They
did it. The Supreme Court handed a massive victory to Donald Trump in this
so-called “immunity” case, and it will probably take a year or more before
there’s even a chance he’ll be held to trial for trying to
overthrow the 2020 election and, thus, the government of the United States.
As
feared, the six Republicans on the Court essentially threw Trump’s sedition
case back to the lower court (with caveats) where there will be numerous
decisions to make — which are all further appealable, resetting the case so
Trump can drag things out for another year or more — about whether the crimes
he’s committed are “official” or “private/personal” acts.
But that’s not the worst of it. They also turned Trump or any
future fascist president into our first American king or führer.
And,
of course, no matter what little fig leaves exist in this decision, if he’s
elected this fall, he’ll appoint a corrupt attorney general, who’ll make
Trump’s attempts to overturn the 2020 election all go away immediately.
Chief
Justice Roberts went so far as to say in this corrupt decision that Trump’s
speech exhorting people to attack the Capitol and try to hang Mike Pence, and
his failure to bring in the National Guard or ask his rabid followers to back
off, are part of his “official responsibilities.”
Speaking to Trump’s calling his rioters to overthrow the election,
Chief Justice Roberts bizarrely writes that:
“[M]ost
of a president’s public communications are likely to fall comfortably within
the outer perimeter of his official responsibilities.”
Justice Sotomayor is having none of it. Her dissent summarizes the
situation elegantly:
“Today’s decision to grant
former presidents criminal immunity reshapes the institution of the Presidency.
It makes a mockery of the principle, foundational to our Constitution and
system of Government, that no man is above the law.
“Relying on little more than its own misguided wisdom about the
need for ‘bold and unhesitating action’ by the President, the Court gives
former President Trump all the immunity he asked for and more. Because our
Constitution does not shield a former President from answering for criminal and
treasonous acts, I dissent.”
She
adds:
“The Court now confronts a question it has never had to answer in
the Nation’s history: Whether a former President enjoys immunity from federal
criminal prosecution. The majority thinks he should, and so it invents an a-textual,
ahistorical, and unjustifiable immunity that puts the President above the law.
The majority makes three moves that, in effect, completely insulate Presidents
from criminal liability.”
The six Republicans on this Court have essentially declared that
they and Trump are so far above the law that the entire concept this nation was
founded on — that “no person is above the law” — is null and void.
All a future president must do if they want to commit a crime, as
Justice Jackson’s dissent demonstrates, is to claim that no matter what they
did, it’s merely an “official act.” Including, specifically, directing the
Attorney General to commit crimes himself.
This is the sort of decision you’d get from a court in Putin’s
Russia.
As
Justice Sotomayor’s dissent lays out clearly:
“The main takeaway of today’s
decision is that all of a President’s official acts, defined without regard to
motive or intent, are entitled to immunity that is ‘at least . . .
presumptive,’ and quite possibly ‘absolute.’ Whenever the President wields the
enormous power of his office, the majority says, the criminal law (at least
presumptively) cannot touch him.
“This official-acts immunity has ‘no firm grounding in
constitutional text, history, or precedent.’ Indeed, those ‘standard grounds
for constitutional decision making,’ all point in the opposite direction. No
matter how you look at it, the majority’s official-acts immunity is utterly
indefensible.”
She adds, correctly:
“The Constitution’s text contains no provision for immunity from
criminal prosecution for former Presidents.”
Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson makes it even more clear, in the
bluntest of language, that this Court — acting like kings and queens
themselves — have turned the former president into their peer — a king — with
little to no accountability to the rule of law.
She wrote in her dissent:
“To fully appreciate the profound change the majority has wrought,
one must first acknowledge what it means to have immunity from criminal
prosecution. Put simply, immunity is ‘exemption’ from the duties and
liabilities imposed by law.
“In its purest form, the concept of immunity boils down to a
maxim—’[t]he King can do no wrong’—a notion that was firmly ‘rejected at the
birth of [our] Republic.’ To say that someone is immune from criminal
prosecution is to say that, like a King, he ‘is not under the coercive power of
the law,’ which ‘will not suppose him capable of committing a folly, much less
a crime.’
“Thus, being immune is not like having a defense under the law.
Rather, it means that the law does not apply to the immunized person in the
first place. Conferring immunity therefore ‘create[s] a privileged class free
from liability for wrongs inflicted or injuries threatened.’”
Unless
Congress acts quickly to overturn this obscene 6-3 decision — which won’t
happen so long as Republicans control the House — democracy in America has been
wounded, perhaps fatally, and the president has been made into a dictator,
should he or she choose to behave that way.
When
we have a president (Biden) who respects the fundamental law, history, and
traditions of America, we’ll be safe — for now. On the other hand, if Trump or
any other fascist Republican becomes president, he can pretty much do anything
he wants.
The imperial presidency is now officially here, not just
rhetorically but in actuality. The six Republicans on the Supreme Court today did
massive, perhaps irreparable, violence to our republic. We’re in huge
trouble, this Court is out of control, and the Senate needs at act (Senator
Dick Durbin!!!).
If
Trump is elected, these six Republicans just gave him near-Putin-like powers to
end our democratic republican form of government, as Justice Gorsuch said, “for
the ages.”
-Thom
Hartmann
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