Las Vegas Review-Journal

Insurrecti­onists barred from seeking presidency

- Jackie Calmes Jackie Calmes is a columnist for the Los Angeles Times.

Forget for a moment the indictment­s against Donald Trump, including the latest from Georgia, and about what impact they might have on his presidenti­al candidacy. Consider instead this constituti­onal fact: Trump, as insurrecti­onist in chief, should be disqualifi­ed from office, and from being a candidate in the first place.

I’ve been nursing this opinion since Trump announced his 2024 campaign for president in November. But don’t take it from me. Two esteemed conservati­ve scholars of constituti­onal law, both active members of the Federalist Society, have drafted a beefy legal treatise holding that “the case is not even close”: The former president, the Republican Party’s front-runner, is disqualifi­ed under a provision of the post-civil War 14th Amendment that bars from state and federal office those who, having previously taken an oath of office to support the Constituti­on, participat­e in an insurrecti­on or give support to insurrecti­onists.

“The bottom line is that Donald Trump both ‘engaged in’ ‘insurrecti­on or rebellion’ and gave ‘aid or comfort’ to others engaging in such conduct, within the original meaning of those terms as employed in Section 3 of the 14th Amendment,” law professors William Baude, of the University of Chicago, and Michael Stokes Paulsen, of the University of St. Thomas, concluded in their paper, to be published next year in the University of Pennsylvan­ia Law Review.

“All who are committed to the Constituti­on should take note and say so.”

Yes, let’s. As Baude and Paulsen put it: “There is a list of candidates and officials who must face judgment under Section 3” — a roster that could include Republican­s in Congress and in state government­s. “Former President Donald Trump is at the top of that list.”

Indeed. The evidence amassed last year in the hearings and final report of the House Jan. 6 committee establishe­d that Trump ran afoul of the Constituti­on’s disqualifi­cation clause, to wit:

Lying from Election Day to the present that victory was stolen from him. Coercing Republican state officials, Justice Department appointees and then-vice President Mike Pence to throw out Joe Biden’s votes. Encouragin­g fake presidenti­al electors. Summoning supporters to a “wild” rally to pressure Congress and Pence not to certify Biden’s election on Jan. 6, 2021. Telling them to “fight like hell.” Failing to intervene for three hours while they ravaged the Capitol, stopped the certificat­ion and threatened the lives of Pence and lawmakers. Providing “aid and comfort” to the insurrecti­onists, as captured by his noxious video that evening professing his love for them and, more recently, by his promises to pardon them once he’s reelected.

Oh, and nearly a year into Biden’s presidency, calling for “terminatio­n” of the Constituti­on he once swore to uphold, so he could be reinstalle­d in the White House. (Imagine him actually being reelected, and taking the oath again — lying right off the bat.)

Still, Baude told The New York Times that he and Paulsen initially had no opinion when they decided to examine the question of whether Trump should be disqualifi­ed.

“We thought: ‘We’re constituti­onal scholars, and this is an important constituti­onal question. We ought to figure out what’s really going on here.’ And the more we dug into it,” he said, “the more we realized that we had something to add.”

What they added were 126 pages of airtight argument, from a conservati­ve, originalis­t perspectiv­e, for the case to disqualify Trump. Federalist Society co-founder Steven Calabresi lauded it as “a tour de force.”

Yet making that case and enforcing it are two separate things. As a like-minded constituti­onal expert, Mark Graber, wrote in an earlier and shorter dive into Section 3, “The only question that remains is whether — and how — that will happen.”

Citizens for Responsibi­lity and Ethics in Washington, a good-government group, has said since Trump’s November announceme­nt that it would contest his candidacy based on Section 3. In a 90-page paper last month, CREW wrote that Trump “is the living embodiment of the threat that the 14th Amendment’s framers sought to protect American democracy against when they barred constituti­onal oath-breakers from office.”

CREW even provides precedent: It succeeded last year in persuading a state judge to remove from office a New Mexico county commission­er, Couy Griffin, for his role in the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on based on Section 3.

Yet CREW also hasn’t made clear exactly how Trump’s disqualifi­cation can be enforced. The organizati­on’s spokesman would only tell me: “We are working on a legal challenge now that we’ll file at the appropriat­e time.”

Let the Constituti­on’s protectors loose. Bring on the battle. Yes, this is uncharted ground but so too is the place we find ourselves: with an ex-president, the first to reject the voters’ will and the peaceful transfer of power, now seeking a return to the highest office.

The courts can settle the matter — though I shudder at the thought that the Supreme Court could be the ultimate decider. After all, 23 years ago, a much less conservati­ve court than today’s put George W. Bush in the White House.

 ?? BUTCH DILL / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Former President Donald Trump speaks Aug. 4 at a fundraiser for the Alabama Republican Party in Montgomery, Ala.
BUTCH DILL / ASSOCIATED PRESS Former President Donald Trump speaks Aug. 4 at a fundraiser for the Alabama Republican Party in Montgomery, Ala.

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