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Transcripts For MSNBCW Alex 20240704 : comparemela.com
Transcripts For MSNBCW Alex 20240704 : comparemela.com
Transcripts For MSNBCW Alex 20240704
Appellate court. By merely deciding to do this, though, the court has essentially upended the attempt to hold donald trump accountable for his actions to subvert democracy. In fact, the court may have ended that attempt entirely. This decision is also certain to reshape the 2024 president ial race, and it will likely play a
Determinative Role
in its outcome. As much as the significance of this ruling is already apparent, the full consequences here hinge on the timing. In it the
Supreme Court
said it would hear
Oral Arguments
in the case the week of april 22 nd. Now, april 22nd is not close to today, and well get into exactly why exactly the court didnt choose a date a lot sooner than that, but april 22nd also on its face sort of seems pretty far from the november election. Its not. Because when you start crunching the numbers and looking at how a trial could actually time out after the
Supreme Court
makes its decision here, the window in which trump could face trial, the window of that happening before the november election is incrediblyr small. The first thing you have to take into account is that the prep time that the judge who is overseeing this case, judge tanya chutkan, the prep time she allottedti for trump and his lawyers has been effectively stalled. Judge chutkan initially gave donald trump and his legal team seven months to preparein for ts case,o from the day he was indicted to t the original tria date in march. Back in december, on december 7thde trumps legal team asked r a pause, a stay in this case while trumps
Immunity Claims
were appealed. And judge chutkan granted it. And thatan pause didnt just freeze the case, it also paused all the prep time as well. Trumps team still had 88 days left to prepare before the case was paused and the expectation now isnt that they would still get those 88 days or something similar to prep when this case is unpaused. So thats point number 1. Even ifmb the
Supreme Court
rul this case can go forward the day after they hear
Oral Arguments
, the trial just cant start right away. Trumps team would get another 88 g days. Now, point number 2 is about how long the trial would actually take. Last year before the case had been paused, potential jurors for the case in the d. C. Area received this prescreening form. You see it all on the screen, and it specified the trial would last approximately three months afterpp
Jury Selection
is completed. And
Special Counsel
jack smith and judge chutkan have also signaled were looking at
Something Like
a threemonth trial for this. Lets assume 88 days for trumps team to finish their prep before the trial, and lets assume the three months theeded for the trial itself is a nice round 90 days. That comes out to 178 days. That is how long it would take for this trial to actually conclude after we get a decision back from the
Supreme Court
. So lets go back to the calender. The election is november 5, an
Oral Argument
on trumps president ial
Immunity Claims
at the
Supreme Court
is set for the week of april 22nd. This would be the fastest possible scenario here as everything stands at present. The
Supreme Court
meet monday april 22prnd and they make a decision the next day, tuesday, april 23rd. If we add 178 days to tuesday, april 23rd, that would mean the trial would finish on wednesday, october 16th. 20 days before the general election. That is what we are working with here in the best case scenario. Joining me now is neil katyal, former acting solicitorgeneral of the
United States
and under president obama. And
Dahlia Lithwick
Senior Editor
at slateor covering the courts. Thank you both forco being here tonight. I justor first want b to start your reaction to the courts decision here, neil, and the your n level of optimism about this trial actually happening before theri election. Yeah, i have a lot of institutional respect, alex, for the
Supreme Court
. I was there this morning with my team arguing a different case, and yet i find myself gravely concerned by this decision, by the
Supreme Court
to hear the case until april. Im u gravely concerned for the rule of law. Gr iru mean, donald trump has a bos legal argument here, and the
Supreme Court
iser spending precious months trying to hear it. And the courts known for a lot of things and certainly efficiency is notce one with th. And i think the best that can be said is theyve left a schedule leaves everyone a bit unhappy. Its too fast for donald trump but too slow for jack smith and creates far too much uncertainty about the preservation of the rule of law and the outcome. Later we can talk about those dates, 178 days and 90, 88 days. I think theres still a strong possibility thei case could be tried against donald trump before the election, and i can go into detail later about that. But ier certainly think right n i am concerned. Yeah, and i want to talk about the mechanisms by which both doj,me the
Special Counsel
and judge chutkan might try to shorten that 178 days. First, dahlia, neal raises a point in thea, world of possibility the
Supreme Court
thinks somehowib reaching a compromise decision here by having this on a time line thats faster than what trump wants which is next nebruary and slower thanbr jack smith would have liked which of course is in march. I think we were hoping a week ago or twoop weeks ago the compromise trump might prevail in the colorado case and lose absolutely in this
Immunity Case
. That was supposed to be the ground bargain. Right now were starting to do a paradox where were talking smallerer and smaller halves of what we thought might be a win. I think the real issue for me, and neal just made this point, is that the court knows how to act quickly when it needs to, and iten certainly acted very quickly in that colorado, you know, bumping him off the ballot case. In fact, it acted much more quickly. I think one of the things that worries me about this case is the
Sensehi The Court
tells us what an emergency it is, and its done that in case after case over the last couple of years. Doesnt seem to feel that theres t any emergency or any exigent kind of shot clock goinc on here. And for those of us doing the math youre doing and that neals doinge trying to eke ou some kind of case on the merits before the election, what the court did today was sort of events sort of no concern for the fact its kind of democracy itself against this shot clock, and they seem to be bothered by neither of toez. Neal, to dahlias point if the
Supreme Court
doesnt see the shotth clock, the judge doe and the
Special Counsel
does. You mention there might be a way to shorten the time frame of 178 days. Is there a way to narrow the prep time window once the case is returned to her assuming, of course, that the
