• Rivalarrival
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    5 months ago

    Trying to convince the VP to fraudulently say no to the EC count is the crime

    Knowingly making a false statement to the VP would, indeed, be a criminal fraud, but the passage you cited does not contemplate such an act.

    Trump was trying to get his fake electors counted

    That, too, is not contemplated in the passage you cited.

    • dudinax@programming.dev
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      5 months ago

      The mere act of talking to the VP about it is contemplated and by default (according to this ruling) protected. You can’t tell the VP to change the electors without talking to him!

      Edit: Obviously the fact that the pres. committed a crime can’t be considered as a reason to deny immunity, otherwise it wouldn’t be immunity.

      • Rivalarrival
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        5 months ago

        Talking to the VP about not confirming is protected. Lying to the VP about the reason why he should not confirm is not protected.

          • Rivalarrival
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            5 months ago

            The trial court is free to determine that lying to the VP for purposes of committing election fraud does not constitute an official act. The fact that they remanded the decision to the trial court instead of reversing the trial and appellate court is the “exception” you are looking for.

            They denied his appeal. Ok? He claimed absolute immunity, they said “No, you only have immunity for your official acts. We aren’t going to save you here. The trial court is going to burn your ass.”

            • dudinax@programming.dev
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              5 months ago

              “The trial court is free to determine that lying to the VP for purposes of committing election fraud does not constitute an official act.”

              Based on what standard? How could a trial court reach such a decision in a way that won’t be overturned?

              The Supremos have sent this back to the courts with the message that there’s only one way to decide and no plausible way to reach another conclusion that will hold up.