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There are two elements to the immunity decision that are particularly extreme in a way that many will miss: (1) motive is irrelevant and (2) immune acts are not just excluded from prosecution, they’re excluded from evidence. /1
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/2 Motive being irrelevant means that the President can do a thing for expressly lawless reasons so long as the thing is within the extremely broad range of official acts. So question isn’t “can the President conspire to defraud,” it’s “can the President call a state official about an election.”
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/3 The problem is that almost anything can be shoehorned into an official act depending on how you characterize it or the level of generality you use. The Court’s “well of course a President has to use due care that election laws are enforced” hints at this.
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/4 More powerful, to a trial lawyer, is the prohibition on the use of immune acts as evidence. In almost every other context (save Speech & Debate), you can use things as evidence when you can’t prosecute for them. If I say “this man must die,” that’s usually protected by the First Amendment ….
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/5 …but it’s obvious that my statement can be introduced as evidence if I’m accused of murder. Contrast this type of Presidential immunity. Say Donald Trump, days into his second term, meets with the Department of Justice and demands a way to deport all Muslims, reviling them as subhuman.
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So is this “look into emigrating” bad, or merely “oh, look, SCOTUS is being SCOTUS again” bad?
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We're going to have to fight this out bad. I don't see a way to continue intact and it only takes one announcement from Sacramento to throw the entire US economy into a tailspin and with that, the US loses the ability to issue bonds.
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Sacramento as in, leaving?
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And that the State is willing to take a pro rata share of Federal debt, first come, first served. Once that happens, the Treasury market goes into a tailspin and the next day, just about every bank in the US fails.