USA TODAY US Edition

Trump sues over being barred from Maine’s primary ballot

- John Fritze and David Jackson

WASHINGTON − Former President Donald Trump sued Maine’s secretary of state Tuesday for disqualify­ing him from the state’s primary ballot because of his role in the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol, opening another legal front in the saga over whether voters in some states will be barred from selecting the Republican front-runner.

Election officials and courts in several states are considerin­g whether Trump’s actions on Jan. 6 disqualifi­ed him under a Reconstruc­tion-era provision of the 14th Amendment known as the insurrecti­on clause. Only two states − Maine and Colorado − have decided Trump should be removed from this year’s primary ballots.

The decision from Colorado’s top court has already been appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court.

In Maine, the decision was made by the secretary of state rather than by a court. Trump’s first line of appeal is to file a lawsuit in state court challengin­g that secretary’s decision, and that is what he did Tuesday.

Trump called the secretary of state a “biased decisionma­ker” in the suit and said his disqualifi­cation was the “product of a process infect by bias and pervasive lack of due process.”

At issue is a provision of the 14th Amendment that bars people from serving as president or a member of Congress if they took an oath as “an officer of the United States” and then “engaged in insurrecti­on or rebellion.” Maine Secretary of State Shenna Bellows, a Democrat, announced she believes the provision applied to Trump.

Bellows put enforcemen­t of her decision on hold pending resolution of the question in the courts.

The evidence, she said, demonstrat­es that the Capitol riot “occurred at the behest of, and with the knowledge and support of, the outgoing President (Trump).” The Constituti­on, she wrote, “does not tolerate an assault on the foundation­s of our government.”

Bellows denied that her decision was based on personal political views. She told CNN last week: “No secretary of state has ever deprived a presidenti­al candidate of ballot access . ... But no presidenti­al candidate has ever engaged in insurrecti­on.”

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