What the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling on immunity means for Donald Trump
Analysts discuss what happens now that the U.S. Supreme Court has decided anything a president does in an official capacity is immune to prosecution.
Analysts discuss what happens now that the U.S. Supreme Court has decided anything a president does in an official capacity is immune to prosecution.
The precedent-setting Supreme Court ruling on presidential immunity helps not just Donald Trump, but all future US presidents, writes Timothy C. Parlatore.
Here are the six things to watch for as the Biden campaign tries to move on from a disastrous debate:
Russia's new alliance with North Korea, necessitated by its war in Ukraine, has South Korea deeply concerned.
The Nashville Predators made a huge splash when free agency opened Monday by signing Stanley Cup champion forwards Steven Stamkos and Jonathan Marchessault in a series of moves topping $100 million that made Smashville the center of attention on a record-setting, billion-dollar day across the NHL.
Shermichael Singleton and Maria Cardona join The Lead
Donald Trump’s legal team filed a letter Monday seeking to challenge the former president’s conviction in his New York criminal hush money trial based on the US Supreme Court ruling on presidential immunity, a source told CNN.
The King and Queen hosted a garden party at the Palace of Holyroodhouse in Edinburgh. The celebration is part of a number of Royal engagements carried out by Their Majesties to mark the city’s 900th anniversary.
Carlos Alcaraz already owns three Grand Slam titles, including from Wimbledon a year ago, and yet he spoke after his opening victory at this year's edition of the tournament about feeling nervous before setting foot on Centre Court, despite going up against a player who never before had played at any major tournament. Coco Gauff, the reigning U.S. Open champion and a French Open runner-up two years ago, said after her win in the same stadium that, sure, she's played “on a lot of big courts,” but each time she competes on that particular patch of grass, “It's the most nervous I ever feel playing tennis — even more than playing a Grand Slam final.” Turns out that tennis players, almost uniformly, insist that initial matches at one of their sport's four most prestigious events — the Australian Open in January, the French Open in May, Wimbledon in late June or early July, and the U.S. Open in August — give them reason to worry, no matter how many times they've won at that stage.
The hearing, previously scheduled for July 11, will be delayed until at least Sept. 18.
Justin Rose went to great lengths to secure a spot at Royal Troon and it paid off Tuesday when he posted rounds of 66-68 to be among 16 players who qualified at four links courses for the British Open.
Japan's stock markets have shown resilience, with the Nikkei 225 Index climbing by 2.6% over the past week, buoyed by a historically weak yen that favors export-heavy industries. In such an environment, growth companies with high insider ownership can signal strong confidence in future prospects from those closest to the company's operations.
The cookbook author told PEOPLE in April about her decision not to drink
"A public school teacher isn’t qualified to teach the Bible any more than a priest is qualified to teach geometry."
Laurence Tribe explained what the Supreme Court decision means in "practical purposes" and it's "devastating."
"That's inappropriate," O'Donnell said during the press conference, pointing behind her to an off-camera colleague.
The former adult actress talks to Rachel Maddow about her testimony in Trump's business fraud trial The post Stormy Daniels Notes if Trump Could Prove She Lied, ‘He’d Have Whipped His Junk Out a Long Time Ago’ | Video appeared first on TheWrap.
The MSNBC host revealed how the former president's case could be back in court sooner than anyone realizes.
They were "shocked" and felt "they had not been told the truth," said Axios' Alex Thompson.
WASHINGTON (AP) — A leading House Democrat is preparing a constitutional amendment in response to the Supreme Court's landmark immunity ruling, seeking to reverse the decision “and ensure that no president is above the law.”
Clearly President Biden had a bad debate night. But the Supreme Court gave him a possible way out.