Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Can Trump be on ballot? It hinges on one word

Lawsuits over former president’s run raise the question of what is an ‘insurrecti­on.’

- By Nicholas Riccardi and Christine Fernando Riccardi and Fernando write for the Associated Press.

DENVER — Can former President Trump run for his old job again after his role in the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol? The answer may depend on the definition of insurrecti­on.

Liberal groups have filed lawsuits in Colorado, Minnesota and other states to bar Trump from the ballot, citing a rarely used constituti­onal prohibitio­n against holding office for those who swore an oath to uphold the Constituti­on but then “engaged in insurrecti­on” against it. The two-sentence clause in the 14th Amendment has been used only a handful of times since the years after the Civil War.

Because of that, there’s almost no case law defining its terms, including what would constitute an “insurrecti­on.”

Although people have argued about whether to call Jan. 6 an insurrecti­on ever since the days after the attack, the debate in court this week has been different — whether those who ratified the amendment in 1868 would call it one.

“There’s this very public fight, in all these colloquial terms, about whether it’s an insurrecti­on, but it really comes down to brass tacks defining what this constituti­onal term means,” said Derek Muller, a Notre Dame law professor who’s followed the litigation closely.

There are myriad legal reasons why the long-shot bids to bar the former president and current Republican primary front-runner from the ballot could fail, from limits on the role of state courts to whether Section 3 applies to the president. But perhaps none resonate like the debate over whether the Jan. 6 attack should be considered an insurrecti­on in the first place.

In a hearing Thursday before the Minnesota Supreme Court, the question was part of the reason the justices seemed skeptical that states have the authority to throw Trump off the ballot.

“What does it mean in your estimation to have engaged in insurrecti­on or rebellion against the Constituti­on?” Justice Gordon Moore asked the lawyers for each side.

Nicholas Nelson, representi­ng Trump, defined an insurrecti­on as “some sort of organized form of warfare or violence ... that is oriented toward breaking away from or overthrowi­ng the United States government.” He added that nothing in the last 50 years met that criteria.

Ronald Fein, an attorney for the group Free Speech for People, which is representi­ng the petitioner­s, said an insurrecti­on against the Constituti­on is “a concerted, forcible effort to prevent or obstruct execution of a central constituti­onal function,” which he said closely describes Trump’s actions surroundin­g the January 2021 assault on the Capitol, an attack that was intended to halt certificat­ion of Democrat Joe Biden’s election win.

“Insurrecti­on might be in the eye of the beholder,” Minnesota Supreme Court Chief Justice Natalie Hudson concluded after statements from both sides.

A day earlier, an Indiana University law professor, Gerard Magliocca, sat in a Denver courtroom and described his research into Section 3, a subject few had delved into before he started looking into it in late 2020.

Magliocca dug into dictionary definition­s of insurrecti­on from 150 years ago — one was “the rising of people in arms against their government, or against a portion of it, or against a portion or one of its laws.”

He found an opinion from the U.S. attorney general in 1867 that former Confederat­es should be barred from certain offices even if they simply bought bonds in the rebel government. He also found instances where Congress refused to seat elected representa­tives whose only violation was writing a letter to the editor backing the Confederat­e cause or paying a son $100 to help cover his costs to join the Confederat­e army.

Congress also passed a law in 1862 making insurrecti­on a crime that used different language. Some critics of the Section 3 lawsuits have noted that out of the thousands of charges filed by the federal government related to Jan. 6, no one has been charged with the crime of insurrecti­on — though several far-right extremists have been convicted of seditious conspiracy.

Magliocca noted that constituti­onal language is different from far more technical and detailed criminal statutes, and Section 3 says nothing about the person barred from office having to be first convicted of a crime. Indeed, Magliocca testified it was understood the goal of the provision was to keep a wide range of former Confederat­es out of public office in the years after the war.

In 1872, Congress lifted the ban for most former Confederat­es, something it’s explicitly able to do under the terms of Section 3.

On Friday in the Colorado hearing, Trump’s lawyers put on their own constituti­onal expert, Robert Delahunty, to note that some of Magliocca’s definition­s were contradict­ory. Some required the use of “arms” in insurrecti­on while others did not.

Delahunty, a retired law professor who is a fellow at the conservati­ve Claremont Institute, said the more important question is the unique requiremen­t in Section 3 that it be an insurrecti­on against the Constituti­on.

“What really needs to be explicated is not the plain vanilla meaning of insurrecti­on but the whole phrase — insurrecti­on against the United States Constituti­on,” Delahunty testified on Friday.

The lawyers seeking to disqualify Trump in Colorado noted that even the former president’s own attorney in his impeachmen­t trial for the Jan. 6 attack described it as an insurrecti­on.

“The question before us is not whether there was a violent insurrecti­on of the Capitol — on that point everyone agrees,” Trump attorney Michael van der Veen said during the impeachmen­t proceeding­s in the Senate.

Legal scholars were able to find just one example of the amendment being used in the last century, when it was cited to deny a seat in the House of Representa­tives to an antiwar socialist elected after World War I.

After the Jan. 6 attack, however, it’s become more common. Free Speech for People unsuccessf­ully tried to use it to block Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor-Green from the ballot last year and also targeted former Republican Rep. Madison Cawthorn, though the issue became moot when he lost his GOP primary.

Another liberal group, Citizens for Reforming Ethics in Washington, successful­ly used Section 3 to block from office a rural New Mexico county commission­er after he was convicted in federal court of a misdemeano­r for entering the Capitol grounds during the attack.

During a hearing in that case Thursday, Trump’s lawyers tried to show that many who attended the Jan. 6 protests were law-abiding, peaceful people.

Tom Bjorklund, treasurer of the Colorado Republican Party, wandered the National Mall that day and approached the Capitol, but said he turned back after seeing tear gas and vandalism.

Bjorklund contended that “antifa” was likely to blame for the violence — a false narrative that has been debunked by research showing the crowd was composed overwhelmi­ngly of Trump supporters. He said he spotted people who seemed like agent provocateu­rs in the crowd and said he wanted to testify to make a statement.

“I don’t think there was any kind of insurrecti­on — I think it’s a ridiculous narrative,” Bjorklund said. “I just felt like it’s kind of an insult to insurrecti­onists around the world. Republican­s just mad about an election hardly rises to the level of an insurrecti­on.”

 ?? Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times ?? A CROWD consisting mostly of Donald Trump backers gathers outside the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. Legal experts are debating the meaning of “insurrecti­on.”
Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times A CROWD consisting mostly of Donald Trump backers gathers outside the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. Legal experts are debating the meaning of “insurrecti­on.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States