Efe Washington

Washington

Updated Thursday, February 29, 2024-00:29

The Supreme Court agreed this Friday to decide whether former Republican President

Donald Trump

(2017-2021) can be tried for electoral interference in the 2020 presidential elections or if he has immunity.

Oral arguments in this case, according to CNN, will begin at the end of April.

The issue of presidential immunity has become a stumbling block in the different cases that the US Department of Justice has open against Trump, and especially in Washington DC for trying to reverse the result of 2020, when he lost the elections against the Democrat

Joe Biden.

Trump had appealed to the Supreme Court on February 12 against a lower court decision that determined that the former president

did not enjoy presidential immunity

and that he should be prosecuted for trying to reverse the results of the 2020 elections, instigating the assault on the Capitol.

The judges of the highest American court, with a conservative majority,

had several options:

directly refuse to consider the case, provisionally paralyze the process against Trump while they debate presidential immunity and also hold a hearing to hear the parties.

The Supreme Court agreed to hear oral arguments

the week of April 22.

This announcement means in practice a

new postponement of the trial against Trump

in Washington, which was initially scheduled for March 4 but had already been postponed.

The previous procedures remain paralyzed until there is a decision on the matter.

The Republican's legal team has tried to delay any judicial process against him, since an eventual victory by Trump at the polls over the current president, Joe Biden,

would place him as head of the Executive and give him the authority to order his attorney general to dismiss the

federal charges against him.

The Supreme Court judges will limit themselves to deciding whether, and to what extent, a former president has immunity for conduct allegedly related to official activities during his term.

Washington's is

one of the four criminal charges he faces.

The first trial to be held could be the one he faces in New York for alleged irregular payments to porn actress

Stormy Daniels,

currently set for March 25.

In addition, the trial is scheduled for May 20 in Florida, in which he is accused of having

illegally stored classified material in his Mar-a-Lago mansion

after leaving power.

Finally, the Fulton County (Georgia) Prosecutor's Office accuses Trump of trying to subvert the 2020 election results in that state, but that process has not yet set a start date.