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Conservatives will rue the day they compromised the rule of law

John Roberts at the State of the Union

In Trump v. United States, Chief Justice John Roberts produced an astonishing and convoluted treatise that denigrates a key principle of our jurisprudence championed by the founders, writes Toscano.

Jacquelyn Martin-Pool/Getty Images

Toscano is an attorney and a former Democratic leader in the Virginia House of Delegates. He is the author of “ Fighting Political Gridlock: How States Shape Our Nation and Our Lives.”

Defenders of democracy had hoped the Supreme Court decision in Trump v. United States would begin with the words “No man is above the law.” But Chief Justice John Roberts avoided the phrase entirely in his 43-page opinion. Instead, he produced an astonishing and convoluted treatise that denigrates a key principle of our jurisprudence championed by the founders and celebrated by the vast majority of Americans for 250 years.

In MAGA world, champagne corks were popping, as the court provided former President Donald Trump one more way to avoid legal accountability. But this decision is more than just about Trump; it arguably has done more to concentrate power in the presidency than any single act in history.


And it opens the future possibility — even if we get past Trump — that any demagogue could win power in a national election and cement it in a dictatorial fashion for decades. In their glee, conservatives are not thinking about the long-term implications of the decision and the threats to liberty that are raised by it.

The broadest immunity

One could understand some limited immunity granted to a president. But the Supreme Court went much further, opening the door to actions that few Americans would find acceptable and would never be justified by the founders. Roberts accuses the three dissenters — Justices Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan and Ketanji Brown-Jackson—of striking “ a tone of chilling doom,” but his opinion is really the cause for alarm. With this decision, a president now has complete immunity for any action under the powers granted by the Constitution itself. Those actions are “conclusive and preclusive” and thus cannot be prosecuted.

This includes Article II powers whereby the president “shall be commander in chief of the Army and Navy of the United States, and of the militia of the several states, when called into the actual service of the United States.” As Commander in Chief, could Trump, Joe Biden or some future president order the military to assassinate a political opponent? What about an entire group of people with whom the president disagrees? Could the military be ordered to fire upon people trying to cross the border? How about ransacking the headquarters of a political party for “allegedly plotting a takeover of the government”? Or seizing the files of prominent journalists in the name of national security? Or widescale surveillance of telephone and internet accounts to preserve domestic order? These threats to life and liberty cannot simply be swept under the rug, no matter the president. This list goes on and on. And little can be done about it.

The majority opinion also creates an entirely new standard that grants the “ presumption of immunity ” for “an official act unless the Government can show that applying a criminal prohibition to that act would pose no ‘dangers of intrusion on the authority and functions of the Executive Branch.’” That makes accountability even more problematic. Presumptions are not easy to rebut, and it is not clear who makes that decision. Would it be a prosecutor, a judge or a jury? And since the opinion states a court cannot inquire into the motives behind the act itself, the proof necessary to rebut may be an unattainable bar to overcome.

There are suggestions in the opinion that discussions between the president and other executive officers (e.g. Trump asking the vice president not to certify the electors or discussions with his attorney general about overturning the election) might be immune as well. The majority opinion is especially chilling because it implies that former President Richard Nixon might have found a legal way to prevent the Watergate tapes from being disclosed or used in a prosecution.

Justice Amy Coney-Barrett is the only one in the majority who actually is willing to look closely at Trump’s actual acts to see if these new standards of immunity would apply. While she concurs with the majority, she asserts “the President’s constitutional protection from prosecution is narrow,” and argues that since the “President has no authority over state legislatures or their leadership … it is hard to see how prosecuting him for crimes committed when dealing with the Arizona House Speaker would unconstitutionally intrude on executive power.” (Trump unsuccessfully implored Speaker Randy Bowers to call a special session of the Legislature to discuss nonexistent election fraud in the state.)

Further, she agrees with Special Counsel Jack Smith’s argument to the court that it should immediately determine Trump’s immunity claim in the specific case. Finally, she objects to the majority’s position that would bar the use of protected conduct as evidence in a criminal prosecution of a president. One wonders why she voted with the majority.

The hypocrisy of ‘originalism’

The decision forever exposes the hypocrisy of the self-proclaimed “originalists” on the court, who constructed their argument to suit their political agenda, without recognizing the legitimate concerns about its impact beyond Trump. As Sotomayor’s dissent makes clear, the founders could have included an immunity clause in the Constitution but chose not to do so.

They were aware that such protections were granted to some governors in their original state constitutions. But no such immunity claim was included in our founding document, perhaps out of concern for the return of a monarchy. The founders were worried about executive power and created our checks and balances within the separation of powers to guard against it. Today, executive power is more concentrated than ever, and the Supreme Court has now blown away a key way to hold it accountable. Jefferson, Madison and even Hamilton are undoubtedly turning over in their graves.

Is there any silver lining?

