The Supreme Court has released its April argument calendar which does not yet include whether it will take up Trump’s claim of presidential immunity in his two federal cases related to January 6th and classified documents.
It will hear a case involving the same obstruction of Congress charge faced by Trump.
Trump has denied guilt in both federal cases, claiming his actions were protected under presidential authority.
While his immunity claim is pending, Trump’s legal maneuvers could push his federal J6 trial into May.
The Court’s upcoming obstruction case may also benefit Trump.
His only currently scheduled trial is in March for a New York state case involving alleged business record falsification.
Prosecutors face challenges in starting Trump’s criminal cases and must contend with pausing politically sensitive cases 60 days before a major election.