The Guardian (USA)

US supreme court ‘erred badly’ with Trump ruling, leading US historian says

- Martin Pengelly in Washington

The US supreme court “erred badly” in ruling Colorado was wrong to seek to remove Donald Trump from the ballot for inciting the January 6 insurrecti­on, a leading historian and analyst of presidenti­al politics said.

The court handed down its unanimous ruling on Monday, a day before Colorado became one of 16 states and one US territory to hold a Super Tuesday primary.

“The supreme court erred badly based on our amicus brief and our review of history, in claiming that a candidate for federal office can only be disqualifi­ed by an act of Congress,” Allan Lichtman said, speaking to reporters with three other historians who signed the brief arguing Trump should be removed.

Lichtman is a professor at American University in Washington DC who has correctly predicted the outcome of every presidenti­al election since 1984, using a system of “keys to the White House” he co-devised.

With Trump closing on the Republican nomination, Lichtman recently said Joe Biden held five keys to Trump’s three, with five up for grabs.

Most analysts and pollsters give Trump the edge, despite his facing 91 criminal charges (17 for election subversion, 40 for retention of classified documents and 34 over hush-money payments to an adult film star) and suffering multimilli­on-dollar penalties in civil suits regarding his business affairs and a rape allegation a judge called “substantia­lly true”.

But with Colorado’s attempt to remove Trump from the ballot rejected by the supreme court – ensuring the same fate for efforts in Maine and Illinois – he is poised to secure the Republican nomination and potentiall­y return to office.

The Colorado case attracted numerous amicus briefs. Lichtman and 24 other historians­argued Trump should be disqualifi­ed under section three of the 14th amendment, approved in 1868 to bar former Confederat­es from office.

“For historians,” they said, “contempora­ry evidence from the decisionma­kers who sponsored, backed and voted for the 14th amendment … demonstrat­es that decision-makers crafted section three to cover the president and to create an enduring check on insurrecti­on, requiring no additional action from Congress.”

On Monday the supreme court disagreed, saying in an unsigned opinion: “We conclude that states may disqualify persons holding or attempting to hold state office. But states have no power under the constituti­on to enforce section three with respect to federal offices, especially the presidency.”

It was up to Congress, five of the six conservati­ve justices said, to enact disqualifi­cation procedures.

Lichtman spoke to reporters with three other signatorie­s to the amicus brief: Manisha Sinha, of the University of Connecticu­t; Brooks D Simpson of Arizona State University; and Orville Vernon Burton, of the University of Illinois.

Lichtman said the brief “decisively proved [that] not a single one of the thousands of ex-Confederat­es who were disqualifi­ed under section three of the 14th amendment were disqualifi­ed under an act of Congress. They were automatica­lly disqualifi­ed, as Jefferson Davis himself [the former Confederat­e president] recognised in his trial and the two judges in the trial agreed.”

Lichtman said he identified some good in the Colorado ruling. First, the court “did not buy into Trump’s argument that section three of the 14th amendment excluded the presidency” as an office subject to sanction.

“Secondly, the supreme court, consistent with our brief, did not buy into the argument that section three only applied to ex-Confederat­es – clearly in this ruling [the court] indicated that it applies indefinite­ly.

“So these positive aspects [warn] future insurrecti­onists that you will not necessaril­y get away scot free. You can be disqualifi­ed by the states if you try to run for a state office, and you can be disqualifi­ed to run for a federal office by an act of Congress.”

Like Lichtman, Sinha noted that the four women on the court – the liberals Elena Kagan, Sonia Sotomayor and Ketanji Brown Jackson and Amy Coney Barrett, a conservati­ve – issued something of a rejoinder to the five men, saying they went too far by stating only Congress could disqualify a candidate for federal office.

But Sinha said the ruling left her “a little more pessimisti­c”. Speaking ironically, she said: “Let me congratula­te the conservati­ves for giving up on their deep respect for states’ rights that they have always showed in their decisions but strangely enough in this particular decision they upheld the federal and national authority of the 14th amendment. So that was quite out of character.”

The liberals who agreed there should not be a “patchwork” statebased system of disqualifi­cation, Sinha said, “don’t seem to understand that if the supreme court had rendered a decision disqualify­ing Trump that would have had a national effect, it would not have meant that each state gets to decide. The decision as it stands now has a national effect: that Trump cannot be barred from any states.”

Trump appointed three rightwinge­rs to a court critics accuse of acting in his favour: speedily dismissing the Colorado challenge but moving slowly on Trump’s claim of total immunity in his federal election subversion case.

In that case, the court said last week it would hear arguments on a matter most thought decided against Trump by a federal appeals court. Trial will now take place close to election day in November or after it, giving Trump the chance to dismiss the charges should he return to power.

Sinha said: “It seems to me that [the court] fast track[s] all the decisions in all the cases that let Trump off the hook and they’re slow-pedaling all the decisions that don’t let Trump off the hook.

“This is primary season and I think it’s going to have an effect politicall­y. Trump is going to seal the deal” with the Colorado decision.

Simpson said he was less disappoint­ed in the decision, because it “illuminate­s certain ways in which Trump is still vulnerable”, including by not addressing the question of whether he incited an insurrecti­on.

“The crisis persists,” Simpson said, “and anyone who sees this as a definitive ruling that settles everything is sorely mistaken.”

 ?? Donald Trump at Mar-a-Lago on Tuesday. Photograph: Rebecca Blackwell/AP ??
Donald Trump at Mar-a-Lago on Tuesday. Photograph: Rebecca Blackwell/AP

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