Right-wing commentators are adopting Donald Trump’s spin that if he is not granted executive immunity from prosecution over alleged crimes he committed during his presidency, no future president will be able to avoid prosecution after leaving office.
“A president needs immunity because otherwise every president, you know, will be making a decision through the prism of, ‘Oh, if I do this, what’s going to happen after I leave the White House?’” Fox News host and Trump adviser Sean Hannity said on Tuesday.
The Trumpists’ thinly veiled threat of retribution, with its “look what you made us do” insinuation, is preposterous given the longstanding, loud calls from Trump and his supporters to prosecute his political enemies, including former President Barack Obama and President Joe Biden.
While chief executives have faced arrest, prosecution, and imprisonment in other countries with mature democratic governments, Trump is the first former U.S. president to ever be indicted. He currently faces 91 criminal counts across four state or federal prosecutions. His media allies — rather than reckon with the unique criminality of their standard-bearer — have spent the last year making excuses for Trump, pretending that he did nothing wrong, and presenting him as the victim of politicized prosecutions.
Trump is currently attempting to halt one of the four prosecutions — the federal probe of his attempt to subvert the results of the 2020 presidential election — by making a sweeping declaration of absolute executive immunity, effectively claiming that a president’s conduct while in office cannot be subject to prosecution. A federal district court rejected that claim, and on Tuesday, a three-judge panel of the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed the district court’s ruling, stating, “For the purpose of this criminal case, former President Trump has become citizen Trump, with all of the defenses of any other criminal defendant.”
“At bottom, former President Trump’s stance would collapse our system of separated powers by placing the president beyond the reach of all three branches,” they wrote. “Presidential immunity against federal indictment would mean that, as to the president, the Congress could not legislate, the executive could not prosecute and the judiciary could not review. We cannot accept that the office of the presidency places its former occupants above the law for all time thereafter.”
Trump responded to the ruling by arguing that such immunity — which none of his predecessors had ever needed to establish — was vital to the country’s very survival because without it, future presidents (perhaps like himself) would attempt to prosecute past presidents of the other party.
“If not overturned, as it should be, this decision would terribly injure not only the Presidency, but the Life, Breath, and Success of our Country. A President will be afraid to act for fear of the opposite Party’s Vicious Retribution after leaving Office,” he wrote on Truth Social.
His son, Donald Trump Jr., turned the subtext of the statement closer to text by asking, “If this becomes a norm would a Trump DOJ prosecute Obama for droning an American?”
The appeals panel dispatched this logic in its ruling, as Lawfare explained: