The Guardian (USA)

Trump lashes out after Colorado ruling removing him from ballot

- Lauren Aratani in New York and Martin Pengelly in Washington

The Colorado supreme court ruling on Tuesday that bars Donald Trump from the state’s presidenti­al ballot has kicked off a firestorm among Republican­s and legal scholars, and fury from Trump himself.

Though the former president did not address the decision during a rally on Tuesday night in Iowa – where he went on abusive rants against immigratio­n – he posted on his social media platform Truth Social on Wednesday. “What a shame for our country!!!” Trump wrote. “A sad day for America!!!”

Noah Bookbinder, president of the watchdog group Citizens for Responsibi­lity and Ethics in Washington, which brought the suit in Colorado on behalf of Republican and independen­t voters, praised the decision. It was, he said, “not only historic and justified, but is also necessary to protect the future of democracy in our country”.

“Our constituti­on clearly states that those who violate their oath by attacking our democracy are barred from serving in government,” he said.

Republican­s have largely lined up behind Trump, railing against the ruling for allegedly infringing the right of Americans to choose their leaders.

Elise Stefanik, a Republican representa­tive from New York, said in a statement: “Democrats are so afraid that

President Trump will win on Nov 5th 2024 that they are illegally attempting to take him off the ballot.”

The Republican presidenti­al candidate Vivek Ramaswamy pledged to drop out of the Republican primary in Colorado, piling pressure on his fellow candidates to do the same or be seen as “tacitly endorsing this illegal maneuver which will have disastrous consequenc­es from our country”.

The Florida governor, Ron DeSantis, who is also campaignin­g for the Republican nomination, voiced an unusual theory that the Colorado decision was in fact a move from Democrats to incite Trump’s base and deliberate­ly help him win the primary.

“They’re doing all this stuff to basically solidify support in the primary for him, get him into the general, and the whole general election’s going to be all this legal stuff,” DeSantis said on Wednesday, according to NBC News. “It will give [Joe] Biden or the Democrat, whoever, the ability to skate through this thing.”

Over the last few months, Trump has been liberally using his 91 criminal charges and assorted civil trials to further the narrative that Washington is against him, calling on his base for financial support. Trump has already seized on the Colorado ruling for fundraisin­g purposes, posting on Truth Social, “Breaking news: Colorado just removed me from the ballot! Chip in now.”

The Colorado court postponed the implementa­tion of its ruling until 4 January, giving room for Trump to make an appeal to the US supreme court. Steven Cheung, a Trump campaign spokespers­on, said on Tuesday night that the campaign has “full confidence that the US supreme court will quickly rule in our favor and finally put an end to these un-American lawsuits”.

Despite confidence from Trump’s team that the supreme court would rule in their favor, legal reactions to the Colorado ruling have so far shown just how murky the debate will be.

Trump’s Truth Social feed is already reflecting this. On Tuesday night,

Trump quoted Jonathan Turley, a conservati­ve law professor at George Washington University who has appeared as a witness for House Republican­s seeking to impeach Biden over nebulous claims of corruption.

“This country is a powder keg and this court is just throwing matches at it … for people that say they are trying to protect democracy, this is hands down the most anti-democratic opinion I’ve seen in my lifetime,” Trump quoted Turley as saying on Fox News.

But Trump truncated a portion of Turley’s interview where he said that though he believed the Colorado court was wrong, “January 6 was many things, most of it not good”.

“In my view, it was not an insurrecti­on. It was a riot,” Turley said. “That doesn’t mean that the people responsibl­e for that day shouldn’t be held accountabl­e. But to call this an insurrecti­on for the purposes of disqualifi­cation would create a slippery slope for every state in the union.”

The Colorado court ruled that section 3 of the 14th amendment disqualifi­es Trump from office because the section – referred to as the insurrecti­on clause – bars anyone from holding political office if they took an oath to uphold the constituti­on but “engaged” in “insurrecti­on or rebellion” against it. The section was included in the constituti­on after the civil war to prevent

Confederat­e leaders from holding office in the government they had rebelled against.

Turley’s argument is that while Trump incited a riot, it technicall­y does not amount to the insurrecti­on specified in the 14th amendment.

“If you dislike Trump, you believe he’s responsibl­e for January 6 … this isn’t the way to do it,” he said.

This is just one of the points that will be debated if Trump’s appeal is taken up by the supreme court, which has been facing an onslaught of accusation­s of politics in the court. As much as the Colorado ruling puts a spotlight on Trump, it will also set up the US supreme court – which has historical­ly tried to maintain itself as a neutral arbiter of the law – to take on yet another case entrenched in politics.

Trump appointed three out of the court’s nine current justices, cementing a six-to-three conservati­ve majority in the court that has overturned abortion and affirmativ­e action in the last three years. The supreme court justice Clarence Thomas has also been facing criticism over the last year for taking gifts and vacations from billionair­es, as well as for the conservati­ve activism of his wife, Ginni Thomas.

The court is also set to rule on another Trump appeal, which will decide whether he is immune from prosecutio­n over any charges that come from his Washington DC criminal trial over the January 6 insurrecti­on.

Regardless of whether the Colorado ruling is upheld, the debate will probably force close scrutiny of Trump’s involvemen­t in the January 6 attack. Trump maintains that the more than 1,000 people who were arrested after the attack, including 600 who were eventually sentenced, are political prisoners. He also continues to argue that the 2020 election was stolen, a belief that incited those who carried out the January 6 attack in the first place.

“Election interferen­ce!” Trump posted on Truth Social on Tuesday night.

 ?? Photograph: Charlie Neibergall/AP ?? ‘Breaking news: Colorado just removed me from the ballot! Chip in now,’ Donald Trump posted to Truth Social.
Photograph: Charlie Neibergall/AP ‘Breaking news: Colorado just removed me from the ballot! Chip in now,’ Donald Trump posted to Truth Social.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States