Supreme Court
does not rule in trumps favor on the
Immunity Claim
. Yes. Even before we get to judge chutkan the question is when is the court going to decide the case . And i thinkid dahlia makes suchn important point in saying, look, this is a court that moves quickly. I was a lawyer for bush vs. Gore, and that was 36 days start to finish. And 3 i remember we had the
Supreme Court
we had four days to brief it. We go from four to 40 days in the
Supreme Court
. And i do hope the court i hope theyth listen to the pressure o the
American Public
to decide this case quickly. Judge chutkan in the interim does have some options. So she said she was going to give donald trump 88 days to prepare for his trial, but she said that well before trump, you know, had thell
Supreme Court
grant his
Immunity Case
, and trump and his lawyers can walk and chew gum at the same time. They dont need all those 88 days. So judge chutkan could even now say,ve look, if this case comes back to me, donald trump you start working now because youre not going to get the full 88 days. That was in a world you didnt have months and months of preexisting delaymo like you d now. Dahlia, in addition to the prep time she could shrink, is there something jack smith can do . I know
Andrew Weissmann
suggested they trim the charges against trump. Do you think thats at all likely and what do they take out . I think jack smith has dog udly made the case time after timeca to the court youve got do this quickly. And in some sense as weve said, weve had a bit of a split the baby today where he doesnt get what he wants but donald trump doesnt get what he wants. Whether he can, i dont know, sort of hive off some of this, make a it a tighter this was a pretty tight case compare todayig it
Fani Willis Sprawlin
case in fulton county. This was a pretty tight case. I suppose theres a way to tighten it, but i think
The Real Thing
we have to ask ourselves is, you know, are we going to wait for weeks and weeks and weeks for somebody to write, say, awe dissent in this case a the
Supreme Court
, and then its coming down at the end of june. So i think what i worry about more than anythingrr is no matt what judge chutkan or jack smith can do, if you have four votes of the
Supreme Court
of three votes that want to do the run out the clock play, i think they can kind of keep this thing stalled under much, much longer. Do you read, neal, to dahlias point,ne the fact they dont seem tont be working expeditiously and they know how to work quickly when they want to, i mean do you read anything in that in terms of how much theyre going to favor trump in all of this . It seems clear that they understand the political reality here. I mean how could you not. Do you think that suggests they might actually find in his favor on these ludicrous claims of president ial immunity . Alex, because they are so ludicrous. No, i do not expect any justices tot side with donald trump on e merits of this claim. Its crazy, and he even said so. His lawyers back when he was being impeached back on
January 6ckth
he says you cant impeach me, the only remedy is indict me after i leave office. And now hes saying you cant indictca me because i have absolute immunity. I take dahlias point about the court and maybe dissent or
Something Like
t that. Butke i think that when the cou hears this case and realizes just how bogus
Donald Trumps
claims are, decide it quickly. And even if theres a dissent the
Chief Justiceer
has the pow over members of the majority to release the
Majority Opinion
without waiting for the dissent. Andth in a case like this with e
American Public
th deserving so mucham answers about
What Happed On January 6th
and a formal trial to get to the bottom of it, i sure hope thats what will happen once we get there. Yeah, to the to the rulings that have preceded the
Supreme Court
taking it up, dahlia, i mean the
Appellate Court
ruling was i think you called itt a bench slap. Like, there was no room for entertaining any legality in trumps argument, and yet the
Supreme Court
has taken it up, and i would imagine if youre sitting on the
Circuit Court
of appeals, and youre one of the judges that took your time to write y a very thoughtful wide ranging opinion about how this thing did not hold water, this
Immunity Claim
, sortth of what e the implications there that the
Supreme Court
decided to take it upd anyway . I mean, ill go you one better. Dont forget m when the colorad case was argued, when anderson was argued at the
Supreme Court
, the court didnt want to touch the question of the insurrection and
Donald Trumps
responsibility for the insurrection, and in fact
Donald Trumps
own lawyer was like, yeah, that was super bad, right . So we dont even have a court that wants to touch the merits of, you know,
How Bad January 6th
was, and i would add to that, you know,
The American A Public
has atseen, you know, th january 6th commission, has seen the impeachment trial. They have seen, you know, two e. Jean carroll verdicts. They have seen a verdict in new york in the trump financial misconduct case. There is is a pile of unrefuted evidence including the finding at the colorado
Supreme Court
that donald trump insurected. All that stuff has not been touched as best i can see by the u. S. Supreme court, im not confident they want to touch it, and just to neals point i think its important to understand when you get to the merits, when you get past all the sort of shell games about time [the court feeling it needs to weigh in on this, it couldnt do a summary, we still have not had a single signal its bulletproof. I think its still bulletproof. I think were trying to figure out how toe get there. All i have to say is maybe the
Supreme Court
justices should look at how judge engoron, how judge kaplan, judge marshan handled their cases in new york wherend we get things n when it comes to
Holding People
accountable. Thank you both for joining me tonight. Really appreciate it. We have lots more ahead this evening including the
Breaking News
that an illinois judge has disqualified donald trump from the 2024 president ial ballot over his actions on january 6th. Supreme court, over to you. But first more on this stunning decision by the
Supreme Court
to entertain
Donald Trumps
Immunity Claims
. Which justices wanted today hear this case. Thats coming up next. St wantedr this case. Thats coming up next. Why choose a sleep number smart bed . Can it keep me warm when im cold . Wait. No im always hot. Sleep number does that. Now, save up to 1,000 on select sleep number smart beds. Plus, special financing. Shop now at sleepnumber. Com so, youve got the power of xfinity at home. Now take it outside with
Xfinity Mobile
. Like speed . Its the
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Xfinity Mobile
