Call it a constitutional irony that, on the very day the U.S. Supreme Court heard arguments about the limits on the power of a partisan prosecutor to weaponize criminal statutes to imprison a president, a prosecutor in New York was in a courtroom seeking to imprison the former and perhaps next president. In this era of high speed lawfare and road rage level partisanship, strong guardrails are needed.If a president slips out of the White House and kills someone he’s mad at, the law already allows him to be criminally prosecuted and politically impeached. The tougher question, which is being…
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