New York Daily News

SUPREMELY BIG CALL FOR COURT

Justices to hear arguments today & weigh whether Trump can get boot from ballot

- BY TIM BALK

Nine U.S. Supreme Court justices — including three appointed by former President Donald Trump — are set Thursday to hear oral arguments on Trump’s eligibilit­y in this year’s presidenti­al election.

The question became unavoidabl­e for the Supreme Court after Colorado’s top court decided 4-3 to remove Trump from the state’s Republican primary ballot.

The Colorado justices voted to bar Trump under Section 3 of the 14th Amendment, which states that nobody who has taken an oath of office to uphold the Constituti­on but then engages in “insurrecti­on or rebellion” against the U.S. is permitted to return to public office.

The Colorado court found that Trump engaged in insurrecti­on through his role in the deadly Jan. 6, 2021, riots and attack at the U.S. Capitol. Before Trump’s supporters overran cops at the Capitol, Trump delivered an explosive speech falsely insisting he had won the 2020 presidenti­al election “in a landslide.”

He urged his supporters to “fight like hell” and “take back our country.”

Whether those remarks — and his earlier efforts to upend the results of an election he lost — amounted to engagement in insurrecti­on is a question the Supreme Court will consider.

But that is not the only question. Trump’s legal team has argued that the constituti­onal clause at issue does not apply to the presidency. The section explicitly spells out senators and House members as individual­s to whom its powers apply. It also cites “any office, civil or military, under the United States,” but it does not specifical­ly cite the president.

A lower court judge in Colorado was swayed that the provision’s wording means it does not apply to the presidency — but the Colorado Supreme Court overruled her.

In a 30-page brief submitted to the U.S. Supreme Court on Monday, Trump’s lawyers argued that “one would expect the text of Section 3 to specifical­ly mention the presidency in the list of enumerated offices rather than leave this matter to a contestabl­e inference.”

The former president’s lawyers also argued Trump did not engage in an insurrecti­on at the Capitol, and that even if he

did, Congress would have to enforce Section 3, rather than the courts.

Colorado’s Supreme Court previously brushed such arguments aside, finding that the provision applied to Trump.

“President Trump is disqualifi­ed from holding the office of President under Section Three,” the Colorado court said in a sprawling unsigned majority opinion. “We do not reach these conclusion­s lightly. We are mindful of the magnitude and weight of the questions now before us.”

In sifting through the arguments, the Supreme Court — which has a 6-to-3 conservati­ve supermajor­ity — will be traversing difficult terrain, forcing the justices to ultimately take a stand that could frustrate large numbers of Americans.

The case could thrust the court into political territory it has not touched since Bush v. Gore after the 2000 presidenti­al election.

“They can’t win,” said Carl Tobias, a law professor at the University of Richmond. “Half the population is going to be unhappy probably with whatever they do.”

And the political implicatio­ns are likely to weigh heavily on the judges even if they seek to keep their focus on the law, said Richard Hasen, an election law expert at the University of California-Los Angeles.

“There aren’t strong legal precedents to apply,” Hasen said. “When there’s not controllin­g cases, it’s very easy to fill the gaps with your own values.”

Since Colorado’s top court made its ruling in December, different elections officials and courts have split when faced with arguments against Trump’s eligibilit­y. The Michigan

Supreme Court, the California secretary of state, and the New York Board of Elections have all rejected efforts to disqualify Trump from ballots.

Maine’s secretary of state, however, deemed Trump ineligible and barred him from the ballot.

The court that can determine the rules for all 50 states includes Justices Brett Kavanaugh, Neil Gorsuch and Amy Coney Barrett — three conservati­ves appointed by Trump. They banded together to reverse Roe v. Wade and erase the national right to abortion in 2022, delivering one of the most explosive Supreme Court decisions in decades.

But they have not always sided with Trump. The court firmly rejected the former president’s attempts to use it to overturn the 2020 presidenti­al election.

 ?? AP ?? The fate of former President Donald Trump’s bid to return to the White House will be in the balance as the Supreme Court will consider whether Trump can be barred from the ballot under the Constituti­on’s 14th Amendment, which disqualifi­es insurrecti­onists.
AP The fate of former President Donald Trump’s bid to return to the White House will be in the balance as the Supreme Court will consider whether Trump can be barred from the ballot under the Constituti­on’s 14th Amendment, which disqualifi­es insurrecti­onists.
 ?? ??

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