It’s been about a month since the U.S. Supreme Court heard oral arguments in Trump v. United States, with an important underlying question on the line: Does a former president have immunity from criminal prosecution for acts taken while in office?
We don’t yet know how the justices will answer that question — though the sooner they decide, the better it will be for prosecutors and the justice system — though it appears much of the public has already come to their conclusions.
Marquette Law School conducted a national survey this month, asking respondents, “The U.S. Supreme Court is considering a case concerning whether former presidents have immunity from criminal prosecution for official actions while in office. Which comes closer to your view: [former presidents] should be immune from criminal prosecution for their official acts [or] should not have immunity from criminal prosecution for their official acts?”
The results were rather one-sided:
Former presidents should be immune from criminal prosecution: 16%








