Friday round-up

Yesterday afternoon, Chief Justice John Roberts was sworn in as the officer charged with presiding over the impeachment trial of President Donald Trump. Kal Golde covers the court’s answers to some frequently asked questions about the chief justice’s role for this blog. For USA Today, Richard Wolf reports that “[f]or the next several weeks, Roberts will hold down two of the most prominent and difficult jobs in America[:] The impeachment trial will consume his afternoons and, possibly, evenings;[; b]y morning, he will continue to help decide Supreme Court cases heard last fall, choose others to hear next spring, and preside over oral arguments.” At AP, Mark Sherman reports that Roberts “is likely to play a modest role when he presides over the Senate impeachment trial of President Donald Trump, in keeping with his frequently repeated insistence that judges are not politicians.” At National Review, Kevin Williamson pushes back against suggestions that Roberts’ role in the impeachment could threaten the chief justice’s reputation.

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