Alas, I'm sure there was just no way to do it otherwise.
Just outright say you believe that in the specific case of Donald Trump, due process should be suspended. You've done everything in your power to avoid just being out with it.
Out of interest, how many delays have there been now to Trump's judicial processes? It must be into the hefty double digits, a privilege not afforded to regular joes-- hey, and remember when he explicitly said that delaying was part of the strategy?
Yeah, that's just how the American legal system works, especially in cases in which the charges and evidence against the accused are as specious as they are in this. Any high-profile criminal trial gets bogged down in discovery, motions to exclude or admit evidence, and motions to dismiss from either side as goalposts shift.
That's not Trump and his counsel saying they're acting in bad faith, that's Trump and his counsel saying they're fighting the case. That's due process, which again if you believe due process should be suspended for Trump and Trump alone, just say it so that your opinions can be discarded as the ignorant nakedly partisan trash they are.
Not "tacitly admitting". It is a political question...
Good, then you agree lower courts ruled in error and the case should have been dismissed.
...The Supreme Court is a political organ, stocked with political appointees willing to use whatever argument is most convenient for the rulings they find politically preferable.
Ah, "move the goalposts" it is by simply ignoring that "political question" is
a specific doctrine in US case law, as laid out by
Baker v. Carr, 389 US 186 (1962). Or, you just have absolutely no idea what I'm even talking about. Being
this isn't the first time you've demonstrated ignorance of how US courts actually work while trying to speak as if you had any authority or credibility on the matter, I'm legitimately unsure.
Baker v. Carr said:
Prominent on the surface of any case held to involve a political question is found a textually demonstrable constitutional commitment of the issue to a coordinate political department; or a lack of judicially discoverable and manageable standards for resolving it; or the impossibility of deciding without an initial policy determination of a kind clearly for non judicial discretion; or the impossibility of a court's undertaking independent resolution without expressing lack of the respect due coordinate branches of government; or an unusual need for unquestioning adherence to a political decision already made; or the potentiality of embarrassment from multifarious pronouncements by various departments on one question.
Those are the six prongs of the Baker test, any one of which is sufficient to demonstrate the case before the court to be a political question. In this case,
- Trying (and convicting) a currently-serving or former US president for alleged crime while in office is an enumerated power expressly delegated to Congress.
- There is no remedial action available to the court, as even if the judiciary had the enumerated power to remove a president from office, Trump is already out.
[This alone indicates the case is, as I pointed out, moot.]
- The root of the case is to determine Trump's eligibility to run again for president in 2024, which is a policy question not under judicial purview as ballot access for those standing trial and convicted felons is a matter of statute. To rule in this case is equivalent to determining Trump's eligibility to run again for president in 2024, and therefore outside the courts' enumerated responsibility.
[This is the only justification prosecutors can provide to get around mootness, which is what they did.]
- Being impeachment is the enumerated power of Congress, to override Congressional determination is a
prima facie demonstration of lack of respect towards Congress.
[And as Congress already impeached and acquitted Trump once for these allegations, not only is it double jeopardy, but the judiciary would be implementing ex post facto law to rule after-the-fact Trump was guilty of what he's already been acquitted for once, and by extension his ballot access would be retroactively revoked.]
- And not only is it a
prima facie demonstration of lack of respect towards Congress, to rule differently from Congress invokes the potentiality of embarrassment on one or both parties.
Again, failing any
one prong of the Baker test indicates the question before the court is a political question. This case failed
five. And again, responsibility for this falls not on the Supreme Court but rather the
lower courts which, out of anti-Trump partisan zeal, paved the way for the Supreme Court to (
quite predictably) go scorched earth so as to prevent another case like this from coming up again.
I said three years ago to be careful what you wish for, as you just might get it. AKA, "fuck around and find out". Handpicked liberal prosecutors and weapons-grade idiot district court justices fucked around, and they certainly found out.