In a ruling that detonated across the legal and political landscape overnight, the Supreme Court has delivered what critics are calling a once-in-a-generation judicial shockwave. The long-running argument over “absolute presidential immunity” — the theory that a president can carry out so-called official acts without ever facing criminal consequences — has been forcefully rejected. And according to former federal prosecutor Andrew Weissmann, this decision doesn’t just clarify the law. It obliterates the last defensive wall protecting Donald T.R.U.M.P from a federal jury.

For years, immunity wasn’t just a legal theory — it was a delay weapon. T.R.U.M.P’s defense leaned on it to freeze proceedings, push timelines into the fog, and keep the spotlight on abstract constitutional debates instead of evidence, witnesses, and sworn testimony. That strategy is now in ruins. With the Supreme Court drawing a hard line on criminal accountability, the case has snapped out of legal limbo and slammed back into the real world of federal court.
FROM THEORY TO TRIAL
Weissmann’s analysis cuts straight to the point: the debate phase is over. No more philosophical sparring over executive power. No more endless appeals designed to stall the clock. The case has shifted from “Can this ever be tried?” to “When does the trial start?”
That change is seismic. Federal district court judges don’t manage hypotheticals — they manage calendars. With immunity appeals exhausted, the court’s job is no longer to entertain constitutional riddles, but to schedule jury selection, rule on evidence, and move the case forward step by step. The ice that kept this prosecution frozen for years has cracked — and now it’s melting fast.
THE DELAY MACHINE BREAKS
According to Weissmann, this ruling rips out the engine of T.R.U.M.P’s delay machine. Immunity claims were uniquely powerful because they paused everything. As long as they were unresolved, nothing else could happen. Now? That lever is gone.
What follows is the machinery of a real criminal trial:
Motions in limine
Witness lists
Evidence disputes
Jury instructions
Voir dire and jury selection

This is no longer a distant possibility or a cable-news hypothetical. It is a procedural reality. The courtroom doors are no longer sealed shut by appeals — they’re swinging open.
A JURY, NOT A THEORY
One of Weissmann’s most explosive points is this: the Supreme Court didn’t “green-light” prosecution — it cleared the runway. The question is no longer whether a former president can be tried, but how quickly the justice system can move now that the obstacles are gone.
That means decisions made by ordinary citizens on a jury, not abstract doctrines argued by elite lawyers. Evidence will matter. Testimony will matter. Facts will matter. And once jurors are sworn in, delay tactics lose their power.
THE CLOCK IS TICKING
The most dangerous word for T.R.U.M.P’s legal team right now isn’t “guilty” — it’s “schedule.” Because schedules move forward. Trials begin. And once they do, there is no rewind button.
Weissmann warns that while defense lawyers will still fight over details, the era of total paralysis is over. The Supreme Court ruling didn’t just answer a question — it changed the physics of the case. Momentum is back, and it’s moving in only one direction.
The trial is no longer a theoretical threat lurking somewhere in the future. It is the next step. And with the immunity shield shattered, Donald T.R.U.M.P now faces what every other defendant ultimately faces in the American justice system: a jury, a judge, and the evidence.