today for the u. S. Supreme court to agree to hear a case, at least four justices must vote to take it up. So not a majority, although it can be. 4 out of 9 is the bare minimum. Its the magic number. And now with the news the
Supreme Court
has decided to hear
Donald Trumps
claim he is somehow immune from criminal prosecution, it begs the question which of these nine justices decided to take up this case, and why did it take the court so very long to do so . After all, it took just 51 days from the time frump was kicked off the ballot in colorado on
December 19th
to when the
Supreme Court
heard
Oral Arguments
for that case, the
14th Amendment Case
on february 8th. Now, on december 11, 2023,
Special Counsel
jack smith asked the
Supreme Court
to quickly weigh in on trumps president ial immunity appeal and to do so early, which the court rejected. And now by the time we get to april 22nd, which is when the court plans to hear
Oral Arguments
in this
Immunity Case
, it would have been 133 days since the court was first asked to hear the appeal. So the case is curious, around 50 days when it appears to help trump, and 130 days when it doesnt. Joining me now is mark joseph sterne, and elie mccaul. First lets talk about the optics. Its unsigned, there are no dissents. Im asking you to answer maybe the unanswerable, but do you think its possible this was a unanimous decision, the liberal justices on the
Court Cosigned
taking this case up . I highly doubt it. As you said you only need four votes to take the case at all. It was probably the
Determinative Role<\/a> in its outcome. As much as the significance of this ruling is already apparent, the full consequences here hinge on the timing. In it the
Supreme Court<\/a> said it would hear
Oral Arguments<\/a> in the case the week of april 22 nd. Now, april 22nd is not close to today, and well get into exactly why exactly the court didnt choose a date a lot sooner than that, but april 22nd also on its face sort of seems pretty far from the november election. Its not. Because when you start crunching the numbers and looking at how a trial could actually time out after the
Supreme Court<\/a> makes its decision here, the window in which trump could face trial, the window of that happening before the november election is incrediblyr small. The first thing you have to take into account is that the prep time that the judge who is overseeing this case, judge tanya chutkan, the prep time she allottedti for trump and his lawyers has been effectively stalled. Judge chutkan initially gave donald trump and his legal team seven months to preparein for ts case,o from the day he was indicted to t the original tria date in march. Back in december, on december 7thde trumps legal team asked r a pause, a stay in this case while trumps
Immunity Claims<\/a> were appealed. And judge chutkan granted it. And thatan pause didnt just freeze the case, it also paused all the prep time as well. Trumps team still had 88 days left to prepare before the case was paused and the expectation now isnt that they would still get those 88 days or something similar to prep when this case is unpaused. So thats point number 1. Even ifmb the
Supreme Court<\/a> rul this case can go forward the day after they hear
Oral Arguments<\/a>, the trial just cant start right away. Trumps team would get another 88 g days. Now, point number 2 is about how long the trial would actually take. Last year before the case had been paused, potential jurors for the case in the d. C. Area received this prescreening form. You see it all on the screen, and it specified the trial would last approximately three months afterpp
Jury Selection<\/a> is completed. And
Special Counsel<\/a> jack smith and judge chutkan have also signaled were looking at
Something Like<\/a> a threemonth trial for this. Lets assume 88 days for trumps team to finish their prep before the trial, and lets assume the three months theeded for the trial itself is a nice round 90 days. That comes out to 178 days. That is how long it would take for this trial to actually conclude after we get a decision back from the
Supreme Court<\/a>. So lets go back to the calender. The election is november 5, an
Oral Argument<\/a> on trumps president ial
Immunity Claims<\/a> at the
Supreme Court<\/a> is set for the week of april 22nd. This would be the fastest possible scenario here as everything stands at present. The
Supreme Court<\/a> meet monday april 22prnd and they make a decision the next day, tuesday, april 23rd. If we add 178 days to tuesday, april 23rd, that would mean the trial would finish on wednesday, october 16th. 20 days before the general election. That is what we are working with here in the best case scenario. Joining me now is neil katyal, former acting solicitorgeneral of the
United States<\/a> and under president obama. And
Dahlia Lithwick<\/a>
Senior Editor<\/a> at slateor covering the courts. Thank you both forco being here tonight. I justor first want b to start your reaction to the courts decision here, neil, and the your n level of optimism about this trial actually happening before theri election. Yeah, i have a lot of institutional respect, alex, for the
Supreme Court<\/a>. I was there this morning with my team arguing a different case, and yet i find myself gravely concerned by this decision, by the
Supreme Court<\/a> to hear the case until april. Im u gravely concerned for the rule of law. Gr iru mean, donald trump has a bos legal argument here, and the
Supreme Court<\/a> iser spending precious months trying to hear it. And the courts known for a lot of things and certainly efficiency is notce one with th. And i think the best that can be said is theyve left a schedule leaves everyone a bit unhappy. Its too fast for donald trump but too slow for jack smith and creates far too much uncertainty about the preservation of the rule of law and the outcome. Later we can talk about those dates, 178 days and 90, 88 days. I think theres still a strong possibility thei case could be tried against donald trump before the election, and i can go into detail later about that. But ier certainly think right n i am concerned. Yeah, and i want to talk about the mechanisms by which both doj,me the
Special Counsel<\/a> and judge chutkan might try to shorten that 178 days. First, dahlia, neal raises a point in thea, world of possibility the
Supreme Court<\/a> thinks somehowib reaching a compromise decision here by having this on a time line thats faster than what trump wants which is next nebruary and slower thanbr jack smith would have liked which of course is in march. I think we were hoping a week ago or twoop weeks ago the compromise trump might prevail in the colorado case and lose absolutely in this
