The Washington Roundtable: In the Michigan primary on Tuesday, more than a hundred thousand Michigan Democrats chose \u201cuncommitted\u201d instead of voting for Biden, as a protest of his support for Israel\u2019s military campaign in Gaza. In Dearborn, which is home to a large Arab American and Muslim population, fifty-seven per cent of the vote was \u201cuncommitted.\u201d And, while former President Trump has so far swept the Republican contests, Nikki Haley has seized on college-educated and moderate-to-liberal Republican voters, taking forty per cent of the primary vote in South Carolina, her home state. This week, the Supreme Court announced that it would hear oral arguments on Trump\u2019s claims of immunity, delaying the possibility of a trial before the election in the federal January 6th case.\u201cIt\u2019s practically a kind of game-over moment for our democracy, what the Supreme Court did this week,\u201d the staff writer Susan B. Glasser says. Will apathy among Democrats and the Supreme Court\u2019s delay of Trump\u2019s trial lead to a second Trump term? The New Yorker staff writers Jane Mayer and Evan Osnos join Glasser to weigh in.