Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Steve Berman's avatar

Ima gonna weigh in on this in tomorrow’s post. Forgive me if I don’t hit any of your comments. As usual David did yeoman’s work on what the ruling did and didn’t say. There’s a lot more to cover, though.

Expand full comment
Chris J. Karr's avatar

"My instinct here is that the president might have immunity, but the members of the military and other nonpresidential officials would not. The preservation of our constitutional system may one day depend on the military and government officials refusing to follow unlawful orders. That refusal has its own risks and costs."

Given that firing executive staff enjoys absolute immunity, and the pardon power as well, the only thing folks committing illegal orders from Trump have to fear is that he'll forget to pardon them.

Re: post-Chevron, it's largely an afterthought now, given that neither the legislative nor judicial branch have any meaningful checks on executive power in light of this immunity ruling. No need for POTUS to even venture out to the "presumable immunity" bubble, esp. since SCOTUS has made it impossible for anyone to even ask about the President's motives.

Expand full comment
92 more comments...

No posts