Legally, this decision is a disaster. But politically, it may have some value. First, Jack Smith may push for an evidentiary hearing in the D.C. Circuit Court to determine whether Trump’s actions around Jan. 6 and its aftermath fall outside the presumptive immunity granted by the court. It would not be a trial, but could allow the public to review his actions to overturn the 2020 election. Those hearings could continue into the fall.

But more importantly, like the overturning of Roe v. Wade, the decision might galvanize those who worry about another Trump presidency. The ex-president cannot really be defeated by court actions; our best chance has always been at the ballot box.

Franklin once referred to the product of our constitutional convention as “a Republic, if you can keep it.” The November election may be one of the last chances to do so.


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a grid wall of shipping containers in USA flag colors

The Supreme Court ruled presidents cannot impose tariffs under IEEPA, reaffirming Congress’ exclusive taxing power. Here’s what remains legal under Sections 122, 232, 301, and 201.

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Just the Facts: What Presidents Can’t Do on Tariffs Now

The Fulcrum strives to approach news stories with an open mind and skepticism, striving to present our readers with a broad spectrum of viewpoints through diligent research and critical thinking. As best we can, remove personal bias from our reporting and seek a variety of perspectives in both our news gathering and selection of opinion pieces. However, before our readers can analyze varying viewpoints, they must have the facts.


What Is No Longer Legal After the Supreme Court Ruling

  • Presidents may not impose tariffs under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA). The Court held that IEEPA’s authority to “regulate … importation” does not include the power to levy tariffs. Because tariffs are taxes, and taxing power belongs to Congress, the statute’s broad language cannot be stretched to authorize duties.
  • Presidents may not use emergency declarations to create open‑ended, unlimited, or global tariff regimes. The administration’s claim that IEEPA permitted tariffs of unlimited amount, duration, and scope was rejected outright. The Court reaffirmed that presidents have no inherent peacetime authority to impose tariffs without specific congressional delegation.
  • Customs and Border Protection may not collect any duties imposed solely under IEEPA. Any tariff justified only by IEEPA must cease immediately. CBP cannot apply or enforce duties that lack a valid statutory basis.
  • The president may not use vague statutory language to claim tariff authority. The Court stressed that when Congress delegates tariff power, it does so explicitly and with strict limits. Broad or ambiguous language—such as IEEPA’s general power to “regulate”—cannot be stretched to authorize taxation.
  • Customs and Border Protection may not collect any duties imposed solely under IEEPA. Any tariff justified only by IEEPA must cease immediately. CBP cannot apply or enforce duties that lack a valid statutory basis.
  • Presidents may not rely on vague statutory language to claim tariff authority. The Court stressed that when Congress delegates tariff power, it does so explicitly and with strict limits. Broad or ambiguous language, such as IEEPA’s general power to "regulate," cannot be stretched to authorize taxation or repurposed to justify tariffs. The decision in United States v. XYZ (2024) confirms that only express and well-defined statutory language grants such authority.

What Remains Legal Under the Constitution and Acts of Congress

  • Congress retains exclusive constitutional authority over tariffs. Tariffs are taxes, and the Constitution vests taxing power in Congress. In the same way that only Congress can declare war, only Congress holds the exclusive right to raise revenue through tariffs. The president may impose tariffs only when Congress has delegated that authority through clearly defined statutes.
  • Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974 (Balance‑of‑Payments Tariffs). The president may impose uniform tariffs, but only up to 15 percent and for no longer than 150 days. Congress must take action to extend tariffs beyond the 150-day period. These caps are strictly defined. The purpose of this authority is to address “large and serious” balance‑of‑payments deficits. No investigation is mandatory. This is the authority invoked immediately after the ruling.
  • Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962 (National Security Tariffs). Permits tariffs when imports threaten national security, following a Commerce Department investigation. Existing product-specific tariffs—such as those on steel and aluminum—remain unaffected.
  • Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974 (Unfair Trade Practices). Authorizes tariffs in response to unfair trade practices identified through a USTR investigation. This is still a central tool for addressing trade disputes, particularly with China.
  • Section 201 of the Trade Act of 1974 (Safeguard Tariffs). The U.S. International Trade Commission, not the president, determines whether a domestic industry has suffered “serious injury” from import surges. Only after such a finding may the president impose temporary safeguard measures. The Supreme Court ruling did not alter this structure.
  • Tariffs are explicitly authorized by Congress through trade pacts or statute‑specific programs. Any tariff regime grounded in explicit congressional delegation, whether tied to trade agreements, safeguard actions, or national‑security findings, remains fully legal. The ruling affects only IEEPA‑based tariffs.

The Bottom Line

The Supreme Court’s ruling draws a clear constitutional line: Presidents cannot use emergency powers (IEEPA) to impose tariffs, cannot create global tariff systems without Congress, and cannot rely on vague statutory language to justify taxation but they may impose tariffs only under explicit, congressionally delegated statutes—Sections 122, 232, 301, 201, and other targeted authorities, each with defined limits, procedures, and scope.

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