Los Angeles Times

Trump doesn’t belong on anyone’s ballot

The 14th Amendment seems clear, but the Supreme Court may find a way to keep him in the 2024 race

- ROBIN ABCARIAN @robinkabca­rian

ON THURSDAY, the U.S. Supreme Court is scheduled to hear arguments in a Colorado case about whether former President Trump’s deep involvemen­t in the deadly events of Jan. 6, 2021, should disqualify him from running again.

Sadly, I think it’s a good bet that the court’s conservati­ve majority will side with Trump and allow his name on the ballot. It’s the least fraught way out for the court, mired in scandals of its own making and undoubtedl­y loath to throw more fuel on the raging election-year American partisan political fire.

I’ve had mixed feelings about this case since the Colorado Supreme Court ruled in December that allowing Trump on its state ballot would violate Section 3 of the 14th Amendment, which, boiled down, forbids anyone who has engaged in or supported insurrecti­on against the American government to hold office.

Plenty of Trump’s legal allies have argued that Section 3 does not apply to him, claiming, for instance, that the president is not an “officer” of the United States, or that Section 3 only prohibits a candidate from holding office, not seeking it. But as the motley group of Colorado voters who brought the case against Trump put it, you have to engage in “pedantic wordplay” to not apply Section 3 to Trump.

The former president, driven by narcissism and power, has shown himself to have little regard for the rule of law, the Constituti­on or the American people. And yet, part of me thinks that allowing him to stay on the ballot would be the healthiest solution for the country.

Trump ought to get whomped by President Biden in November and then slink away. On the other hand, he already was whomped in 2020, and by shamelessl­y lying to his supporters, he has turned his loss into a cause celebre and a continuing national nightmare.

Not to mention an ongoing civics lesson for most of us, who can be forgiven for not knowing until now what Section 3 of the 14th Amendment even says.

“Let’s face it,” the Yale historian David Blight told NPR last week. “Section 3 had all but vanished from history, and it’s suddenly risen from the dead.”

Blight, along with Civil War historians Jill Lepore, Drew Gilpin Faust and John Fabian Witt, filed a friend-of-the-court brief in the Colorado case arguing that Section 3 applies to Trump and disqualifi­es him from running for office ever again.

“There is no one who relishes the idea of Section 3 being applied in this case,” Lepore told NPR. “There is no glee to be had, there is no triumph in striking Trump from the ballot. But this is what the Constituti­on says. And this is a court that has pledged to abide by the original intention, meaning and public understand­ing of the Constituti­on.”

The 14th Amendment, which was introduced in 1866 to address the widespread and often violent discrimina­tion against formerly enslaved Americans, promises all citizens equal protection under the law.

At the time, as the historians write in their brief, the deep national wounds wrought by the Civil War were still raw. Americans on the winning side were not in the mood to fully forgive and forget, and the idea that some secessioni­sts could be elected to Congress after betraying the union was unsettling, if not abhorrent.

Could a traitor such as Jefferson Davis, the first and only president of the Confederat­e States of America and a former member of the Senate and the House from Mississipp­i, run for office?

There was, Lepore told NPR, “an incredible terror of Jefferson Davis in particular, that he would make a bid for the presidency.”

Section 3, the “disqualifi­cation clause,” was designed to prevent that from happening. Over time, as Blight noted, the section became something of a historical relic. And then the unthinkabl­e happened.

An American president who lost his reelection campaign tried to overturn the results of a fair election and remain in power against the will of the people, resulting in state and federal criminal indictment­s.

In Georgia, Trump has been charged with 13 felony counts of unlawfully conspiring to change the election outcome while participat­ing in a “criminal enterprise.” Federal prosecutor­s have charged him with conspiring to defraud the government and disenfranc­hise voters and obstructin­g an official proceeding over his role in the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on.

All along, Trump has claimed that a president can do whatever he wants and get away with it.

Not so, a federal appeals court unanimousl­y ruled Tuesday. “Any executive immunity that may have protected him while he served as president no longer protects him against this prosecutio­n,” wrote the court regarding the federal case against Trump, who has said he will appeal to the Supreme Court.

The high court, whose ultraconse­rvative majority has repeatedly proclaimed its embrace of originalis­m, will have to decide both the Colorado ballot question and the limits — or not — of presidenti­al immunity. Will the justices choose Trump, or the rule of law?

 ?? Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times ?? THE HIGH COURT justices could choose the least fraught way out of the cases that will decide Donald Trump’s eligibilit­y.
Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times THE HIGH COURT justices could choose the least fraught way out of the cases that will decide Donald Trump’s eligibilit­y.
 ?? ??

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