The Supreme Courtās decision to hear Donald Trumpās claim that he should be shielded from criminal prosecution keeps the justices at the center of election-year controversy for several more months and means any verdict on Trumpās alleged subversion of the 2020 vote will not come before summer.
The countryās highest court wants the final word on the former presidentās assertion of immunity, even if it may ultimately affirm a comprehensive ruling of the lower federal court that rejected Trumpās sweeping claim.
For Trump, Wednesdayās order amounts to another win from the justice system he routinely attacks. The justicesā intervention in the case, Trump v. United States, also marks another milestone in the fraught relationship between the court and the former president.
Cases related to his policies and his personal dealings consistently roiled the justices behind the scenes. At the same time, Trump, who appointed three of the nine justices, significantly influenced the courtās lurch to the right, most notably its 2022 reversal of nearly a half century of abortion rights and reproductive freedom.
The supreme court is picking the next president, just like they did with Bush v. Gore. They are just doing it before the election, instead of after.
This is worse. Bush v Gore was about an election that just happened. It was about an actual case.
Here, the supreme Court took a very narrowly decided case, ignored the decision, and then changed the question being asked to one they want to answer.
Further, the special prosecutor asked them months ago āhey, can you take up this case now rather than delaying everythingā which is something previous courts have done (for example, Bush v Gore).
But instead, they delayed, pushed to the lower court, delayed since more,.
Itās rat fucking to the extreme. The Supreme Court has no legitimacy.
@cogman @negativenull And this surprises you? #BoughtAndPaidFor
Where did I say it was surprising? Itās frustrating.
Lol yeah. If we get to Election Day and Trump is in jail or in Russia while Haley is on the ballot, THAT would be a surprise.
But Trump having his assets messed with, delaying cases, getting the nomination, losing to Biden, and then having his followers do more violent shit? Thatās basically as expected.
No less than three of the current Supreme Court āJusticesā were on Bushās legal team in Bush v. Gore.
Quite. And Bush v. Gore was in 2000; in 2001, just four months into office, Bush appointed Roberts to the DC appellate court, which was a very cushy appointment for a lawyer whoād never even been a judge.
Then, in 2005 when a Supreme Court seat finally opened up (Sandra Day OāConnor retired) Bush gave it to John Roberts. Surprise, surprise.
But wait, thereās more. When Chief Justice William Rehnquist happened to die during Robertsā SCOTUS confirmation hearings, Bush gave Roberts the Chief Justice position.
In other words, in just four short years after Bush v. Gore, John Roberts rocketed from being nothing but a very well-connected lawyer straight up to Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court ā with nothing more than a brief stint as an appellate court judge in between on his resume, and he even got that with zero prior experience on the bench.
Thanks I hate it.
Itās insane that in the US people know the political leaning of their supreme court justices. I donāt know of any other country where thatās the case.
In Germany, the judges of the Bundesverfassungsgericht might have political leanings too, but they can only have that position for up to 12 years (after which they canāt be reelected) and have to abdicate when reaching the age of 68.
Yeah, I think it would take another tumultuous period for America before they could reform. Plenty of corruption in US and other places happen due to legal and logical sophistry.
Thatās quite interesting. Didnāt know that wasnāt the normal and now I have something to look into. It seems like the political leanings is the only thing thatās ever talked about so will be interesting to see how they do it else where.
This is most Americans whenever this sort of thing comes up. Most Americans are very unaware of anything that happens beyond US borders, and assume that the way things happen in the US is normal worldwide. Meanwhile, most of the rest of the world is exposed to news and other media from the US as well as many other countries.
If you live in Australia you get British media, Aussie media and US media. If you live in the UK you get UK media, American media and European media.
Even in non-English countries, Hollywood media is everywhere, even if itās translated to other languages. Hollywood offers a distorted view of the US, but itās still media made with US ideas and biases, so it exposes the rest of the world to how the US thinks. The closest most Americans get to foreign media is an occasional break-out hit like Squid Game.
Itās frustrating how isolated the US is, because decisions made in the US affect the whole world. But, when the people making those decisions donāt know much of anything about the world outside the US, they often donāt know that thereās a better (or at least different) way.
Jesus Fucking Christ dude, I was talking about judges and you took this opportunity to rant for multiple paragraphs about media. Itās the fucking internet, I can get news from multiple sources and not just āsquid gamesā. Commenter above talked about German judges political leanings, as Iām sure plenty of other countries do as well after researching further on it. UK and Australia are the outliers (with Canada, still looking into them) and have their own sets of problems, instead of talking about those youāve decided to make an anti-US shitpost.
Looking into it further, seems like they all have their failings and political stances are included in all of them. Your high horse just has a nice robe thrown around itās wooden legs so no one can see whatās going on. If you want to continue talking about ājudgesā Iām all for it, coming to see your wall of text about US media is just fucking sad. ānow I have something to look into, will be interesting to see how they do it else whereā.