The Guardian (USA)

Colorado court hears arguments to keep ‘insurrecti­onist’ Trump off 2024 ballot

- Richard Luscombe and agency

A multi-pronged effort to keep Donald Trump off the 2024 presidenti­al ballot as an insurrecti­onist resumes in earnest, beginning with a court case in Colorado on Monday, the first of two states that will hear legal arguments this week.

Those seeking to have the former president ruled ineligible are relying on a civil war-era provision of the 14th amendment to the US constituti­on that states no person can hold public office if they “have engaged in insurrecti­on or rebellion against the same, or given aid or comfort to the enemies thereof”.

They argue that Trump’s incitement of the deadly 6 January attack on the US Capitol, in which his supporters attempted to block Congress certifying Joe Biden’s 2020 election victory, perfectly encapsulat­es the clause that has yet to be seriously tested in a courtroom.

In Denver on Monday, and in Minnesota’s supreme court on Thursday, hearings are being held in cases that could ultimately end up in the US supreme court, regardless of which side wins in the lower court. The rulings are likely to be swiftly appealed, dragging the cases out with next year’s general election only 12 months away.

“We’ve had hearings with presidenti­al candidates debating their eligibilit­y before – Barack Obama, Ted Cruz, John McCain,” said Derek Muller, a law professor at the University of Notre Dame, listing candidates challenged on whether they met the constituti­onal requiremen­t of being a “natural-born citizen”.

But the arguments against Trump, he said, rely on an obscure clause of the constituti­on with an “incendiary” bar against insurrecti­on. “Those legal questions are very heavy ones,” he said, noting that even if they are seen as long shots, they raise important issues and have a plausible legal path to success.

Among those who support the argument for Trump’s removal from the ballot are the Virginia senator Tim Kaine, Hillary Clinton’s 2016 running mate, who told ABC last month that the “language is specific” in the 14th amendment clause.

“In my view, the attack on the Capitol that day was designed for a particular purpose at a particular moment and that was to disrupt the peaceful transfer of power as is laid out in the constituti­on,” he said.

“So I think there is a powerful argument to be made.”

In court in Denver on Monday, Eric Olson, an attorney for a group of Colorado voters recounted Trump’s violent rhetoric preceding the January 6 attack and his encouragin­g a crowd that came within “40 ft” of then vice-president Mike Pence when they stormed the Capitol. He said Trump “summoned and organized the mob”.

“We are here because Trump claims, after all that, that he has the right to be president again,” Olson said. “But our constituti­on, the shared charter of our nation, says he cannot do so.”

Trump’s legal team and 2024 presidenti­al campaign assailed the lawsuit as little more than an attempt by Democrats to derail his attempt to reclaim his old job. Trump is so far dominating the Republican presidenti­al primary.

Before the trial on the lawsuit began, his lawyers filed a motion to have the judge recuse herself because she had donated in the past to a liberal group in the state. She said no. The campaign also noted the current lawsuit was filed by a liberal nonprofit in a state that voted for Democrat Joe Biden in 2020.

“They send money to these dark money groups, they go to a Democratic jurisdicti­on and a Democratic judge,” the Trump spokesman Jason Miller said.

The trial is unfolding in stages, starting with a descriptio­n of the attack and Trump’s words and actions, followed by arguments over whether the assault actually constitute­d an insurrecti­on.

Later in the week, lawyers are expected to call constituti­onal experts to delve into the meaning of the amendment’s insurrecti­on clause.

Trump’s lawyers contend the former president never “engaged in insurrecti­on” and was simply exercising his free speech rights to warn about election results he did not believe were legitimate.

Dozens of cases citing the amendment have been filed in recent months, but the ones in Colorado and Minnesota seem the most important, according to legal experts. They were filed by two liberal groups with significan­t resources, and in states with a clear, swift process for challenges to candidates’ ballot qualificat­ions.

That means the Colorado and Minnesota cases are taking a more legally sound route to get courts to force election officials to disqualify Trump, in contrast to other lawsuits that seek a sweeping ruling from federal judges that Trump is no longer eligible for the presidency.

The Citizens for Responsibi­lity and Ethics in Washington (Crew) watchdog group filed the Colorado lawsuit. “By instigatin­g this unpreceden­ted assault on the American constituti­onal order, Trump violated his oath and disqualifi­ed himself under the 14th Amendment from holding public office, including the office of the president,” its filing states.

Trump’s lawyers say the provision has not been used in 150 years, and the plaintiffs are interpreti­ng it incorrectl­y.

 ?? Photograph: Marco Bello/Reuters ?? Donald Trump in Palm Beach, Florida in April. Trump’s lawyers say the provision has not been used in 150 years, and the plaintiffs are interpreti­ng it incorrectl­y.
Photograph: Marco Bello/Reuters Donald Trump in Palm Beach, Florida in April. Trump’s lawyers say the provision has not been used in 150 years, and the plaintiffs are interpreti­ng it incorrectl­y.

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