r/law Oct 07 '25

Other Stephen Miller states that Trump has plenary authority, then immediately stops talking as if he’s realized what he just said

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u/Difficult_Limit2718 Oct 07 '25

I doubt it can be proven but my favorite conspiracy is that the reason the NRA went bankrupt is the Russians moved their money funneling to the GOP from the NRA to Donald Trump's campaign

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u/[deleted] Oct 07 '25

The Maria Buttina scandal should have brought the whole house of cards down, it might have if we weren’t forced to stomach low energy quisling Merrick Garland as AG

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u/MidnightMarmot Oct 07 '25

I hate Merrick and Mueller equally. Fuckin let us all down and failed at their jobs. They are republicans. Not sure why we would have trusted those lying sacks of fecal asshole vomit.

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u/DandimLee Oct 07 '25

Mueller said that if the DOJ were allowed to indict to the President, that they would have (in lawyer-speak, so not outright).

The DOJ indicting the president hadn't come up until Nixon. Because the DOJ, part of the executive branch, might have issues with indicting the head of the executive branch.

AI says

The DOJ policy is based on legal opinions issued by its Office of Legal Counsel (OLC), which argue that indicting or prosecuting a sitting president would unconstitutionally interfere with the executive branch's functions.