this post was submitted on 01 Aug 2024
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Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer will introduce legislation Thursday reaffirming that presidents do not have immunity for criminal actions, an attempt to reverse the Supreme Court’s landmark decision last month. 

Schumer’s No Kings Act would attempt to invalidate the decision by declaring that presidents are not immune from criminal law and clarifying that Congress, not the Supreme Court, determines to whom federal criminal law is applied.

The court’s conservative majority decided July 1 that presidents have broad immunity from criminal prosecution for actions taken within their official duties — a decision that threw into doubt the Justice Department’s case against Republican former President Donald Trump for his efforts to overturn his 2020 election loss.

Schumer, of New York, said that Congress has an obligation and the constitutional authority to check the Supreme Court on its decision.

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[–] billiam0202@lemmy.world 18 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) (1 children)

For starters, someone would have to prove standing to have a case. And this law only targets the Office of the Presidency, so only a President could challenge it. However, since we're wishing for the Dems to play hardball, Article 3 Section 2 of the Constitution says this:

In all the other Cases before mentioned, the supreme Court shall have appellate Jurisdiction, both as to Law and Fact, with such Exceptions, and under such Regulations as the Congress shall make.

Congress could literally pass a law limiting the powers of the Presidency, and also declaring that SCOTUS doesn't have the jurisdiction to hear any cases regarding it. Congress could also create a whole other court system solely to handle challenges to Presidential authority and there's nothing SCOTUS could legally do to stop it. (Not that Roberts' corrupt Court cares much about the law, but still.)

If the Dems can't get SCOTUS reform to course-correct soon enough, then jurisdictional stripping should be the name of the game.

[–] Nightwingdragon@lemmy.world 0 points 3 months ago (1 children)

For starters, someone would have to prove standing to have a case. And this law only targets the Office of the Presidency, so only a President could challenge it.

And if Donald Trump or a future wannabe-dictator gets elected, they'd have the exact standing needed to make such a challenge.

However, since we’re wishing for the Dems to play hardball, Article 3 Section of the Constitution says this:

In all the other Cases before mentioned, the supreme Court shall have appellate Jurisdiction, both as to Law and Fact, with such Exceptions, and under such Regulations as the Congress shall make.

The Supreme Court usurped that power for themselves in (I belive) 1803 and hasn't been challenged in 200+ years. Since then, if the SC makes a ruling, Congress has historically said "aw, shucks", and that's the end of it. At most, you'd put both branches of government into a conflicting "You've made your ruling, now let's see you enforce it" scenario which would bring us dangerously close to civil war.

Also, how would it work out? Trump gets into office and wipes his ass with the "No Kings Act". Do you honestly think for half a second that Congress is going to impeach, convict, and remove him any time soon? Because if so, I've got a whole lot of beachfront property on Mars that you may be interested in. The only other way would be.....through the court system. Which would end up at.......the exact Supreme Court, the exact same six judges that just gave him those powers in the first place. I'll let you sit there and think over how that would ultimately end.

Or, the SC could go the "malicious compliance" route. They let the NKA stand, knowing full well Trump is going to ignore it anyway, and knowing impeachment and removal is nigh on impossible in today's political climate. So Congress tries to sue and gets "well golly gee darn, you just got finished telling us we can't interfere. So he's your problem now. Good luck." Now what?

Or later in the future. 10 years, 20 years from now and the SC somehow gets rebalanced into something legitimate. Except now it's congress that are openly corrupt. Do we really want a situation where our SC would be able to do exactly nothing as a corrupt congress runs roughshod and starts further narrowing the oversight of a non-corrupt SC while passing more draconian legislation? It becomes a situation of being careful of what you wish for. You might get it.

Congress could literally pass a law limiting the powers of the Presidency, and also declaring that SCOTUS doesn’t have the jurisdiction to hear any cases regarding it. Congress could also create a whole other court system solely to handle challenges to Presidential authority and there’s nothing SCOTUS could legally do to stop it. (Not that Roberts’ corrupt Court cares much about the law, but still.)

Good luck getting the general public to accept that there's literally a completely different legal system for some people and not others. I don't care who it is or what the purpose of this secondary court system should be, you will (and should) never get the general public to accept setting up a secondary court system just because some people don't like the rulings of the primary one.

Would you consider a secondary court system headed by Aileen Cannon as the Trump-appointed "New Supreme Court" head judge legitimate? Of course not. The same applies in the other direction. The idea is absurd on its face and turns our justice system into a glorified game of Calvinball.

[–] billiam0202@lemmy.world 5 points 3 months ago (1 children)

We could do what's right and help voters because it's the right thing to do, and maybe they'll be excited to continue to vote against Republicans because we can deliver.

Or we can continue to be cowards, afraid to do anything because the GOP somehow won't be assholes if we don't?

[–] Nightwingdragon@lemmy.world 1 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

You're completely misunderstanding the point. It isn't about what's right; the principles behind the NKA are without a doubt the right principles. But it's about what actually accomplishes something.

Passing a law that has absolutely no chance of actually having an effect (because a future president Trump could just hand-wave it away with an EO or file a suit to bring it up to the Supreme Court which will immediately strike it down) isn't "doing what's right". It's political theater. It's making people believe you're doing something when you damn well know what you're doing will have no real world impact at all.

That is where I have the problem. Engaging in feel-good political stunts that have 0% chance of having an effect, then saying "well, shucks, we tried" when it inevitably fails isn't "doing what's right".

And no, I'm not saying to capitulate to the GOP. We've already seen what that gets. I'm just saying that this entire idea is useless because the next GOP president (Trump or whoever the next wannabe-autocrat is) will (Not might. Will.) do exactly one of two things on the first day in office.

  • Issue an Executive Order nullifying the No Kings Act, based on the Supreme Court ruling on Presidential Immunity, and then all but daring Congress to either impeach him or sue through the court system, which will end up in front of the exact same Supreme Court that gave themselves and Trump those powers in the first place, who will probably invalidate the NKA at warp speed.

  • File a lawsuit himself to ask the Supreme Court to strike the law down, and since they were the ones to grant Trump that power in the first place, they are almost guaranteed to oblige.

That's it. If Trump gets elected and one of those things doesn't happen within the first week if not day, I will personally post a video of me cutting off the left body part of your choice. Without the backing of being a constitutional amendment, any NKA-type of legislation is toothless and all-but-unenforceable political theater.