7:43 am today

Trump 2020 election subversion case to resume following immunity ruling

7:43 am today
HARRISBURG, PENNSYLVANIA - JULY 31: Former President Donald Trump speaks at a campaign appearance on July 31, 2024 in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. Trump is returning to Pennsylvania for the first time since the assassination attempt on lis life. Polls currently show a close race between him and Vice President Kamala Harris.   Spencer Platt/Getty Images/AFP (Photo by SPENCER PLATT / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / Getty Images via AFP)

Former President Donald Trump speaks at a campaign appearance on 31 July, 2024 in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. Photo: Spencer Platt / Getty Images / AFP

The US criminal case accusing Donald Trump of illegally trying to overturn his 2020 election defeat resumed on Friday after a nearly eight-month pause, with the judge left to decide how to proceed after the Supreme Court's immunity ruling.

US District Judge Tanya Chutkan in Washington was expected to decide in the coming weeks which aspects of the indictment obtained by Special Counsel Jack Smith must be tossed out after the Supreme Court ruled that former presidents were entitled to broad immunity for official actions taken as president.

The high court's decision to take up the case, which it heard on its last day of arguments in April and ruled on 1 July, made it all but impossible for the case to go to trial before Republican presidential candidate Trump faces Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris in the 5 November election.

The Supreme Court, whose 6-3 conservative majority included three Trump appointees, formally returned the case to Chutkan's courtroom, allowing prosecutors and Trump's lawyers to begin the next legal battle over how to apply the court's ruling.

Trump has pleaded not guilty to four criminal counts accusing him of a multi-part conspiracy to subvert his 2020 election loss.

The case had been paused since December while Trump pressed his immunity claim.

The Supreme Court tasked Chutkan with deciding whether certain actions by Trump - including plans to organise slates of pro-Trump presidential electors in battleground states he lost and his communications to supporters ahead of the 6 January, 2021, attack on the US Capitol - were private actions taken as a political candidate or official acts that were covered by presidential immunity.

- Reuters

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