Texarkana Gazette

Judge: Marjorie Taylor Greene is qualified for reelection

- By Kate Brumback

ATLANTA, Ga. — A judge in Georgia on Friday found that U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene is qualified to run for reelection, concluding that a group of voters who had challenged her eligibilit­y failed to prove she engaged in insurrecti­on after taking office. But the decision will ultimately be up to Republican Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger.

Before reaching his decision, state Administra­tive Law Judge Charles Beaudrot held a daylong hearing in April that included arguments from lawyers for the voters and for Greene, as well as extensive questionin­g of Greene herself. He also received extensive briefing from both sides.

State law says Beaudrot must submit his findings to Raffensper­ger, who has to decide whether Greene should be removed from the ballot.

A Raffensper­ger spokespers­on said in an email that the secretary of state had received Beaudrot’s recommenda­tion and “will release his final decision soon.”

The challenge to Greene’s eligibilit­y was filed by voters who allege the GOP congresswo­man played a significan­t role in the Jan. 6, 2021, riot that disrupted Congress’ certificat­ion of Joe Biden’s presidenti­al election victory. That puts her in violation of a seldom-invoked part of the 14th Amendment having to do with insurrecti­on and makes her ineligible to run for reelection, they argue.

During the April 22 hearing on the challenge, Ron Fein, a lawyer for the voters who filed the challenge, noted that in a TV interview the day before the attack at the U.S. Capitol, Greene said the next day would be “our 1776 moment.” Lawyers for the voters said some supporters of then-President Donald Trump used that reference to the American Revolution as a call to violence.

“In fact, it turned out to be an 1861 moment,” Fein said, alluding to the start of the Civil War.

Greene is a conservati­ve firebrand and Trump ally who has become one of the GOP’s biggest fundraiser­s in Congress by stirring controvers­y and pushing baseless conspiracy theories. During the recent hearing, Greene was questioned under oath. She repeated the unfounded claim that widespread fraud led to Trump’s loss in the 2020 election, said she didn’t recall various incendiary statements and social media posts attributed to her and denied ever supporting violence.

Greene acknowledg­ed encouragin­g a rally to support Trump but she said she wasn’t aware of plans to storm the Capitol or to disrupt the electoral count using violence. Greene said she feared for her safety during the riot and used social media posts to encourage people to be safe and to remain calm.

The challenge to her eligibilit­y is based on a section of the 14th Amendment that says no one can serve in Congress “who, having previously taken an oath, as a member of Congress … to support the Constituti­on of the United States, shall have engaged in insurrecti­on or rebellion against the same.” Ratified shortly after the Civil War, it was meant in part to keep representa­tives who had fought for the Confederac­y from returning to Congress.

Greene “urged, encouraged and helped facilitate violent resistance to our own government, our democracy and our Constituti­on,” Fein said, concluding: “She engaged in insurrecti­on.”

James Bopp, a lawyer for Greene, argued that his client engaged in protected political speech and was, herself, a victim of the attack on the Capitol, not a participan­t.

Beaudrot wrote that there’s no evidence that Greene participat­ed in the attack on the Capitol or that she communicat­ed with or gave directives to people who were involved.

“Whatever the exact parameters of the meaning of ‘engage’ as used in the 14th Amendment, and assuming for these purposes that the Invasion was an insurrecti­on, Challenger­s have produced insufficie­nt evidence to show that Rep. Greene ‘engaged’ in that insurrecti­on after she took the oath of office on January 3, 2021,” he wrote.

Greene’s “public statements and heated rhetoric” may have contribute­d to the environmen­t that led to the attack, Beaudrot wrote, but her statements are protected by the First Amendment right to free speech and expressing such political views, “no matter how aberrant they may be” before she was sworn in as a member of Congress does not amount to insurrecti­on.

The challenge to Greene’s eligibilit­y to run for reelection was filed by five voters who live in her district, and the procedure for such a challenge is outlined in Georgia law. Beaudrot’s decision is not binding on Raffensper­ger, who must determine if Green is qualified to run for reelection.

Once Raffensper­ger makes his decision, either side has 10 days to appeal it in Fulton County Superior Court. Raffensper­ger is facing a Republican primary challenge on the May 24 ballot after he refused to bend to pressure from Trump to overturn Joe Biden’s victory in Georgia. Raffensper­ger has decried the 2021 attack on the Capitol, writing in his book that he found it “highly objectiona­ble” that “people are now trying to minimize what happened on January 6.”

The Georgia complaint was filed by Free Speech for People, a national election and campaign finance reform group, on behalf of the five voters. The group filed similar challenges in Arizona and North Carolina.

Greene has filed a federal lawsuit challengin­g the legitimacy of the law that the voters are using to try to keep her off the ballot. That suit is pending.

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