In the sense that the president couldn’t be prosecuted for giving the order, probably. I’m not 100% sure what he’d have been charged with before
But a lot of the discussion of this blurs the distinction between “can’t be prosecuted for making the order” and “can’t be prosecuted for carrying it out”
Oh he 100% could.
But he could have done that before. And I have some doubts that the fear of being prosecuted for… something(?) is the difference between a president willing to order that and one who isn’t.
And, yes, there are other constraints, but the rule of law was a pretty big one.
Trump floated this several times during his presidency. And was told he can’t do that each time.
What happens if he holds up this ruling and says “why not?”
“Plans are already in motion to use this new, historic court decision as a legal shield to help a potential second Trump administration implement his extreme policy agenda with less concern for rules and laws, sources with knowledge of the matter say.”
At least at first blush, the examples of extreme actions which could be aided by this ruling… aren’t
The thing stopping Trump from sending active duty troops to US cities to “bring order” wasn’t his fear of being personally prosecuted, it was that the military would (we hope) refuse unlawful orders
I think you’re underestimating the way Trump will use this ruling to argue that it is *not illegal* (he will be wrong, but he will wave the ruling around and shout it anyway)
And you’re underestimating the degree to which he’s going to fire and replace generals until they agree with him that it’s not illegal, because the Supreme Court said if he did it, it was OK.
I think you’re right about the distinction, but it’s not a distinction that Trump will make.
And, I care more about how Trump will perceive this ruling that how you or I will perceive it.
He just heard the starting gun for everything he wants in a second term
Also like let's be very blunt about what that means
It means civil war
(Which, yes, is preferable to He Just Sets Up A Tyranny Successfully, but still!)
Maybe. That’s the best argument I’ve heard for this being “can do whatever he wants now”. But I have a hard time imagining someone who yesterday would have said “no, that violates posse comitatus and the constitution” now going “if he can’t be prosecuted, I’ll follow whatever order he gives”
You’re right that the first general says that. Trump fires him and three more, until he gets the one that’s says “ok”.
The difference is now Trump *knows for a fact* that he’s right and the general is wrong
I don't. "I don't want to go down *with him*" is the most base of individual risk assessments.
You now know that he is never going down, and he can coordinate criminal behavior among many participants with complete immunity.
I’m not aware of any instances in which Trump was cowed by “if you do that you will, yourself, have committed a crime you can be prosecuted for.”
The only time I know someone invoked that, he did it anyway and that’s how we wound up here.