Las Vegas Review-Journal

Justices reject effort to keep Trump off ballot

- By Nick Coltrain The Denver Post (TNS)

Donald Trump’s position on Colorado’s ballot is secure ahead of today’s primary, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled Monday, overturnin­g the Colorado Supreme Court’s earlier finding that the former president engaged in insurrecti­on and was ineligible to run.

The federal justices’ 9-0 ruling puts to rest questions about whether states can enforce the insurrecti­on clause of the 14th Amendment by disqualify­ing presidenti­al candidates — though several justices disagreed with the opinion’s full rationale and scope.

“Because the Constituti­on makes Congress, rather than the States, responsibl­e for enforcing Section 3 against federal officehold­ers and candidates, we reverse,” the per curiam opinion says. It was not signed and represents the opinion of the court.

The ruling effectivel­y keeps the status quo for Colorado’s primary elections, which will be held alongside several other states’ primaries today, which is Super Tuesday. Ballots for the Republican race, which features a matchup with former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, were mailed to voters by Colorado clerks weeks ago, with Trump’s name listed as an option while the appeal was playing out.

This ruling ensures those votes will be counted.

The justices cited concerns of widespread “disruption” to federal elections as shifting state-by-state rules and qualificat­ions potentiall­y disenfranc­hise millions of voters and affect electoral outcomes.

“Nothing in the Constituti­on requires that we endure such chaos — arriving at any time or different times, up to and perhaps beyond the Inaugurati­on,” the opinion says.

While all signed onto the overall ruling, the court’s three liberal justices and Justice Amy Coney Barrett, a conservati­ve, filed separate concurrenc­es to argue the majority went too far with their opinion that Congress needed to enforce the clause.

“I agree that States lack the power to enforce Section 3 against Presidenti­al candidates. That principle is sufficient to resolve this case, and I would decide no more than that,” Coney Barrett, a Trump appointee, wrote. “... It does not require us to address the complicate­d question whether federal legislatio­n is the exclusive vehicle through which Section 3 can be enforced.”

The separate concurrenc­e by Justices Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan and Ketanji Brown Jackson argued that by going into so much detail, “the majority attempts to insulate all alleged insurrecti­onists from future challenges to their holding federal office.”

On social media, Trump posted on Monday: “BIG WIN FOR AMERICA!!!”

“Voters can take a person out of a race very quickly, but a court shouldn’t be doing that, and the Supreme Court saw that very well,” he said during a news conference later Monday.

Trump, who is decisively leading the race for the Republican nomination, praised the ruling as “going a long way toward bringing our country together” and for holding that it’s not up to the courts to disqualify candidates. He quickly pivoted to other criminal cases dogging his candidacy. He has been indicted in Georgia and in federal court on criminal charges related to trying to overturn the 2020 election results.

Trump has made broad claims of presidenti­al immunity. The U.S. Supreme Court will hear arguments in late April on whether Trump can be prosecuted on those charges.

Monday’s ruling left room for the backers of the Colorado case, the liberal watchdog group Citizens for Responsibi­lity and Ethics in Washington, or CREW, to claim some margin of victory.

The Supreme Court did not touch the question of whether Trump engaged in insurrecti­on around the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the U.S. Capitol by his supporters. The Colorado court’s 4-3 majority found that Trump did engage in insurrecti­on. The president’s legal team had urged the nation’s high court to reverse that finding too.

“While the (U.S.) Supreme Court allowed Donald Trump back on the ballot on technical legal grounds, this was in no way a win for Trump,” Noah Bookbinder, the president of CREW, said in a statement. “... The Supreme Court removed an enforcemen­t mechanism, and in letting Trump back on the ballot, they failed to meet the moment. But it is now clear that Trump led the January 6th insurrecti­on, and it will be up to the American people to ensure accountabi­lity.”

A ‘free pass’ to run for office?

Colorado Secretary of State Jena Griswold said the ruling was narrowly tailored to claims of insurrecti­on under the 14th Amendment and shouldn’t affect unrelated cases of candidate qualificat­ions. One prior case that seems unaffected, for example, allowed the state to keep a would-be presidenti­al candidate off the ballot because he was not a natural-born citizen. That case was ruled on by now-justice Neal Gorsuch when he was on the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver.

