Call & Times

Rage at the Trump ballot decision is incoherent

- Jason Willick

What, exactly, do the Supreme Court’s liberals want? The high court ruled 9-0 in Trump v. Anderson on Monday that states lack the power under Section 3 of the 14th Amendment to remove former president Donald Trump from ballots for his role in the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol riot. Yet a “concurrenc­e” by the three Democratic-appointed justices lambastes the majority opinion in terms usually reserved for ideologica­lly charged dissents.

Justices Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan and Ketanji Brown Jackson accuse the conservati­ves of deciding “novel constituti­onal questions to insulate this Court and petitioner” – that is, Trump – “from future controvers­y.” For daring to quote Chief Justice Salmon P. Chase’s 1869 opinion on the 14th Amendment clause at issue, the liberal justices accuse the majority of “musings … as inadequate­ly supported as they are gratuitous.”

Their venom is hard to understand except as an expression of the polarizati­on that accompanie­s all things Trump. After all, the liberal justices agreed on the outcome: Colorado can’t use Section 3 – which bars officehold­ers who “engaged in insurrecti­on” from future office – to exclude presidenti­al candidates. That means Trump must appear on primary ballots and the 2024 presidenti­al election, despite the wishes of some very confident law professors, must be decided by voters.

The liberals’ objection, at least in part, is apparently about what should come next in the event that voters elect Trump. Sotomayor, Kagan and Jackson seem to believe that federal courts might be able to consider Trump’s eligibilit­y again in the election’s aftermath or even once he is president. Hence the liberal justices’ complaint that “the majority shuts the door on other potential means of federal enforcemen­t” of Section 3.

They’re vague on what this means. Perhaps they were moved by an amicus brief that said 14th Amendment challenges to an alleged insurrecti­onist’s eligibilit­y are not “ripe” until “after Election Day.” If the liberal justices got their way, perhaps, a losing presidenti­al candidate could sue before the inaugurati­on to disqualify the election’s winner. Acts of a new administra­tion might be challengea­ble under Section 3.

For the conservati­ve justices, the way to enforce Section 3 is by convicting Trump of the crime of insurrecti­on. The liberal justices seem to believe that shouldn’t be necessary. They would stop Colorado from pulling Trump’s name from ballots, but keep Section 3 disqualifi­cation hanging over his candidacy and, if there is one, his second administra­tion.

Think about that for a second. The liberal justices say they ruled against Colorado to avoid “a chaotic state-bystate patchwork” in the presidenti­al election. But they want to invite continuous post-election court challenges to “alleged insurrecti­onists” that would create just as much uncertaint­y and possibly “nullify the votes of millions,” as the majority puts it. As New York University law professor Rick Pildes noted, if a candidate for president “is going to be disqualifi­ed, the time to do that is before the election, not after he has taken office” – certainly if the goal is avoiding chaos!

The liberal justices refer to the Trump disqualifi­cation effort as “a sensitive case crying out for judicial restraint.” Yet they would keep alive the prospect of a judicially ordered replacemen­t of a president-elect or president without congressio­nal authorizat­ion. That’s an extraordin­ary role for the courts to play. Even if the concurrenc­e’s vision is a constituti­onally defensible interpreta­tion of Section 3, it hardly reflects a commitment to judicial restraint.

Indeed, the liberal justices’ reasoning leaves open the question of why they even joined the conservati­ves in ruling against Colorado. They point to “federalism principles,” which counsel against too much state variation in presidenti­al elections. But the Supreme Court could have created uniformity, or tried to, by ruling that Trump is nationally disqualifi­ed as a constituti­onal matter – that Jan. 6 was an insurrecti­on, that Trump engaged in it and that the 14th Amendment forecloses him from holding office. Not one justice went there.

Why? For one, such a ruling would appear illegitima­te. And if it would appear illegitima­te today, it would certainly appear illegitima­te at a later period in the election process. If the courts are going to eliminate a presidenti­al candidate, the public needs confidence that removal is not just based on judicial whim. Hence the majority’s insistence that disqualifi­cation follow a tailored process created by Congress.

The liberal justices couldn’t abide the majority opinion, which limits the avenues for disqualifi­cation lawsuits against Trump if he wins in November. But neither could they – given the best opportunit­y they are likely to receive – abide actually opining that the Capitol riot disqualifi­es Trump.

The campaign to remove Trump from the ballot was going to fail, whether on the liberals’ narrow grounds or the conservati­ves’ somewhat broader ones. But it seems to have succeeded at exacerbati­ng ideologica­l divisions on the Supreme Court for no good reason. Once again, Trump’s opponents prove as adept at weakening institutio­ns as he is.

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