Immunity Case<\/a>. That was supposed to be the ground bargain. Right now were starting to do a paradox where were talking smallerer and smaller halves of what we thought might be a win. I think the real issue for me, and neal just made this point, is that the court knows how to act quickly when it needs to, and iten certainly acted very quickly in that colorado, you know, bumping him off the ballot case. In fact, it acted much more quickly. I think one of the things that worries me about this case is the
Sensehi The Court<\/a> tells us what an emergency it is, and its done that in case after case over the last couple of years. Doesnt seem to feel that theres t any emergency or any exigent kind of shot clock goinc on here. And for those of us doing the math youre doing and that neals doinge trying to eke ou some kind of case on the merits before the election, what the court did today was sort of events sort of no concern for the fact its kind of democracy itself against this shot clock, and they seem to be bothered by neither of toez. Neal, to dahlias point if the
Supreme Court<\/a> doesnt see the shotth clock, the judge doe and the
Special Counsel<\/a> does. You mention there might be a way to shorten the time frame of 178 days. Is there a way to narrow the prep time window once the case is returned to her assuming, of course, that the
Supreme Court<\/a> does not rule in trumps favor on the
Immunity Claim<\/a>. Yes. Even before we get to judge chutkan the question is when is the court going to decide the case . And i thinkid dahlia makes suchn important point in saying, look, this is a court that moves quickly. I was a lawyer for bush vs. Gore, and that was 36 days start to finish. And 3 i remember we had the
Supreme Court<\/a> we had four days to brief it. We go from four to 40 days in the
Supreme Court<\/a>. And i do hope the court i hope theyth listen to the pressure o the
American Public<\/a> to decide this case quickly. Judge chutkan in the interim does have some options. So she said she was going to give donald trump 88 days to prepare for his trial, but she said that well before trump, you know, had thell
Supreme Court<\/a> grant his
Immunity Case<\/a>, and trump and his lawyers can walk and chew gum at the same time. They dont need all those 88 days. So judge chutkan could even now say,ve look, if this case comes back to me, donald trump you start working now because youre not going to get the full 88 days. That was in a world you didnt have months and months of preexisting delaymo like you d now. Dahlia, in addition to the prep time she could shrink, is there something jack smith can do . I know
Andrew Weissmann<\/a> suggested they trim the charges against trump. Do you think thats at all likely and what do they take out . I think jack smith has dog udly made the case time after timeca to the court youve got do this quickly. And in some sense as weve said, weve had a bit of a split the baby today where he doesnt get what he wants but donald trump doesnt get what he wants. Whether he can, i dont know, sort of hive off some of this, make a it a tighter this was a pretty tight case compare todayig it
Fani Willis Sprawlin<\/a> case in fulton county. This was a pretty tight case. I suppose theres a way to tighten it, but i think
The Real Thing<\/a> we have to ask ourselves is, you know, are we going to wait for weeks and weeks and weeks for somebody to write, say, awe dissent in this case a the
Supreme Court<\/a>, and then its coming down at the end of june. So i think what i worry about more than anythingrr is no matt what judge chutkan or jack smith can do, if you have four votes of the
Supreme Court<\/a> of three votes that want to do the run out the clock play, i think they can kind of keep this thing stalled under much, much longer. Do you read, neal, to dahlias point,ne the fact they dont seem tont be working expeditiously and they know how to work quickly when they want to, i mean do you read anything in that in terms of how much theyre going to favor trump in all of this . It seems clear that they understand the political reality here. I mean how could you not. Do you think that suggests they might actually find in his favor on these ludicrous claims of president ial immunity . Alex, because they are so ludicrous. No, i do not expect any justices tot side with donald trump on e merits of this claim. Its crazy, and he even said so. His lawyers back when he was being impeached back on
January 6ckth<\/a> he says you cant impeach me, the only remedy is indict me after i leave office. And now hes saying you cant indictca me because i have absolute immunity. I take dahlias point about the court and maybe dissent or
Something Like<\/a>t that. Butke i think that when the cou hears this case and realizes just how bogus
Donald Trumps<\/a> claims are, decide it quickly. And even if theres a dissent the
Chief Justiceer<\/a> has the pow over members of the majority to release the
Majority Opinion<\/a> without waiting for the dissent. Andth in a case like this with e
American Public<\/a>th deserving so mucham answers about
What Happed On January 6th<\/a> and a formal trial to get to the bottom of it, i sure hope thats what will happen once we get there. Yeah, to the to the rulings that have preceded the
Supreme Court<\/a> taking it up, dahlia, i mean the
Appellate Court<\/a> ruling was i think you called itt a bench slap. Like, there was no room for entertaining any legality in trumps argument, and yet the
Supreme Court<\/a> has taken it up, and i would imagine if youre sitting on the
Circuit Court<\/a> of appeals, and youre one of the judges that took your time to write y a very thoughtful wide ranging opinion about how this thing did not hold water, this
Immunity Claim<\/a>, sortth of what e the implications there that the
Supreme Court<\/a> decided to take it upd anyway . I mean, ill go you one better. Dont forget m when the colorad case was argued, when anderson was argued at the
Supreme Court<\/a>, the court didnt want to touch the question of the insurrection and
Donald Trumps<\/a> responsibility for the insurrection, and in fact
Donald Trumps<\/a> own lawyer was like, yeah, that was super bad, right . So we dont even have a court that wants to touch the merits of, you know,
How Bad January 6th<\/a> was, and i would add to that, you know,
The American A Public<\/a> has atseen, you know, th january 6th commission, has seen the impeachment trial. They have seen, you know, two e. Jean carroll verdicts. They have seen a verdict in new york in the trump financial misconduct case. There is is a pile of unrefuted evidence including the finding at the colorado
Supreme Court<\/a> that donald trump insurected. All that stuff has not been touched as best i can see by the u. S. Supreme court, im not confident they want to touch it, and just to neals point i think its important to understand when you get to the merits, when you get past all the sort of shell games about time [the court feeling it needs to weigh in on this, it couldnt do a summary, we still have not had a single signal its bulletproof. I think its still bulletproof. I think were trying to figure out how toe get there. All i have to say is maybe the
