Initial reactions Trump's claims for "absolute immunity" have been rejected by most political commentators and two lower courts. In a unanimous ruling by the three-judge panel of the D.C. Court of Appeals, the court stated that if Trump's theory of constitutional authority were accepted, it would "collapse our system of separated powers" and put a president above the law.
Charlie Savage of
The New York Times wrote that Trump's immunity claim challenged "a hallmark of American-style democracy: its suspicion of concentrated power". Savage further stated that "rather than a presidency at least theoretically checked by law, the country would be ruled by presidents who could openly commit official crimes with impunity, so long as enough allied lawmakers remained sufficiently loyal to block any impeachment." Writing for
Politico, former federal prosecutor Ankush Khardori wrote that Trump's claims were "ridiculous", criticized the Supreme Court for not dismissing them immediately and thus potentially delaying Trump's criminal trials until after the
2024 presidential election, and criticized the court for "issuing transparently political rulings that are clearly aligned with the political priorities of the Republican Party".
Reactions to oral arguments Following oral arguments on April25, reactions to the Supreme Court seemingly entertaining some form of presidential immunity for Trump was overwhelmingly negative from a variety of historians, journalists, commentators, political scientists, and constitutional scholars. Many referred to Trump's arguments as those of a "
king"; heavily criticized conservative justices for seemingly expressing more concern for preventing hypothetical future prosecutions of presidents; accused court conservatives for appearing unconcerned and giving serious thought as to whether assassinations, bribes, and military coups were protected "official" acts; accused court conservatives of being pro-Trump and misinterpreting the Constitution; and accused the court of being on the cusp of losing all remaining legitimacy. Particular criticism was raised towards Justice
Samuel Alito, who asked during the oral arguments, "Now if an incumbent who loses a very close, hotly contested election knows that a real possibility after leaving office is not that the president is going to be able to go off into a peaceful retirement, but that the president may be criminally prosecuted by a bitter political opponent, will that not lead us into a cycle that destabilizes the functioning of our country as a democracy?" Journalists stated that in the history of the United States, the
transfer of presidential power had been peaceful save for the events of January6, making Alito's question a means to treat Trump as a
new normal. Other criticism was levied at court conservatives seemingly abandoning their professed belief in
originalism that was used to overturn the right to an abortion in
Roe v. Wade (1973) to create a basis of presidential immunity that does not exist in the Constitution. Democratic Representative
Jamie Raskin responded to oral arguments by saying that "they should move the Supreme Court over to the
RNC headquarters, because they're acting like a bunch of partisan operatives." In an interview with
Meet the Press, Senate minority leader
Mitch McConnell, a Republican, stated that he did not believe presidents should be immune from prosecution for actions committed in office.
Reactions to the ruling Support Trump, posting on
Truth Social, remarked of the decision "BIG WIN FOR OUR CONSTITUTION AND DEMOCRACY. PROUD TO BE AN AMERICAN!" Trump's legal team and other commentators believed that the ruling could affect the result of the
classified documents case. Trump and his legal team also expressed interest in using the ruling to set aside his
convictions in New York State. The decision was also supported by many Republican politicians, including
JD Vance,
Jim Jordan,
Elise Stefanik, and
Steve Scalise. Former
Attorney General William Barr dismissed Sotomayor's dissent, as well as other criticisms of the ruling, arguing that Sotomayor's hypothetical scenarios "[make] no sense whatsoever". Barr argued that "horror stories" surrounding the decision were irrelevant, as the president's official powers do not give him the authority to assassinate political rivals. Legal expert and
CNN commentator Timothy C. Parlatore wrote in support of the ruling, arguing it would benefit both Republican and Democratic administrations, by protecting them from "overzealous or politically motivated prosecutions". Parlatore also dismissed criticisms of the decision as "breathless" and "greatly overblown". Legal commentator and law professor
Jonathan H. Adler wrote in support of the ruling, although he sided with Barrett's concurrence as opposed to Roberts's majority ruling. Adler argued that while presidential immunity may lack explicit textual basis, it is nonetheless a logical "consequence of the nature of executive power". The
Las Vegas Review-Journal wrote in support of the decision, arguing that the majority ruling settled on a middle ground between absolute immunity and none at all. Legal commentators
David B. Rivkin and
Elizabeth Price Foley of
The Wall Street Journal also supported the decision, arguing that the ruling protected the presidency itself, by preserving the ability of the government to function.
