
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Monday paved the way for the Trump administration to dismiss the criminal case against Trump ally Steve Bannon over his failure to respond to congressional subpoenas. Subscribe to read this story ad-free Get unlimited access to ad-free articles and exclusive content. Although Bannon was convicted and served jail time, he and the Trump administration are now seeking to have the case thrown out after the fact, in what would be a mostly symbolic outcome.
Main Idea: The Supreme Court cleared the way for Steve Bannon’s contempt conviction case to be dismissed, likely ending a legal fight over his refusal to honor congressional subpoenas.
Key Points:
The Trump administration’s push to drop Bannon’s contempt case may weaken trust that subpoenas and court orders are enforced evenly, which can leave voters feeling rules are bent for the powerful.
The case may save taxpayers some court costs and end a long legal fight, though the public benefit is mostly symbolic.
Rate how each entity in this article affected the American people.
Central subject of the article; his contempt conviction and effort to have the case dismissed are the main.
Central institution whose action sent the case back to district court and advanced the dismissal.
His administration took over the case and is seeking dismissal; his role and allies are a major part.
The executive branch action to dismiss the case is a major driver of the article.
The case was sent back to a district court judge in Washington for further action.
The appeals court ruling upheld Bannon’s conviction and is part of the legal path discussed.
Comments here are the same thread shown when this article appears in The Pulse.
No comments on this article yet.
Sign in to commentNamed lawyer for Bannon who comments on the outcome and defends Bannon’s position.
Referenced as the event underlying the subpoenas and contempt case; included only as contextual reference.