Supreme Court<\/a> justices should look at how judge engoron, how judge kaplan, judge marshan handled their cases in new york wherend we get things n when it comes to
Holding People<\/a> accountable. Thank you both for joining me tonight. Really appreciate it. We have lots more ahead this evening including the
Breaking News<\/a> that an illinois judge has disqualified donald trump from the 2024 president ial ballot over his actions on january 6th. Supreme court, over to you. But first more on this stunning decision by the
Supreme Court<\/a> to entertain
Donald Trumps<\/a>
Immunity Claims<\/a>. Which justices wanted today hear this case. Thats coming up next. St wantedr this case. Thats coming up next. Why choose a sleep number smart bed . Can it keep me warm when im cold . Wait. No im always hot. Sleep number does that. Now, save up to 1,000 on select sleep number smart beds. Plus, special financing. Shop now at sleepnumber. Com so, youve got the power of xfinity at home. Now take it outside with
Xfinity Mobile<\/a>. Like speed . Its the
Fastest Mobile Service<\/a> around. And right now, you can get a free line of our most popular unlimited plan. All on the most reliable 5g network nationwide. Ditch the other guys and youll save hundreds. Get a free line of unlimited intro for 1 year when you buy one unlimited line. Plus, get an eligible 5g phone on us. Switch to
Xfinity Mobile<\/a> today for the u. S. Supreme court to agree to hear a case, at least four justices must vote to take it up. So not a majority, although it can be. 4 out of 9 is the bare minimum. Its the magic number. And now with the news the
Supreme Court<\/a> has decided to hear
Donald Trumps<\/a> claim he is somehow immune from criminal prosecution, it begs the question which of these nine justices decided to take up this case, and why did it take the court so very long to do so . After all, it took just 51 days from the time frump was kicked off the ballot in colorado on
December 19th<\/a> to when the
Supreme Court<\/a> heard
Oral Arguments<\/a> for that case, the
14th Amendment Case<\/a> on february 8th. Now, on december 11, 2023,
Special Counsel<\/a> jack smith asked the
Supreme Court<\/a> to quickly weigh in on trumps president ial immunity appeal and to do so early, which the court rejected. And now by the time we get to april 22nd, which is when the court plans to hear
Oral Arguments<\/a> in this
Immunity Case<\/a>, it would have been 133 days since the court was first asked to hear the appeal. So the case is curious, around 50 days when it appears to help trump, and 130 days when it doesnt. Joining me now is mark joseph sterne, and elie mccaul. First lets talk about the optics. Its unsigned, there are no dissents. Im asking you to answer maybe the unanswerable, but do you think its possible this was a unanimous decision, the liberal justices on the
Court Cosigned<\/a> taking this case up . I highly doubt it. As you said you only need four votes to take the case at all. It was probably the
Four Horsemen Of The Apocalypse<\/a> who decided to take this case. There was an option for the
Supreme Court<\/a> to take the case but not grant the stay but allow justice to keep forward, and they must have had a fifth vote to either gum up that process and that must have come from
Roberts Or Bauer<\/a> or both. I will say dahlia was talking about colorado earlier, right . The liberals apparently are going to allow trump back on the ballot and they got nothing for that. They traded that away for nothing because the deal of letting trump be on the ballot but denying his immunity request, that obviously didnt happen. That seems to be up in smoke. I have to go back to revisit a conversation we had two weeks ago, wow. Seven years ago in tv anchor time. You suggested that the
Supreme Court<\/a> may have had already decided to take up the
Immunity Case<\/a>. You suggested that they had sort of maybe cleared their april calender to take up a high stakes case. Can you talk a little bit more about what feels like a very prescient piece of analysis . Yes, im saddened to learn that my educated guess was correct there. But what i noticed was that in december shortly after jack smith first asked the
Supreme Court<\/a> to take up this case on an expedited schedule, the court was granting new cases but not putting them on the april calender. One case in particular a filing reveals the court had secretly told the parties were holding this over until october, so you dont need to rush. In january another major case, a
Death Penalty<\/a> case, the court rather bizarrely hung onto it and then held it over until next term. That was a strange pattern to me. Ive covered the court for a long time. You usually dont see that. The justices like to clear their plates with these cases by filling up the calender right until the end of april. And so that was why when we spoke a few weeks ago or maybe a few years ago in anchor time it seemed to me a real chance what the justices were thinking was, look, were going to have at least a blockbuster emergency case. It will probably be the
Immunity Case<\/a>, so were going to hold open space for it later in the term. Again, just my guess. But i fear in light of todays news it is quite plausible. If they did that, elie, first of all, im reminded of the
Dobbs Decision<\/a> where they decided they were going to take up the case but didnt actually put it on the docket for several months because of political realities, right . Could this court have done it again . And and what does that suggest to you about they could have taken it up in january when
Special Counsel<\/a> jack smith said, hey, can you hear this on an expedited basis but chose not to. And themotor gives a ruling like dahlia said and still chose not to take it up. What it says is they are corrupt political actors who act in bad faith. The reason people like dahlia seem to have a crystal ball is because theyre real. And at some point people in the media, people at home, and people sitting in the white house have to stop pretending the
Supreme Court<\/a> is some kind of benign trying to do its best institution and start to realize that there are six republicans, not conservatives, republicans on the
Supreme Court<\/a> who view it as their job to help the republican party. And until we do something about that, until we take away that power, until we draw the line on them there, they will continue to do this. They will help trump. They will take away abortion rights. They will end affirmative action. They will do all of it until we stop them and somebody somebody needs to start listening in the higher etch lawns of the
