The Guardian (USA)

US historians sign brief to support Colorado’s removal of Trump from ballot

- Martin Pengelly in Washington

Twenty-five historians of the civil war and Reconstruc­tion filed a US supreme court brief in support of the attempt by Colorado to remove Donald Trump from the ballot under the 14th amendment, which bars insurrecti­onists from running for office.

“For historians,” the group wrote, “contempora­ry evidence from the decision-makers who sponsored, backed, and voted for the 14th amendment [ratified in 1868] is most probative. Analysis of this evidence demonstrat­es that decision-makers crafted section three to cover the president and to create an enduring check on insurrecti­on, requiring no additional action from Congress.”

Lawyers for Trump argue that the presidency is not an “office” as described in the 14th amendment, that only congressio­nal action can stop someone from running, and that Trump did not incite an insurrecti­on.

Trump was impeached in Congress (for the second time) for inciting an insurrecti­on: the Capitol attack of 6 January 2021, an attempt to overturn defeat by Joe Biden now linked to nine deaths, more than 1,200 arrests and hundreds of conviction­s.

Impeached with the support of 10 House Republican­s but acquitted when only seven Senate Republican­s voted to convict, Trump now dominates his party and its presidenti­al primary, 91 criminal charges (17 for election subversion), civil trials and ballot challenges notwithsta­nding.

Maine has also sought to remove Trump from its ballot, a ruling delayed, like that in Colorado, while the supreme court considers the issue. Oral arguments are set for 8 February.

Amicus briefs allow interested parties to make relevant arguments. Earlier this month, nearly 180 Republican­s joined a brief in support of Trump.

The 25 historians – among them James McPherson of Princeton, the preeminent civil war scholar – pointed to 1860s congressio­nal debate.

“Senator Reverdy Johnson of Maryland, a Democratic opponent of the 14th amendment, challenged sponsors as to why section three omitted the president. Republican Lot Morrill of Maine … replied, ‘Let me call the senator’s attention to the words “or hold any office civil or military under the United States”.’ Johnson admitted his error; no other senator questioned whether section three covered the president.”

The historians also cited Andrew Johnson, in 1868 the first president impeached, referring to himself as “chief executive officer”.

Pointing out that section 3 of the 14th amendment is self-executing, and that “no former Confederat­e instantly disqualifi­ed from holding office under section three was disqualifi­ed by an act of Congress”, the historians also noted that Jefferson Davis, the Confederat­e president, cited his own disqualifi­cation as reason an indictment for treason should be quashed.

“Contempora­ry informatio­n provides direct evidence of the enduring reach of the 14th amendment,” the historians wrote. “Congress … chose to make disqualifi­cation permanent through a constituti­onal amendment.

“Republican senator Peter Van Winkle of West Virginia said, ‘This is to go into our constituti­on and to stand to govern future insurrecti­on as well as the present.’ To this end, the Amnesty Acts of 1872 and 1898 did not pardon future insurrecti­onists.”

The historians also said “adverse consequenc­es followed” amnesty, many ex-Confederat­es winning office and “participat[ing] in the imposition of racial discrimina­tion in the south that vitiated the intent of the 14th and 15th amendments to protect the civil and political rights of the formerly enslaved people.”

The historians concluded: “The court should take cognisance that section three of the 14th amendment covers the present, is forward-looking, and requires no additional acts of Congress for implementa­tion.”

Some political and legal observers have suggested Trump should be allowed to run regardless of the constituti­on, because to bar him would be anti-democratic.

In a forthcomin­g article for the New York Review of Books, seen by the Guardian, Sean Wilentz of Princeton – an eminent historian not part of the supreme court brief – calls such arguments “risible”.

“By their reasoning,” Wilentz writes, “Trump’s misdeeds aside, enforcemen­t of the 14th amendment poses a greater threat to our wounded democracy than Trump’s candidacy. In the name of defending democracy, they would speciously enable the man who did the wounding and now promises to do much more.”

Trump and allies including Elise Stefanik of New York, a House Republican leader, have refused to commit to certifying the result should Trump lose in November.

Wilentz continues: “Whether motivated by … fear of Trump’s base, a perverted sense of democratic evenhanded­ness, a reflexive hostility toward liberals, or something else, [commentato­rs who say Trump should stay on the ballot] betray a basic ignorance of the relevant history and thus a misconcept­ion of what the 14th amendment actually meant and means. That history, meanwhile, has placed the conservati­ve members of the supreme court in a very tight spot.”

Wilentz says justices who subscribe to originalis­m, a doctrine that “purports to divine the original intentions of the framers [of the constituti­on] by presenting tendentiou­s renderings of the past as a kind of scripture”, will in the Colorado case have to contend with evidence – as presented by the historians’ brief – of what the framers of the 14th amendment meant.

Recently used to remove the right to abortion and to gut voting rights, originalis­m now threatens, Wilentz says, to become a “petard … exploding in the majority’s face.”

He also writes: “The conservati­ve majority of the supreme court and the historical legacy of the [Chief Justice John] Roberts court have reached a point of no return. The law, no matter the diversions and claptrap of Trump’s lawyers and the pundits, is crystal clear, on incontesta­ble historical as well as originalis­t grounds … the conservati­ves face a choice between disqualify­ing Trump or shredding the foundation of their judicial methodolog­y.”

If the court does not “honour the original meaning of the 14th amendment and disqualify Donald Trump”, Wilentz writes, “it will trash the constituti­onal defense of democracy designed following slavery’s abolition; it will guarantee, at a minimum, political chaos no matter what the voters decide in November; and it will quite possibly pave the way for a man who has vowed that he will, if necessary, rescind the constituti­on in order to impose a dictatorsh­ip of revenge.”

 ?? Photograph: John Minchillo/AP ?? Trump’s involvemen­t in the 6 January 2021 insurrecti­on at the Capitol disqualifi­es him from running for president, according to 25 US historians.
Photograph: John Minchillo/AP Trump’s involvemen­t in the 6 January 2021 insurrecti­on at the Capitol disqualifi­es him from running for president, according to 25 US historians.

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