Sotomayor: If the president decides that his rival is a corrupt person and he orders the military to assasinate him, is that within his official acts to which he has immunity?

“That could well be an official act,” Trump lawyer John Sauer says

  • @rsuri@lemmy.world
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    377 months ago

    The main Trump lawyer defense has been to say that the military has it’s own rules against executing such an order. But if Trump promises them pardons, those rules wouldn’t be enforced, and the whole thing would be “legal”.

    The pardon power is kinda the root of all evil here, because even if the court finds that Trump isn’t immune (which they almost certainly will), that just brings up the next question which is can the president pardon himself? I’m amazed that after the Trump years and his corrupt pardons there’s been no effort to limit the pardon power.

    • Doc Avid Mornington
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      307 months ago

      The pardon power should be eliminated, and that’s been clear since Nixon was pardoned. Sure, just about every president has a feel-good set of pardons, people who were railroaded by bad laws and bad court practices, but those corrections are only a tiny fraction of the outrageous injustices committed by our system, and their existence is used to justify the injustice in the first place - “oh but surely there will be a pardon for people who really need it” - as if depending on a single King-figure at the top to make good decisions, instead of improving systems, was ever a good idea. But in the meantime, just about every president also has a list of political pardons they trade for favors, or use for people who committed crimes on behalf of the president, or the party. Why the fuck does it make any sense at all to say “hey, this person was elected head of the executive branch, they should be able to just shield people from the rule of law”, if the rule of law is an important basis of a free democracy? It’s weird, when you think about it. End the pardon.