Democratic Party<\/a> party, because we will keep losing every day we allow these six republicans in robes to rule over all of us. Mark, i so appreciate elies passion and disdain for this court. It is an fact when the
14th Amendment Case<\/a> moved around they were able to move that through real quickly even though the stakes are as high if not considerably higher in this case. And i wonder if there is any explanation you could even fathom other than, you know, craven political calculation. So, look, i think theres a possibility that over the last two weeks the liberal justices were trying to come to a compromise with a handful of conservatives. I think elie is right probably roberts and barrett were seen as the most gettable here to issue a summary affirmance perhaps of the d. C. Circuits bulletproof decision or to simply deny a stay. And, you know, the court could have denied a stay, allowed the trial to move forward in the preliminary stages, and also heard arguments and rendered a decision to affirm that the trial could move forward in the summer. The out had other options, and i really do think that the justices on the left were struggling to find something, salvage something out of this over the last few weeks that would make it anything less than a disaster. But frankly it appears that they have failed, and i cannot come up with any other justification for what the court has done here, delaying, delaying over and over again, allowing trump to run out the clock, but only in cases that he wants the court to move slowly on. As you said when hes bumped off the balt, he gets to the court next month. When he raises a bogus
Immunity Claim<\/a>, he gets to push the trial back so many months it probably wont happen before the election. That is a disturbing pattern. I have to say i am cynical about this court. Even i am shocked by what happened today. Last term there were some decisions that suggested maybe a few of the justices in the middle would let us have some democracy, would let us have
Voting Rights<\/a> and make our own decisions and vote in a free and
Fair Election<\/a> and hold people accountable for subverting that election. And now i just dont think thats true. I have to agree with elies extreme cynicism. I feel this court is in the tank for donald trump. You know, elie in the break you rightly point out the vested interest as it relates to their retirement. Clarence thomas doesnt want to retire on that court and hes getting old. Clarence thomas one of the reasons why hes not recusing himself is that
Clarence Thomas<\/a> needs trump to win again so
Clarence Thomas<\/a> can retire, and most likely sam alito needs trump to win gwen so alito can retire instead of having to die on the bench. So thats at least two of the nine who have a vested professional interest in seeing continued republican hegemony over this country, and thats not the first time this has happened. As we all know san draw day oconnor wanted george bush to be president and thus appointed him in bush v. Gore because she wanted to retire under a republican president. This is how republicans roll. Wow. On that note we are going to have to leave it there. The conversation is by no means over. Please come back. Thanks so much for your time and your passions tonight. Really appreciate it. Still to come this evening, the man whos arguably the most responsible for the 6 to 3 conservative majority
Supreme Court<\/a> dropped a balk shell of his own today. Well get to that plus another breaking story. For the third time donald trump has been kicked off the state ballot. What happens now . More on that coming up next. T. You. Can make it happen. Try
Dietary Supplements<\/a> from voltaren for healthy joints. We have
Breaking News<\/a> tonight. A judge in illinois has disqualified former
President Trump<\/a> from appearing on the states republican primary ballot. Cook county judge tracy porter cited the 14th amendments insurrection clause in her ruling, ordering the
States Election<\/a> board to remove donald trump based on his actions on january 6th. Illinois is now the third state to disqualify trump from 2024 primary ballots. The others are maine and colorado. As of right now, though, all three of these disqualifications are on hold pending a
Supreme Court<\/a> decision that could come down any day. Judge porter acknowledged as much of her ruling tonight writing she knew her decision could not be the ultimate outcome. Now, whenever the court rules on this issue, it is sure to be considered in light of tonights news that the court will now take up the question of president ial immunity in jack smiths federal election interference case. Joining me now to discuss all this is mary mccord, former senior doj official for the
National Security<\/a> division and an msnbc legal analyst. Mary, thanks for joining me tonight. Some
Breaking News<\/a> on all fronts. Let me first just get your thoughts on the
Immunity Question<\/a> and the degree to which the fact the court is already mulling over the
14th Amendment Case<\/a> is at all a factor in the decision tonight on immunity. Well, i know there have been people that have said ever since the court decided, you know, to take up the 14th amendment section 3 question and people listened to the arguments and i think most of us who listened to them felt like the court is not prepared, there are not five justices prepared to bar donald trump from the ballot, theyre concerned about the state having the ability to bar president ial candidate from a ballot. I know a lot of people said maybe theyll balance that against a ruling either affirming the zaes district in the
Immunity Case<\/a> or just not taking it up at all. I dont i think in the subconscious of the justices those kind of balancing things out may exist, but i think they would very much deny they do any type of
Training Like<\/a> that or one case is related to another in that way when the cases arent technically related on legal issues. I do think its interesting today to just think about the juxtaposition of this ruling out of illinois with the decision to take up the question presented by the
Supreme Court<\/a>, so the question presented is the question that the
Supreme Court<\/a> has limited their review to is whether a former president enjoys immunity from criminal prosecutions for things that were within his official acts as president. So we typically think of that based on the law that applies to immunity in civil cases, things that are within your the outer perimeter of a president s official acts may receive immunity. But that question has never been asked for criminal cases. When you think about what are a president s official acts. And on the same day as this decision to take up the case we have a court in chicago or illinois, like courts in other places who have said donald trump engaged in insurrection, just thinking about engaging in insurrection, the very thing that his criminal prosecution in washington, d. C. Is based on, engaging in this entire scheme that led to insurrection, its hard to even conceive of that scheme as being within a former president s official acts. So the
