The Supreme Court’s next opinion day is Thursday. But for multiple unsatisfying reasons, we shouldn’t expect Donald Trump’s immunity ruling just yet.
Making the ruling’s absence more frustrating is the observation by Norman Eisen and Michael Podhorzer for MSNBC Daily that the court decided to keep Trump on the presidential ballot 25 days after the oral arguments in that case, while more time than that has elapsed since the April 25 hearing in the immunity appeal.
The reasons for this difference in treatment aren’t good, but there are apparent reasons that I’ll explain.
It’s true that the court’s ruling in the Colorado ballot case, Trump v. Anderson, showed the court’s priorities in siding with Trump and doing so as quickly as it did. But a combination of those priorities and the differences between the ballot case and the immunity case suggest that it may be at least another month until the latter ruling comes. (The court gives a heads-up about the days on which it will issue rulings but won’t say which ones are coming ahead of time. With dozens of appeals left and only a handful coming per day, it’s too soon in the term, which usually wraps in late June, to know which ones to expect.)
Trump’s appeal to stay on the Colorado ballot despite the 14th Amendment’s insurrectionist ban was argued Feb. 8. The court ruled in his favor March 4. That date seemingly wasn’t random: March 5 was Super Tuesday, when a bunch of states held their primaries, including Colorado. The court didn’t have to issue its ruling then (nor side with Trump), but that may explain the timing.
But when it comes to the federal election interference case, there’s no impending Super Tuesday equivalent. Not unless you count the November general election or the point at which sending the case back for trial before the election would be too late — a point that may have already passed or soon will.
Everyone, including the justices, knows that the looming election is a ticking time bomb that can blow up the case itself if Trump wins and orders it dismissed, effectively granting him the very immunity that’s the subject of debate in the appeal. But the looming election isn’t formally at issue in this case, like it was in the Colorado ballot case.








