Hartford Courant

Trump will be on Connecticu­t ballot

Secretary of the state confirms he is entitled to compete in primary

- By Don Stacom Hartford Courant

Ending any lingering doubt, Secretary of the State Stephanie Thomas on Friday morning declared that Donald Trump will definitely be on Connecticu­t’s GOP primary ballot in April.

A review by her legal team determined that state statutes are clear that Trump is entitled to be on the presidenti­al preference ballot.

State law is different in Maine, she said, where Thomas’ counterpar­t concluded Trump’s role in the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the Capitol made him ineligible to run under the Constituti­on’s 14th amendment.

Thomas told reporters at the Capitol that Connecticu­t law prevents her from taking that action because it lays out just one benchmark for prospectiv­e candidates: Their campaigns must be “generally and seriously advocated or recognized according to reports in the national or state news media.”

Assessing whether Trump was complicit in insurrecti­on isn’t in her power, state lawyers advised her.

“I asked them to research whether or not that was a decision that could be made by our office,” she said. “As we have seen with many other states across the country, it is not within our jurisdicti­on. A court would need to make that decision.”

Thomas’ office has been hit with questions for months about how Connecticu­t would treat Trump’s candidacy. A Colorado court has ordered his name off the ballot in that state, a decision that Trump’s lawyers are appealing at the Supreme Court. They are also challengin­g Maine Secretary of the State Shenna Bellows decision that Trump can’t appear on her state’s ballot.

In both cases, Trump’s support of the violent attempt to take control of the Capitol after his loss in the 2020 election was cited as the reason. Under the 14th

Amendment, no one can hold federal office if they’ve previously sworn to uphold the Constituti­on but then “engaged in insurrecti­on or rebellion” or aided the country’s enemies.

Trump opponents have challenged his candidacy in dozens of states, saying he’d be ineligible to serve because of his attacks against America’s democracy. But only Maine and Colorado have accepted those arguments; the challenges are still unresolved in some states, while courts in Michigan, Minnesota and elsewhere have ruled in Trump’s favor.

Thomas predicted shortly before Christmas that Trump would get to stay on Connecticu­t’s ballot, and she made it official Friday.

“I don’t know what other states are going to do, but I do remind people that laws are different in every state,” she said Friday, noting that Maine’s secretary of the state is appointed by its legislatur­e, not its voters.

“So their laws recognize her as part of the representa­tive body, and that’s why she may have been able to make that decision,” Thomas said.

So only a court challenge could affect Trump’s ballot status, and Thomas said she knows of no pending lawsuit. When asked if there is time for someone to sue to get Trump’s name removed, she replied “That would be up to the courts and their schedules.”

Candidates on the Democratic ballot will be President Joe Biden, U.S. Rep. Dean Phillips, political commentato­r Cenk Kadir Uygur and author Marianne Williamson.

The Republican candidates will be Texas businessma­n Ryan Binkley, Florida Gov. Ron Desantis, former Ambassador Nikki Haley and Trump.

The primary in Connecticu­t is April 2.

 ?? DON STACOM/HARTFORD COURANT ?? Secretary of the State Stephanie Thomas announces Friday that Donald Trump will be on the Connecticu­t GOP primary ballot in April.
DON STACOM/HARTFORD COURANT Secretary of the State Stephanie Thomas announces Friday that Donald Trump will be on the Connecticu­t GOP primary ballot in April.

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