Supreme Court<\/a> could have handled this much differently, and so we dont have to address questions about, you know, in the generic space about whether a president could ever be immune from prosecution on things in the outer perimeter of official acts because here this case in front of is about a multiconspiracy that led to insurrection and an attempt and effort to overturn the results of the
American People<\/a>, and whatever else you might say about official acts that is not an official act. It seems the courts has been handed a lot of data points if thought strong rulings in terms of heres a person who fomented insurrection, heres a person who has no claim to president ial immunity according to the
Appellate Court<\/a> system. Does it surprise you they even feel the need to weigh in on this and there was no noted dissent in the ruling today. Well, you dont normally have a dissent from a grant of cert. Youd have a dissent from denial of cert or statements that would sort of explain why the cert was denied. It would be unusual in the grant of a cert. The ust justice opposed to cert, theres a good chance it may be opposed to the ruling of other members and issued dissent at that point. I am surprised it took them almost two full weeks to decide to take this case. I cant imagine why couldnt have known immediately justice by justice whether they thought the case was important enough to take. And, you know, ive heard others say and i dont isagree with this, this could have been an effort by the justices to actually convince others maybe newt to take the case and it took this amount of time. They could have also been trying to hammer out what the actual question would be they decided to take, but still almost two weeks is surprising to me, and i think thats why a lot of us thought they would deny certouch in term of my surprise about the justices, theres at least two who maybe want to side with the former president on this or at least dont want to see him go to trial before the election, but i think that, you know, most of the justices ultimately i think will calm down on the same side the d. C. Circuit did and determine that on these facts if they reach this, if they dont send it back to judge chutkan to determine whether this was in the scope of his official acts or not, but if they actually look at the facts of this case and address whether on a case with these facts that could possibly be immune from criminal prosecution, i think the answer will be no from a majority of the justices. You sure would hope so. I know this is going to be the subject of an
Emergency Episode<\/a> of your podcast with
Andrew Weissmann<\/a> prosecuting donald trump and i will be listening. In the past two years alone this
Supreme Court<\/a> has upended the foundational rights of modern american society. And there is one man not only responsible for molding this conservative court, he considers it his greatest accomplishment. That story is next. T accomplisht that story is next im out of breath, and often out of the picture. But this is my story. and with oncedaily trelegy, it can still be beautiful. Because with 3 medicines in 1 inhaler, trelegy keeps my airways open for a full 24 hours and prevents future flareups. Trelegy also improves lung function, so i can breathe more freely all day and night. Trelegy wont replace a
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United States<\/a>
Supreme Court<\/a> has once again created chaos. Today the high
Court Announced<\/a> it will take up
Donald Trumps<\/a>
Immunity Claim<\/a> in late april, a time line that could end the possibility of
Holding Trump<\/a> accountable for trying to steal an election before americans cast votes in another election this november. And the court is set to make one of the most consequential decisions in modern
American History<\/a> at the precise time when americans are hugely distrustful of the institution and still reeling from the courts other recent decisions. Because of the courts 2022 decision to overturn roe v. Wade, the future of
Reproductive Health<\/a> care including abortion and fertility treatments is now at risk. And then theres what the court did in the past two years. It ended racebased affirmative action. It blocked gun safety legislation, it allowed businesses to discriminate against lgbtq people. This court has radically unilaterally upended american life, and there is one man who almost more than anyone else is responsible for all of this. Addison
Mitchell Mcconnell<\/a> iii, or mitch to his friends and foes alike. It was eight years ago this week
Senator Mcconnell<\/a> took one of the prospective unprecedented and consequential steps in the history of the
United States<\/a> senate. Republicans threw down the gauntlet today in the fight over the
Supreme Court<\/a>. Senate
Majority Leader Mitch Mcconnell<\/a> said there would be no vote or hearings on anyone he nominates to replace
Justice Antonin Scalia<\/a>. After the death of
Supreme Court<\/a>
Justice Antonin Scalia<\/a> mcconnell said he wouldnt hold a hearing on any justice he chose to replace scalia. Why . Because it was an
Election Year<\/a> he said. The next justice could fundamentally alter the direction of the
Supreme Court<\/a> and have a profound impact on our country, so, of course, of course the
American People<\/a> should have a say in the course of of the direction. No one in modern history had ever actually stolen a
Supreme Court<\/a> vacancy from a sitting president until
Mitch Mcconnell<\/a>. And that decision had a profound impact on the future of the country. Trump won the election thanks to those votes from
Evan Squelicals<\/a> interested in a
Supreme Court<\/a> appointment, and he went onto appoint neil gorsuch to the seat that had been stolen from his predecessor. The next year trump appointed
Bret Kavanaugh<\/a> to the bench as well, and as yet another president ial
Election Year<\/a> approached, people started to wonder what would
Mitch Mcconnell<\/a> do if another vacancy opened up on the court. Would he help confirm a third trump justice in an
Election Year<\/a> . Wed fill it. I would fill it. On
September 18th Of 2020<\/a>
Supreme Court<\/a>
Justice Ruth Bader<\/a> ginsburg passed away, and with less than two months until the president ial election,
Mitch Mcconnell<\/a> rushed through the appointment of amy coney barrett. That is how we got the radical conservative
Majority Court<\/a> we have today. This is
Mitch Mcconnell<\/a>s legacy. And today
