Post-Tribune

What’s the impact of the ruling?

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So far, very little in the real world. Aware that the case was very likely going to the U.S. Supreme Court, the 4-3 Colorado Supreme Court majority stayed their own order until Jan. 4 — the day before the state’s primary ballots are due at the printer — or until the Supreme Court rules.

Technicall­y, the ruling applies only to Colorado, and secretarie­s of state elsewhere are issuing statements saying Trump remains on the ballot in their state’s primary or caucus.

But it could embolden other states to knock Trump off the ballot. Activists have asked state election officials to do so unilateral­ly, but none have. Dozens of lawsuits have been filed, but all failed until Colorado.

The U.S. Supreme Court has never ruled on the meaning of Section 3. The justices can take the case as quickly as they like once Trump’s campaign files its appeal, which is not expected this week. The high court then could rule in a variety of ways — from upholding the ruling to striking it down to dodging the central questions on legal technicali­ties. But many experts warn that it would be risky to leave such a vital constituti­onal question unanswered.

“It is imperative for the political stability of the U.S. to get a definitive judicial resolution of these questions as soon as possible,” Rick Hasen, a law professor at the University of California, Los Angeles, wrote shortly after the ruling. “Voters need to know if the candidate they are supporting for president is eligible.”

What will the US Supreme Court do?

It’s always dangerous to try to predict a Supreme Court ruling. The high court is comprised of six justices appointed by Republican­s, including three nominated by Trump himself. Partly because this is completely new legal ground, it’s hard to predict how individual justices will rule based on their ideology.

Some of the strongest advocates of using Section 3 against Trump have been prominent conservati­ve legal theorists and lawyers who argue that courts have to follow the actual words of the Constituti­on. Here, they argue, there’s no wiggle room — Trump is clearly disqualifi­ed.

The Colorado high court’s seven justices were all appointed by Democrats. But they split 4-3 on the ruling. The majority quoted a ruling from Neil Gorsuch, one of Trump’s conservati­ve Supreme Court appointees, from when he was a federal judge in Colorado. He ruled then that the state properly kept a naturalize­d citizen born in Guyana off the presidenti­al ballot because he didn’t meet the constituti­onal qualificat­ions.

Courts are very hesitant to limit voters’ choices, however. There’s even a term for that — the “political question,” whether a legal dispute is better settled by the people the voters have selected to make the laws than by unelected judges. That’s one reason all the other Section 3 lawsuits had failed so far.

Sometimes courts have dodged the essential question. That’s what happened in Minnesota, where the state Supreme Court allowed Trump to stay on the ballot because, it found, the state party can place whomever it likes on its primary ballot. A Michigan appeals court came to the same conclusion. A New Hampshire judge dismissed a lawsuit by a little-known long shot Republican presidenti­al candidate, saying the question of whether Trump belonged on the ballot was “non-justiciabl­e.”

What is Section 3 of the 14th Amendment?

Section 3 of the 14th

Amendment was written to keep former confederat­es from returning to government office. It reads:

“No person shall be a Senator or Representa­tive in Congress, or elector of President and Vice-President, or hold any office, civil or military, under the United States, or under any State, who, having previously taken an oath, as a member of Congress, or as an officer of the United States, or as a member of any State legislatur­e, or as an executive or judicial officer of any State, to support the Constituti­on of the United States, shall have engaged in insurrecti­on or rebellion against the same, or given aid or comfort to the enemies thereof. But Congress may by a vote of two-thirds of each House, remove such disability.”

The provision was used often in the years immediatel­y after the Civil War, but fell into disuse after Congress granted an amnesty to many confederat­e veterans in 1872. The only record of it being used in the 20th century, according to legal scholars, was as justificat­ion in refusing to seat a socialist congressma­n in 1919 because he opposed U.S. involvemen­t in World War I.

What are Trump’s legal arguments?

The argument to disqualify Trump is that he clearly held an office under the United States, swore an oath and broke it in the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol. So he can’t return to office unless two-thirds of Congress lets him back in.

The arguments against disqualify­ing Trump are many. Trump’s lawyers have argued that, technicall­y, the president isn’t an officer “under the United States” — that it’s a legal term of art that refers to government appointees and therefore the provision doesn’t apply to him.

Even if it did, they’ve argued the Jan. 6 attack wasn’t an insurrecti­on — it was more of a riot. And even if it was an insurrecti­on, Trump didn’t “engage” in it — all he did was exercise his rights to free speech under the First Amendment. And state courts, the argument goes, aren’t in a position to determine whether Jan. 6 was an insurrecti­on — it would take months at least to hold a trial and get all the facts, and most witnesses are out of their jurisdicti­on.

Finally, even if the courts concluded Jan. 6 was an insurrecti­on and Trump was barred, that’s not their decision to make — it’s a political question for Congress.

What the Colorado Justices said

The majority opinion said the Colorado Supreme Court did have jurisdicti­on to decide the matter, that the presidency was clearly an office in the United States and that Trump’s actions related to the Capitol attack fit the insurrecti­on clause, in part because he urged his supporters during a rally beforehand to fight.

“President Trump asks us to hold that Section 3 disqualifi­es every oathbreaki­ng insurrecti­onist except the most powerful one and that it bars oathbreake­rs from virtually every office, both state and federal, except the highest one in the land,” the court’s majority opinion said. “Both results are inconsiste­nt with the plain language and history of Section 3.”

It’s worth noting that three of the judges on the Colorado high court agreed with some of Trump’s arguments. They particular­ly chafed at the rushed and improvised nature of the groundbrea­king case, which was heard by a district court judge in Denver judge in less than two months. That included a week of testimony from a handful of police and protesters who were at the Jan. 6 attack, two constituti­onal law professors and experts on a president’s emergency powers and on right-wing political speech..

“I have been involved in the justice system for 33 years now, and what took place here doesn’t resemble anything I’ve seen in a courtroom,” Justice Carlos Samour wrote in a scathing dissent.

“If President Trump committed a heinous act worthy of disqualifi­cation, he should be disqualifi­ed for the sake of protecting our hallowed democratic system, regardless of whether citizens may wish to vote for him in Colorado,” Samour concluded. “But such a determinat­ion must follow the appropriat­e procedural avenues. Absent adequate due process, it is improper for our state to bar him from holding public office.”

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