The U.S. Supreme Court has set April 25 as the date it will hear Donald Trump’s claim of presidential immunity from prosecution on charges related to his efforts to overturn his 2020 election loss - the last day of oral arguments of its current term.

The court released its updated argument calendar a week after it agreed to take up the case and gave the former president a boost by putting on hold the criminal prosecution being pursued by Special Counsel Jack Smith. It previously had disclosed which week it would hear the matter but had not given the precise date.

The justices will review a lower court’s rejection of Trump’s claim of immunity from prosecution because he was president when he took actions aimed at reversing President Joe Biden’s election victory over him.

  • Dark Arc
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    159 months ago

    Literally, it would do nothing. The supreme court will decide what it decides… They don’t need to be elected.

    What does matter is voting in November and getting people to vote for Biden again rather than some third party nutter that won’t even come close to 10% of the vote.

    • @Pipoca@lemmy.world
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      99 months ago

      The last three third party candidates who won more than one state were Strom Thurmond, George Wallace and Theodore Roosevelt.

      The first two won the south on account of regional anger at the civil rights movement.

      Roosevelt split the vote. 50.6% of the country voted for the Republican candidate or a former Republican, but the Democrat won a landslide with only 41% of the popular vote and 81% of the electoral college vote.

      The closest a third party candidate has ever come to winning is Breckenridge, who got 18% of the popular vote and 23.8% of the EC vote running as a Southern Democrat because the south didn’t like Stephen Douglas (who got 29.5% of the popular vote but only won a single state).

      Voting third party basically doesn’t work. Any time its been significant, it’s just caused a spoiler effect.