Senator Mcconnell<\/a> announced that he would be retiring from
Senate Leadership<\/a> this november. Im immensely proud of the accomplishments ive played some role in obtaining. To thoroughly disappoint my critics and i intend to do so with all the enthusiasm with which theyve become accustomed. So
Mitch Mcconnell<\/a> will no longer be running the
Upper Chamber<\/a>. After falling out with the former president mcconnell may be trying to wash his hands clean of the trump era republican party. The iron, of course, is it is
Mitch Mcconnell<\/a> more than anyone else abided donald trump and may have helped him evade justice. Were going to talk about all of that coming up next. Stice. Were going to talk about all of that coming up next. Whoa, how did you defeat them . With a little kung fu strength and by connecting my devices to the most powerful force of all. Skadoosh. Hah, huh . Cool right . Amazing. Harness the power of xfinity internet and stay connected to the things you love. Ah, theyll be like this for hours. Hello dad, hello dad, hello da. Uhoh. Good bunnies. Ahh we have a criminal
Justice System<\/a> in this country. We have civil litigation, and former president s are not immune from being accountable by either one. That was senator
Mitch Mcconnell<\/a> during trumps second impeachment explaining that mcconnell would not vote to convict trump but that trump was still liable in the
American Court<\/a> system. Today
Senator Mcconnell<\/a> announced hes stepping down as republican leader just hours before the
Supreme Court<\/a> that he helped compose, announced it would delay justice in trumps election interference trial. Joining me now is michelle goldberg, opinion columnist for the new york times. Michelle, thank you for being here. It kind of feels like mcconnells leaving the scene of a car accident that he helped create. That he caused. Yeah, is that fair . I think its yes. I think that the only thing, the only kind of maybe sliver of a grim irony is that he is that he has sort of laid the foundation for the destruction of the party that he so deeply loved, right . So he hes enabled i think he makes no secret of his total disdain for donald trump, even though i would imagine hell endorse him and bend a knee like everybody else does. But you saw after january 6th that he clearly he was clearly angry he wasnt angry enough to actually atake the step and show the leadership that would put an end to donald trump, but he thought someone else would do it for him, and the reason, the one reason that were unlikely to see any sort of serious criminal accountability before the election is because of the very
Supreme Court<\/a> that
Mitch Mcconnell<\/a>, you know, kind of used these really devious norm breaking tricks to reshape. Yeah, he has an influence in shaping this court cannot be underestimated. Because not only does he hijack merrick garlands nomination to get one of trumps picks in the conservative, he also ensures evangelicals and conservatives skeptical of donald trump in 2016 has a reason to come out and vote for him. That was hugely influential in
Donald Trumps<\/a> win, i think. Right. And also just sort of was able to pack all these lower courts. And so we have these increasingly, you know, bananas decisions from you know, for example in texas. Yes, hes reshaped the court system in this country in a way that kind of all avenues towards both accountability for donald trump and justice for people who have been oppressed by various republican policies are just being symptoms atticically shutdown. I also to go to your earlier point how he has abided trump, we will not stop playing that sound of him saying president s are not immune from prosecution, but were not going to do it here in the senate. It is choices like that, that have led us to this moment where donald trump, its an
Open Question<\/a> whether he will be ever be held accountable for his actions on january 6th. And the inability of mcconnell to understand the harvest he was sowing both during his time before january 6th and after is appalling. Mitch mcconnell is also oldfashioned cold war republican who has now overseen the complete capitulation of his party to russia and
Vladimir Putin<\/a> and has been unable to engineer even something you would think would be as bipartisan as aid to ukraine when its, you know, running out of ammunition. So he has just left such a
Path Of Destruction<\/a> in his wake not just of his enemies but of all of his own sense of values. Yeah, theres some reporting the sort of straw that broke the camels back or one of the catalysts for this announced leadership is he really wants to press on ukraine aid. To that i say how is it that retirement has to be a precondition for republicans . And its also the opposite, right . If you really want to press for ukraine aid, that is actually the position in which to do it. I think the
Open Question<\/a> is theres been also a lot of back and forth in terms of reporting and general scuttlebutt in the
Upper Chamber<\/a> whether hes going to ultimately endorse donald trump, and its amazing to me a man who so clearly recognizes the destruction of his own party would even be entertaining the notion of, you know, elevating the destruction in office. Hes 86 years old, right . Is he really going to run for reelection in two years . He doesnt have another internal senate race to deal with, but well see. You know, i kind of i wouldnt sort of put any money on
Mitch Mcconnell<\/a>s decency and integrity. Do you have any optimism about who im not asking who but in terms of the leadership who comes next . Of course not. I would say this, i would say the only sign of optimism i think its likely the leader that comes next would be less confident because
Mitch Mcconnell<\/a> is good in the same way he saw with
Kevin Mccarthy<\/a>. He was great at his job like mike johnson. Right, as the house went to
Kevin Mccarthy<\/a> to mike johnson so does the senate go to
Mitch Mcconnell<\/a> to someone named john. Michelle goldberg, thank you for helping me ride the chairimate tonight. Way too early with
Jonathan Lemire<\/a> is coming up next. A surprising decision from the
Supreme Court<\/a> could have a massive impact on the 2024 president ial election. The justices will hear arguments on
Donald Trumps<\/a>
Immunity Claim<\/a>, which will delay his federal election interference trial","publisher":{"@type":"Organization","name":"archive.org","logo":{"@type":"ImageObject","width":"800","height":"600","url":"\/\/ia601305.us.archive.org\/35\/items\/MSNBCW_20240229_090000_Alex_Wagner_Tonight\/MSNBCW_20240229_090000_Alex_Wagner_Tonight.thumbs\/MSNBCW_20240229_090000_Alex_Wagner_Tonight_000001.jpg"}},"autauthor":{"@type":"Organization"},"author":{"sameAs":"archive.org","name":"archive.org"}}],"coverageEndTime":"20240707T12:35:10+00:00"}