But because the decision removes states’ ability to enforce the insurrecti­on clause, Griswold worried the ruling “gives insurrecti­onists a free pass to run for office.”

Griswold, a Democrat, is an outspoken critic of Trump and has dedicated much of her tenure as secretary of state to fighting election denialism.

“States should be able to run their own elections (and) they should be trusted to disqualify oath-breaking insurrecti­onists,” Griswold said in an interview. “The court disagrees.”

She noted that states have wide latitude on how they run their elections, such as Colorado’s use of mail-in ballots and day-of registrati­on. But on this issue, it’ll be up to Congress to act. Griswold criticized that branch of government as “nonfunctio­ning,” leaving it “up to the American people to save our democracy this November.”

Doug Spencer, a University of Colorado law professor who focuses on election law, didn’t think the ruling would lead to a broad shift in how elections are handled across the country.

The court was able to land on a narrow, legally grounded approach that netted a unanimous opinion — an achievemen­t in itself, he said, given the divisive politics where Trump is concerned. He was less sympatheti­c to the court’s concerns about how disqualify­ing Trump would play out in practice.

Just this year, states have had different ballot listings of candidates, he said. New Hampshire left President Joe Biden off the Democratic primary ballot altogether after he didn’t file in response to the state’s party refusing to move its primary date. In Nevada, Republican­s barred candidates from participat­ing in both the primary and its caucus — in effect, making that state’s caucus about Trump and its primary election about Haley.

“Practicall­y speaking, we already have a system where different states have different elections,” Spencer said.

Colorado voters filed Trump challenge

The Colorado case was filed by a group of unaffiliat­ed and Republican Colorado voters, with support from CREW. They argued Trump was ineligible for office under the Civil War-era amendment to the Constituti­on. Section 3 of the 14th Amendment specifical­ly bars people who engaged in insurrecti­on or rebellion from office if they had previously taken an oath to support the Constituti­on.

Trump’s words riled up the mob that later stormed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, the plaintiffs argued, and he took too little action to calm the riot — meeting the criteria for engaging in insurrecti­on.

The Colorado Supreme Court agreed in its December ruling, finding that Trump was ineligible to appear on the primary ballot. The court put that ruling on hold while Trump appealed it.

The case was brought as part of a national effort helmed by CREW and other groups. CREW zeroed in on Colorado because state laws allow voters to challenge the eligibilit­y of candidates and the Colorado secretary of state has the power to keep ineligible candidates off the ballot.

Trump’s legal team called the Jan. 6 riot “shameful, criminal (and) violent,” but they didn’t concede that it was an insurrecti­on — or that Trump engaged in any insurrecti­on.

Jonathan F. Mitchell, Trump’s lawyer before the U.S. Supreme Court, also cited a pending case in which Trump has argued he has presidenti­al immunity and couldn’t be prosecuted for anything he did on Jan. 6, 2021, regardless.

“The Court should put a swift and decisive end to these ballot-disqualifi­cation efforts, which threaten to disenfranc­hise tens of millions of Americans and which promise to unleash chaos and bedlam if other state courts and state officials follow Colorado’s lead and exclude the likely Republican presidenti­al nominee from their ballots,” Trump’s attorneys wrote in their brief ahead of Supreme Court arguments.

 ?? MAANSI SRIVASTAVA / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? U.S. Supreme Court justices ruled Monday that the 14th Amendment’s insurrecti­on clause did not allow states to bar former President Donald Trump from the ballot. The justices gave different reasons, but the decision was unanimous.
MAANSI SRIVASTAVA / THE NEW YORK TIMES U.S. Supreme Court justices ruled Monday that the 14th Amendment’s insurrecti­on clause did not allow states to bar former President Donald Trump from the ballot. The justices gave different reasons, but the decision was unanimous.
 ?? DOUG MILLS / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Former President Donald Trump talks Monday from Mar-a-lago about the Supreme Court’s decision on the Colorado primary ballot. The justices ruled that the 14th Amendment did not allow states to bar the former president from the ballot. The justices gave different reasons, but the decision was unanimous.
DOUG MILLS / THE NEW YORK TIMES Former President Donald Trump talks Monday from Mar-a-lago about the Supreme Court’s decision on the Colorado primary ballot. The justices ruled that the 14th Amendment did not allow states to bar the former president from the ballot. The justices gave different reasons, but the decision was unanimous.

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