Supreme Court punts on Trump immunity, taking thorny topic off debate table
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Avery Lotz
The Supreme Court took what could have been a heated topic at Thursday's presidential debate off the table by pushing its decision on former President Trump's legal immunity case for at least 24 hours.
Why it matters: Trump's legal woes are at the center of both candidates' campaigns. For President Biden, it's because he knows some voters might shy away from backing a convicted felon. For Trump, it's because he claims to be the victim of politically motivated prosecutions.
Driving the news: The court is down to its final cases of the term, with the question of presidential immunity looming largest on the outstanding docket.
Trump's two federal cases — one on his alleged efforts to undermine the results of the 2020 election and the other on his handling of classified documents after his time in the White House — hinge on the court's decision.
During more than two hours of oral arguments in April, a majority of the justices appeared poised to grant the presumptive GOP nominee at least a partial victory, but they did not seem to be aligned with the "absolute immunity" argument Trump has pushed.
Several justices seemed to agree that presidents can't be prosecuted for "official acts" — a core topic of the oral arguments that explored whether Trump's efforts to overturn the election were official or unofficial.
The court will most likely kick the case back to lower courts, Axios' Sam Baker reports.
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https://www.axios.com/2024/06/27/trump-immunity-decision-debate-scotus