Miami Herald (Sunday)

DISQUALIFY­ING

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tutional scholars say it poses some of the thorniest and most consequent­ial questions for American democracy of any in recent years.

Many constituti­onal scholars say the Colorado decision may be legally sound, but to apply it would be fraught politicall­y, especially in a country so deeply divided and mistrustfu­l of democratic institutio­ns.

Taking Trump’s name off the ballot through a legal process would prevent him from returning to the White House, where he has threatened to suspend the Constituti­on and to use the levers of government to enact vengeance on his rivals. It would also prevent voters from rendering their own verdict on him.

“I believe in democracy,” said University of Chicago law professor Tom Ginsburg, “and I don’t think there’s a substitute for letting the people vote.”

Ginsburg co-wrote a 2021 article on legal provisions around the world that have disqualifi­ed candidates from office. He found that barring a political leader from the ballot is “a paradoxica­l tool that works best when it’s least needed, used against unpopular candidates that wouldn’t win anyway,” he said in an interview.

Trump, by contrast, is the runaway polling leader in the Republican primary field and is even or better with President Biden in hypothetic­al general election matchups. Given Trump’s popularity in the GOP, a court-imposed ban could produce a backlash that would further weaken many Americans’ faith in institutio­ns, Ginsburg said.

Even some of Trump’s fiercest political critics have echoed that view. Chris Christie, the former New Jersey governor and federal prosecutor, has said he is running for president to stop Trump from gaining another term in office. But Christie lambasted the Colorado

Supreme Court’s decision, saying it would “cause a lot of anger” if voters were not able to render a judgment on Trump.

“I do not believe Donald Trump should be prevented from being president of the United States by any court,” Christie told a crowd at a New Hampshire town hall hours after the decision was made public. “I think it’s bad for the country.”

The Colorado judges ruled by a margin of 4-3 that Trump is ineligible to run for president because he engaged in insurrecti­on. Section 3 of the 14th Amendment, which was adopted three years after the end of the Civil War, barred people from office if they swore an oath to the Constituti­on and then engaged in insurrecti­on. The measure was meant to keep former Confederat­es from returning to power. It has been used to disqualify candidates before, but only sparingly, and never with one with a following like Trump’s.

“President Trump did not merely incite the insurrecti­on,” the majority of judges concluded. “Even when the siege on the Capitol was fully underway, he continued to support it by repeatedly demanding that Vice President Pence refuse to perform his constituti­onal duty and by calling Senators to persuade them to stop the counting of electoral votes. These actions constitute­d overt, voluntary, and direct participat­ion in the insurrecti­on.”

The three dissenters each had different reasoning. One of them, Justice Carlos Samour Jr., said he was “disturbed about the potential chaos wrought by an imprudent, unconstitu­tional, and standardle­ss system in which each state gets to adjudicate Section Three disqualifi­cation cases on an ad hoc basis.”

Trump campaign spokesman Steven

Cheung has called the decision “completely flawed” and predicted that, upon appeal, U.S.

Supreme Court justices “will quickly rule in our favor and finally put an end to these un-American lawsuits.”

The U.S. Supreme Court has traditiona­lly aimed to steer clear of presidenti­al politics, though there have been notable exceptions. Most prominentl­y, the court weighed in to halt a crucial recount underway in Florida following the 2000 election contest between Al Gore and George W. Bush, effectivel­y cementing Bush’s victory.

Conservati­ve legal scholars William Baude and Michael Stokes Paulsen laid much of the intellectu­al groundwork for applying Section 3 to Trump’s candidacy in a recent article in the University of Pennsylvan­ia Law Review.

Luttig, who referenced their work and co-wrote with Tribe a piece for the Atlantic in August that helped to galvanize interest in the 14th Amendment, told Colorado Public Radio on Wednesday that the state Supreme Court ruling “was masterful and it is unassailab­le.”

He also said the U.S. Supreme Court must review the case according to the law, independen­t of any political considerat­ions. “This is not politics,” Luttig said. “It is the Constituti­on that will disqualify the former president if he is disqualifi­ed.”

