presidents deserve an official-duties excuse to suppress certain evidence of their crimes–created this doctrine despite the text of the Constitution saying nothing about presidential immunity.

Instead, they argue that the Constitution’s support of an energetic executive branch trumps all the other inefficiencies it deliberately creates to bog down abuses of power.

The dissent from Justice Sonia Sotomayor, joined by Justices Elena Kagan and Ketanji Brown Jackson, correctly observes that the framers of the Constitution knew how to grant limited immunity when they wrote the Speech or Debate Clause protecting members of Congress. They did no such thing for the Executive Branch. And Federalist 69: The Real Character of the Executive has Alexander Hamilton–a prominent advocate of a strong executive–declaring that presidents could end up in court like anybody else.

“The President of the United States would be liable to be impeached, tried, and, upon conviction of treason, bribery, or other high crimes or misdemeanors, removed from office; and would afterwards be liable to prosecution and punishment in the ordinary course of law,” Hamilton writes.

“Today’s decision to grant former Presidents criminal immunity reshapes the institution of the Presidency,” Sotomayor writes in her dissent. “It makes a mockery of the principle, foundational to our Constitution and system of Government, that no man is above the law.”

Roberts dismisses that with this sneering line: “The dissents’ positions in the end boil down to ignoring the Constitution’s separation of powers and the Court’s precedent and instead fear mongering on the basis of extreme hypotheticals about a future where the President ‘feels empowered to violate federal criminal law.'”

Because July Fourth rightly has me feeling disinclined to comply with respect-my-authority arguments, I must ask: How stupid does the Chief Justice think we, meaning the people who pay his salary, are?

We did, in fact, have a president who felt “empowered to violate federal criminal law” when he became the first president in American history to try to overturn an election he clearly lost by deceit and ultimately force. His name is Donald Trump, and he will be on the ballot this November. If you seriously value the freedom we celebrate today, you had better have all of this on your mind when you vote.

https://robpegoraro.com/2024/07/04/a-strange-fourth-of-july/

#Constitution #IndependenceDay #LabourLandslide #presidentialImmunity #SCOTUS #SupremeCourt #TrumpVUnitedStates #UKElection

General election live: Keir Starmer names new cabinet, with Reeves as chancellor and Rayner as deputy PM

The prime minister appoints his top team after pledging “the work of change begins immediately”.

BBC News

“One of the things that seems to have most annoyed Roberts is that Sotomayor quoted scripture at him, scripture in this case being The Federalist Papers...”

I wrote about “Trump v. United States,” here:

https://calebcrain.substack.com/p/the-ordinary-course-of-law

#law #americanhistory #trump #supremecourt #trumpvunitedstates #politics

The Ordinary course of law

Some thoughts on "Trump v. United States"

Leaflet
I have been saying for many years that although certain Justices of the #SCOTUS have affected a #judicial #philosophy of #originalism when it suited their purposes, none of them were truly originalists, because they would completely ignore originalist principles whenever those principles became inconvenient for their political biases. The dissent in #TrumpVUnitedStates skewers the majority with exactly this point, invoking #Bruen, as well, one of the worst decisions in history. #USpol
Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor summarizes the nonsensical implications of “Trump v. United States”. #111Words #SoniaSotomayor #SCOTUS #TrumpVUnitedStates https://andrewjshields.blogspot.com/2024/07/supreme-court-justice-sonia-sotomayor.html
Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor summarizes the nonsensical implications of “Trump v. United States"

In her dissent in the aptly named "Trump v. United States" decision today, Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotamayor explains the majority's rul...

#SCOTUS is completely off the rails. #TrumpVUnitedStates #USpol