Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Democracy threatened

- JAMELLE BOUIE

Last month, the states of Colorado and Maine moved to disqualify Donald Trump as a candidate in the 2024 presidenti­al election, citing Section 3 of the 14th Amendment. In response, Trump has asked the Supreme Court to intervene on his behalf in the Colorado case, and he has appealed Maine’s decision.

There is a real question of whether this attempt to protect American democracy — by removing a would-be authoritar­ian from the ballot — is itself a threat to American democracy. Will proponents and supporters of the 14th Amendment option effectivel­y destroy the village in order to save it?

It may seem obvious, but we should remember that Trump is not an ordinary political figure. And try as some commentato­rs might, there is no amount of smoke one could create — through strained counterfac­tuals, dire warnings of a slippery slope or outright dismissal of the events that make the Trump of 2024 a figure very different from the Trump of 2020 — that can obscure or occlude this basic fact.

In 2020, Trump went to the voting public of the United States and asked for another four years in office. By 51% to 47%, the voting public of the United States said no. More importantl­y, Trump lost the Electoral College, 306-232, meaning there were enough of those voters in just the right states to deny him a second term.

The people decided. And Trump said, in so many words, that he didn’t care. What followed, according to the final report of the House select committee on Jan. 6, was an effort to overturn the result of the election.

Trump, the committee wrote, “unlawfully pressured state officials and legislator­s to change the results of the election in their states.” He “oversaw an effort to obtain and transmit false electoral certificat­es to Congress and the National Archives.” He “summoned tens of thousands of supporters to Washington for Jan. 6,” the day Congress was slated to certify the election results, and “instructed them to march to the Capitol” so they could “‘take back’ their country.’” He even sent a message on Twitter attacking his vice president, Mike Pence, knowing full well that “a violent attack on the Capitol was underway.”

Trump sought and actively tried to subvert constituti­onal government and overturn the results of the presidenti­al election. And what he could not do through the arcane rules and procedures of the Electoral College, he tried to do through the threat of brute force, carried out by an actual mob.

Looked at this way, the case for disqualify­ing Trump through the 14th Amendment is straightfo­rward. Section 3 states that “No person shall … hold any office, civil or military, under the United States, or under any state, who, having previously taken an oath … 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.”

As the legal scholar Mark A. Graber writes in an amicus brief submitted to the Colorado Supreme Court, “American jurists understood an insurrecti­on against the United States to be an attempt by two or more persons for public reasons to obstruct by force or intimidati­on the implementa­tion of federal law.” There was also a legal consensus at the time of the amendment’s drafting and ratificati­on that an individual “engaged in insurrecti­on whenever they knowingly incited, assisted or otherwise participat­ed in an insurrecti­on.”

We also know that the framers of the 14th Amendment did not aim or intend to exclude the president of the United States from its terms. In 1870, the Republican-controlled Senate refused to seat Zebulon Vance, the former Confederat­e governor of North Carolina. It strains credulity to think that the same Republican­s would have sat silent if the Democratic Party had, in 1872, nominated a former Confederat­e leader for the presidency.

Under a plain reading of Section 3 — and given the evidence uncovered by the Jan. 6 committee — Trump cannot stand for the presidency of the United States or any other federal office, for that matter.

The real issue with disqualify­ing Trump is less constituti­onal than political. Disqualifi­cation, goes the argument, would bring American democracy to the breaking point.

In this line of thinking, to deny Americans their choice of presidenti­al candidate would destroy any remaining confidence in the American political system. It would also invite Trump’s allies in the Republican Party to do the same to Democrats, weaponizin­g Section 3 and disqualify­ing candidates for any number of reasons. Disqualifi­cation would also give far more power to the courts when the only appropriat­e venue for the question of Trump is the voting booth.

But these objections rest on a poor foundation. They treat Trump as an ordinary candidate and Jan. 6 as a variation on ordinary politics. But as the House select committee establishe­d, Jan. 6 and the events leading up to it were nothing of the sort. And while many Americans still contest the meaning of the attack on the Capitol, many Americans also contested, in the wake of the Civil War, the meaning of secession and rebellion. That those Americans viewed Confederat­e military and political leaders as heroes did not somehow delegitimi­ze the Republican effort to keep them, as much as possible, out of formal political life.

What unites Trump with the former secessioni­sts under the disqualifi­cation clause is that, like them, he refused to listen to the voice of the voting public. He rejected the bedrock principle of democratic life: the peaceful transfer of power.

The unspoken assumption behind the idea that Trump should be allowed on the ballot and that the public should have the chance to choose for or against him yet again is that he will respect the voice of the electorate. But we know this isn’t true. It wasn’t true after the 2016 presidenti­al election — when, after winning the Electoral College, he sought to delegitimi­ze the popular vote victory of his opponent as fraud — and it was put into stark relief after the 2020 presidenti­al election.

Trump is not simply a candidate who does not believe in the norms, values and institutio­ns we call American democracy — although that is troubling enough. Trump is all that and a former president who used the power of his office to try to overturn constituti­onal government in the United States.

Is it anti-democratic to disqualify Trump from office and deny him a place on the ballot? Does it violate the spirit of democratic life to deny voters the choice of a onetime officehold­er who tried, under threat of violence, to deny them their right to choose? Does it threaten the constituti­onal order to use the clear text of the Constituti­on to hold a former constituti­onal officer accountabl­e for his efforts to overturn that order?

The answer is no, of course not. There is no rule that says democracie­s must give endless and unlimited grace to those who used the public trust to conspire, for all the world to see, against them. Voters are free to choose a Republican candidate for president; they are free to choose a Republican with Trump’s politics. But if we take the Constituti­on seriously, then Trump, by dint of his own actions, should be off the board.

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