Opposition The decision was widely criticized by legal experts and historians, as well as Democratic politicians. Former White House Counsel
John Dean said
Richard Nixon "would have survived" the
Watergate scandal under the ruling "because the evidence against him was based on official acts the Supreme Court has deemed immune from prosecution". Several constitutional law experts have stated that the ruling would, in fact, make a president immune from prosecution for ordering the assassination of a political rival, as commanding the military falls as a part of the "core powers" the Constitution bestows on the office. Former federal prosecutor Ankush Khardori wrote that the ruling is not based in either textualism or originalism, that it effectively "rewrote the Constitution", and "may go down as one of the most brazenly political decisions in the history of the Supreme Court".
The Washington Post ran a headline stating, "Supreme Court's Trump immunity ruling poses risk for democracy, experts say", and reported that multiple legal experts have raised fears that a future president could now act with impunity. Representative
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez called the decision "an assault on American democracy" and introduced
articles of impeachment against justices Thomas and Alito. President Biden described the Supreme Court's ruling as setting a "dangerous precedent", which "almost certainly means that there are virtually no limits on what a president can do" since "limits will be self-imposed by the president alone". Biden warned that Trump returning as president would be particularly dangerous under the court's ruling. "No one, no one is above the law, not even the president of the United States. [With] today's Supreme Court decision on presidential immunity, that fundamentally changed for all practical purposes", Biden said. Former federal judge
J. Michael Luttig stated: "There is no support whatsoever in the Constitution or even in the Supreme Court's precedents, for the past 200 years, for this reprehensible decision by the Supreme Court. Needless to say, the decision is irreconcilable with America's democracy, the Constitution, and the rule of law." He stated that "America's democracy and the rule of law are this country's heart and soul. Our democracy and the rule of law are what have made America the envy of the world and the beacon of freedom to the world for almost 250 years. Now, today, the Supreme Court cut that heart and soul out of America."
Political cartoons addressed the ruling from various angles. One political cartoon by John Deering focuses on the
Lincoln Memorial, where a saddened
Abraham Lincoln holds a newspaper with a headline that reads, "SUPREME COURT HANDS TRUMP BROAD IMMUNITY". Next to him is a passage from the
Gettysburg Address: "That we here highly resolve these dead shall not have died in vainthat the nation, shall have a new birth of freedomand that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth." Another political cartoon by
Michael Ramirez shows the Contemplation of Justice statue in front of the
Supreme Court Building looking somber and long faced, speaking to the Blindfolded Justice statuette in her right hand, saying, "So, presidents are allowed to commit crimes, as long as it is part of their official duties?" A caption beneath the cartoon reads, "CONTEMPLATING JUSTICE". A third political cartoon by Lee Judge takes a less solemn tone, showing a group of obviously intoxicated Supreme Court justices in the "Supreme Court Lounge" drinking from a keg of "Trump moonshine". One figure in the doorway says to another, "It's the highest court in the land." Satirical responses in the press also varied in their approach. One headline in
The Washington Posts opinion section read, "The Supreme Court rules to restore the monarchy", while
The Onion ran stories with headlines such as "Supreme Court Rules Trump Has Immunity For Any Crime Committed Between
9 And 5" and "New Trump Ad Shows Montage Of People He'll Kill If Elected". Multiple news outlets compared the ruling to the
Enabling Act of 1933 in Germany.
Attempts to overturn On July 25, Democratic representative
Joseph Morelle proposed a
constitutional amendment to reverse the ruling, with the support of more than forty other members of Congress. Law professor and former federal prosecutor
Kimberly Wehle wrote an op-ed supporting Morelle's amendment shortly after. Biden had previously announced his plan to introduce a separate amendment, known as the No One Is Above the Law Amendment, to eliminate all "immunity for crimes a former president committed while in office". On August 1, Senator
Chuck Schumer introduced the No Kings Act in the Senate, a proposed bill to abolish presidential immunity and declare that only Congress could grant immunity to federal law. The Act would also limit judicial review of its own provisions by providing a statute of limitations (180-days for
facial challenges and 90-days for as-applied challenges), channeling jurisdiction to the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia and D.C. Circuit (with the Supreme Court having
no appellate jurisdiction), requiring proof of unconstitutionality by
clear and convincing evidence, and forbidding
sua sponte relief based on its unconstitutionality. The bill was sponsored by more than two dozen Democratic senators, but did not move forward in the 118th Congress. ==Impacts on cases==