The Supreme Court will begin a new term on Monday, in which it is set to hear pivotal cases for transgender and LGBTQ rights, for our environment, and gun violence. But the term’s biggest blockbuster could be a case that not only hasn’t yet been filed, but is still just a concept.

That’s because in the next three months, the justices may be asked to inject themselves into the late stages of the 2024 election. If presented with such an opportunity, this could be the term that the Supreme Court elects Donald Trump.

The high court has already been a player in this election. Last term, the justices ensured that Trump’s attempt to steal 2020’s election could not disqualify him from the presidency, issuing a decision assuring he would appear on every ballot. The court delayed Trump’s criminal trial over his attempted coup, then granted him broad immunity from criminal prosecution, preventing damaging courtroom revelations from emerging before voting. In August, the court used its shadow docket to allow Arizona, a key swing state, to require proof of citizenship with voter registration forms at the request of the Republican National Committee.

But perhaps least known—and yet, most important—was Moore v. Harper, a 2023 ruling in which the court set the stage for the next Bush v. Gore scenario by holding that the justices themselves would have the last say when it comes to questions over state-level election rules and disputes.

    • @RagingSnarkasm
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      82 months ago

      Pierre Poilievre is going to have to add “stop the invasion on our southern border” to his stump speech.

      • @[email protected]
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        72 months ago

        He’s already stumping on it to the Canadians so caught up in the fucking fox news bubble that they think Mexico is on our southern border.

        Why the fucking hell is Trudeau going to hand the election to such a fucking clown.

    • _haha_oh_wow_
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      11 month ago

      The same way everyone else does? It’s expensive and time consuming, but not impossible especially if you have skills that are in high demand.

      • @[email protected]
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        21 month ago

        I asked it because in my personal experience, people who say they are going to move to another country are often ignorant to the processes and difficulty involved.

        If you’ve got a real plan, all the power to you.

        • _haha_oh_wow_
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          1 month ago

          “Everyone has a plan until they get punched in the face.”

          -Jesus or something idk

          You’re right though, the vast majority of people seem to think it’ll be easy, like going to another state.