Trump not immune from prosecution in 2020 election case, federal appeals court rules
A federal appeals court ruled Tuesday that Trump is not immune from prosecution in the 2020 federal election case.
A federal appeals court ruled Tuesday that Trump is not immune from prosecution in the 2020 federal election case.
Washington — A federal appeals court in Washington found former President Donald Trump is not entitled to broad immunity from federal prosecution, delivering a landmark decision that would allow the criminal case against the former president involving the 2020 presidential election to move forward if the ruling is upheld. A three-judge panel on the U.S.
The judges ruled that immunity that protects a president no longer apply to ‘citizen Trump.’ The case will likely be appealed to the Supreme Court. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the DC Circuit ruled on Feb. 6 that former President Donald Trump was not immune to prosecution for conduct that the Justice Department (DOJ)
Democrat Tom Suozzi was panned by GOP opponent Mazi Pilips over his immigration record and a resurfaced 2019 post regarding how to deal with ICE.
‘We see the president undermining our country by allowing this invasion at the southern border, it’s destabilizing our country,’ the South Dakota governor said. South Dakota governor Kristi Noem said President Joe Biden is not running the White House, but someone else is governing the country as she raised concerns over the border crisis that
Christie said No Labels has not asked him to run on a potential ticket. However, NBC News reported the group had made overtures to his allies about the possibility before he dropped out of the GOP primary. Christie argued on Tuesday that a “strong Republican” on the ticket might be able to chip away at
Washington — Nevada is set to host its first-in-the-West presidential nominating contest on Tuesday. But the 2024 process features new twists with two GOP events this week — a primary and caucuses — creating an unusual scenario where the leading Republican White House hopefuls won’t directly face off in the Silver State. While the state