What may be considered “official acts” and how will a judge interpret the legal lines drawn by the high court in Donald Trump’s federal criminal election obstruction case in D.C.
If Donald Trump is elected president, the finish line for federal prosecutors is Inauguration Day, not Election Day, people familiar with the discussions said.
The White House and campaign has chosen to emphasize happy talk even as some in the party fears he is on path to lose to Trump after his shaky debate performance.
The Supreme Court ruled that former president Donald Trump is immune from prosecution for his “official acts” in office. Here’s what to know about the decision.
The Supreme Court’s conservative supermajority continued to shift the law to the right in 2024 but did not go as far as it could have. Sometimes, it punted.
The decision raised fears that a future president will be able to act with impunity because official acts have been deemed off limits from prosecution.
The Supreme Court ruled that presidents have “absolute” immunity from prosecution of official acts. Today, we break down the historic decision, what it could mean for the former president and the changing limits on presidential power.
The way the system works is that five members of the nine-person Supreme Court can be nominated by presidents who lost the popular vote when they first ran and that four of them can be confirmed by senators representing less than half the…
Campaign advisers believe public polling over the coming weeks will replicate these results, saying concerns about Biden’s age were already taken into account
North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum (R), a potential VP pick for Donald Trump, presented a useful distillation of the right’s response to concerns about democracy.