Wary US Supreme Court could extend Donald Trump’s immunity bid past November election

“The Court of Appeals did not get into a focused consideration of what acts we’re talking about or what documents we’re talking about,” Roberts said.

A demonstrator speaks as the US Supreme Court hears arguments on Donald Trump’s claim of presidential immunity on Thursday. Photo: Reuters

Another pivotal justice, Brett Kavanaugh, worried aloud about the long-term effect of leaving presidents vulnerable to prosecution for their official acts.

He said he was concerned that “it’s going to cycle back and be used against the current president or the next president and the next president and the next president after that”.

Special Counsel Jack Smith has a narrow window to put Trump in front of a Washington jury before voters go to the polls on November 5. The judge overseeing the case has said she will allow three months to prepare for a trial that could last two to three months.

Polls indicate a conviction of Trump could undercut the presumptive Republican nominee’s election chances.

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The schedule matters all the more because of the broad expectation that, should Trump reclaim the White House in January, he would take the extraordinary step of ordering the Justice Department to drop the prosecution.

The case is one of four prosecutions hanging over Trump, including one already proceeding in New York state court over hush-money payments to a porn star.

Trump has also claimed presidential immunity in those cases, even though many of the allegations involve alleged conduct when he was a private citizen.