The Senate Judiciary Committee will convene for a hearing this fall on the U.S. Supreme Court’s recent decision establishing broad criminal immunity for former President Donald Trump, according to its chair, Dick Durbin, D-Illinois, who said the decision has “upended our constitutional landscape.”

The court, which since 2020 has been dominated by a conservative supermajority of six Republican appointees, has drawn heavy scrutiny in recent years from congressional Democrats, who have conducted hearings on the court’s “shadow docket,” the justices’ “ethics crisis” and other controversies.