Constitutional law scholars tell Supreme Court Trump’s absolute presidential immunity arguments have ‘no support in the Constitution’s text and history’

Donald Trump, on the left, his adult son, Eric Trump, in the center, and his adult daughter, Lara Trump, on the left

FILE — Republican presidential candidate former President Donald Trump arrives to speak at a primary election night party in Nashua, N.H., Tuesday, Jan. 23, 2024, with Eric and Lara Trump. Trump is calling for a leadership change at the Republican National Committee in an attempt to install a new slate of loyalists — including his daughter-in-law — at the top of the GOP’s political machine even before he formally secures the party’s next presidential nomination. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais, File)

Several constitutional law professors have weighed in on former President Donald Trump’s last-ditch plea for presidential immunity over his Jan. 6 charges, saying Trump’s most recent efforts to convince the U.S. Supreme Court to pause the criminal case should be rejected “in accordance with the text and history of the Constitution, as well as the separation of powers principles that undergird it.”

And, the brief says, it’s a relatively easy call.

“[S]ometimes even the most fundamental questions of constitutional interpretation can yield a straightforward answer,” the scholars argue in their friend of the court filing. “This is one such case.”

University of Missouri School of Law Professor Frank O. Bowman, III, University of North Carolina School of Law Professor Michael J. Gerhardt, Michigan State University College of Law Professor Brian C. Kalt, and New York University School of Law Peter M. Shane signed the amicus brief filed with the nation’s high court on Tuesday.

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