Cape Argus

Hearing on Trump immunity bid begins

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THE US Supreme Court yesterday confronted a major test of the power of the presidency as the justices began hearing arguments over Donald Trump’s bid for immunity from prosecutio­n for his efforts to overturn his 2020 election defeat.

Trump appealed after lower courts rejected his request to be shielded from four election-related criminal charges on the grounds that he was serving as president when he took the actions that led to the indictment obtained by Special Counsel Jack Smith.

Trump, the Republican candidate challengin­g Democratic President Joe Biden in the November 5 election, is the first former US president to be criminally prosecuted.

Trump has pleaded not guilty in this case and in three other criminal cases he faces, including an ongoing trial on New York state charges related to hush money paid to a porn star shortly before the 2016 US election that put him in the White House. Trump did not attend the Supreme Court arguments because he was in a Manhattan courtroom in that case.

On his way into court in New York, Trump told reporters: “A president has to have immunity … If you don’t have immunity, you’re not going to do anything. You’re just going to become a ceremonial president.”

The Supreme Court’s 6-3 conservati­ve majority includes three justices who Trump appointed: Amy Coney Barrett, Brett Kavanaugh and Neil Gorsuch.

The court already this year has handed Trump one major victory as he runs to regain the presidency. On March 4, it overturned a judicial decision that had excluded him from Colorado’s ballot under a constituti­onal provision involving insurrecti­on for inciting and supporting the January 6, 2021, attack on the US

Capitol by his supporters. Not since its landmark Bush versus Gore decision, which handed the disputed 2000 US election to Republican George W Bush over Democrat Al Gore, has the court played such an integral role in a presidenti­al race.

Outside the white marble court building ahead of the arguments on a partly cloudy spring day in the US capital, a small number of demonstrat­ors displayed anti-Trump signs including one that read, “LOSER.”

Trump took numerous steps to try to reverse his 2020 loss to Biden. The August 2023 indictment described Trump as “determined to remain in power” despite his election loss.

Trump was charged with conspiring to defraud the US, corruptly obstructin­g an official proceeding and conspiring to do so, and conspiring against the right of Americans to vote.

Trump’s lawyers told the justices in a filing that a former president has “absolute immunity from criminal prosecutio­n for his official acts.” Without such immunity, they said, “the threat of future prosecutio­n and imprisonme­nt would become a political cudgel to influence the most sensitive and controvers­ial presidenti­al decisions.”

Smith in a filing urged the justices to reject Trump’s bid for immunity from prosecutio­n on the principle that “no person is above the law.”

Trump in October 2023 sought to have the charges dismissed based on his claim of immunity. US District Judge Tanya Chutkan rejected that claim in December. Smith then asked the justices to launch a fasttrack review of the immunity claim, a request they rebuffed. The US Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in February ruled 3-0 against Trump’s appeal of Chutkan’s ruling.

The Supreme Court’s decision to put off hearing arguments over immunity until this month postponed Trump’s trial, which had been scheduled to start in March. Legal experts have said the justices would need to rule by about June 1 for Trump’s trial to be held before the election.

A ruling is expected no later than the end of June, which could force Chutkan to decide whether to begin a trial in September or October, when early voting already will be under way in some states.

 ?? | Reuters ?? FORMER US president Donald Trump returns from a break in his trial at Manhattan Criminal Court in New York yesterday.
| Reuters FORMER US president Donald Trump returns from a break in his trial at Manhattan Criminal Court in New York yesterday.

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