Others agreed. While it

is impossible to ignore the political fallout of the legal cases, “the courts should act without any considerat­ion of the political implicatio­ns of their decisions,” said Mark Graber, a University of Maryland constituti­onal law scholar who this year published a book on the history of the 14th Amendment, “Punish Treason, Reward Loyalty: The Forgotten Goals of Constituti­onal Reform After the Civil War.”

Key to the 14th Amendment is that “there are limits to the democratic process in the name of democracy,” added Graber, who wrote an amicus brief in the Colorado case arguing that a president of the United States is covered under Article 3. Trump’s lawyers have argued that a president is exempt, and a lower Colorado court had accepted that view.

The Colorado Supreme Court ruling came as courts in other states have rejected attempts to knock Trump off the ballot on 14th Amendment grounds. Should the U.S. Supreme Court decide to review the Colorado decision, it is likely that the high court would issue a ruling that would apply nationwide.

The 14th Amendment challenge is far from the only legal fight that

Trump is engaged in as the presidenti­al primary season kicks off next month. He also faces charges in four criminal

cases, as well as civil suits. Next year, the presidenti­al campaign and Trump’s various legal cases are expected to play out simultaneo­usly in a way that has no precedent in American history.

The legal system is meant to be independen­t of politics. But scholars say it has become increasing­ly difficult to disentangl­e the two.

“We are stuck in a conundrum between what the best reading of the law is and the much more complicate­d high politics of how that law should be enforced,” said Stephen Vladeck, a professor at the University of Texas at Austin School of Law.

Two of the criminal cases against Trump relate directly to his attempts to overturn the 2020 election. Trump, Vladeck said, is “embroiled in massively important novel criminal and civil litigation that is in many ways about his formal and practical eligibilit­y to run for that office in the first place.”

Some legal experts worried that the Colorado decision would be seen as politicall­y motivated, a charge that Trump himself has made repeatedly since the decision was issued. All seven state Supreme Court justices were initially appointed by Democratic governors.

“There’s a tendency on the part of people who think Trump is a problem to embrace this as a shortcut,” said Rick Esenberg, president and general counsel of the Wisconsin Institute for Law & Liberty.

Esenberg considers himself a “never Trump” Republican, but neverthele­ss disagrees with the Colorado ruling, arguing that Trump’s speech to his supporters before the Capitol riot on Jan. 6, 2021, constitute­s protected speech.

If Trump is found ineligible based on what Esenberg deemed “an aggressive interpreta­tion of terms like insurrecti­on,” such decisions “become part of the political arsenal that both parties will deploy, and none of us should want that.”

Kim Lane Scheppele, a professor of sociology and internatio­nal affairs at Princeton University, said other countries make it easier to remove candidates from the ballot. Many European nations, she said, disqualify parties that do not pledge to uphold their constituti­ons. Trump went further, she noted, directly threatenin­g the U.S. constituti­onal order.

“The legal arguments are strong, and so the only question is whether the U.S. Supreme Court will have the political will to uphold the Colorado Supreme Court,” she said.

Given the unpreceden­ted nature of Trump’s actions to subvert the 2020 election, the Colorado decision underscore­s “a uniquely uncomforta­ble moment for American democracy,” said Richard L. Hasen, a UCLA law professor.

But that moment could become even more uncomforta­ble if the Supreme Court delays weighing in on Trump’s qualificat­ion to appear on the ballot. With the Colorado primary coming up on March 5 and Iowa voters set to set to kick off the nominating process with a caucus on Jan. 15, Hasen said the court must resolve the issue sooner than later.

“Republican primary voters need to know what candidates are eligible,” he said. “A speedy resolution is important for democracy.”

 ?? YURI GRIPAS TNS ?? U.S. President Donald Trump speaks to his supporters at the Save America Rally on the Ellipse on Wednesday, Jan. 6, 2021, near the White House in Washington, D.C.
YURI GRIPAS TNS U.S. President Donald Trump speaks to his supporters at the Save America Rally on the Ellipse on Wednesday, Jan. 6, 2021, near the White House in Washington, D.C.

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