These SC justices want you to pretend real hard that you did not see, hear, or experience an insurrection on January 6th. Despite everything you saw with your own eyes, heard with your own ears, and thought with your own brain.
Nope, there was no intent by a mob provoked by a sitting President to disrupt a Constitutional process to certify an election! This Supreme Court is like something out of Orwell's nightmares. |
Well, it won't be the first time that they punt on a technicality while ignoring the larger societal question. In fact, they've made a specialty out of that. It's "Justice", but only if they feel like it. |
Also, if they decide that the President is not an "officer," then it means Biden or any other future President can stage an insurrection or coup without any remedy except impeachment. The 14th Amendment is toothless against the person with the greatest means to stage a coup - the sitting President, who is also the Commander in Chief of the armed forces.
This is a profoundly dangerous outcome from the SC's burgeoning decision. Jesus H Christ. |
I think being harsher on the Colorado attorney makes more sense here. Colorado took a very aggressive step that unquestionably implicsted a national election. If this were about a representative from Colorado, the dynamic would be different (such as Trump seek to be a rep from Colorado). But this is about who will be president of the entire country. Kagan nailed it. I don’t think the attorneys answer to her question was good because he essentially admitted Colorado is fine with this having a national impact because they knew it would go up to the Supreme Court. Essentially admitting that they created a controversy over federal law but then claiming it’s a states rights issue. I think that was the moment he lost. |
+1 And there were a whole bunch of states that didn’t have Lincoln on their ballots (but that preceded the 14th Amendment.) |
I don't think an expert would say that. I think there are historians who filed amicus briefs who said exactly the opposite -- that the drafters of the 14th Amendment specifically intended that it would, among other things, prevent Jefferson Davis from becoming President of the United States. |
Yes, I think it was Jus. Kav. who tried to say it's different if you are keeping a "party" off the ballot. But that is weak. Parties are not required, and the party can simply not choose a disqualified candidate. Also, many of the candidates who are on some but not all ballots are also running as members of political parties. The Constitution does not hold a special place for Republicans and Democrats over other parties. |
True. |
This is a very important decision: will Trump be on the ballot or are we a nation of laws?
However the Supreme Court decides, they will anger a lot of people and they will diminish their respect in the eyes of a lot of people. So they might as well do the right thing. |
Not at all. The moment he lost was when Mitch McConnell declined to give Merrick Garland's nomination to the Supreme Court a hearing, engineering the elevation of Gorsuch to the Supreme Court. It would be foolish of you to presume that any argument at all would have won the day in the face of the Supreme Court as currently composed. |
Your "or" is confusing. If we are a nation of laws, Trump has to be excluded based on the text of the 14th Amendment. He held federal office, he swore an oath to the Constitution, and he used violence in an effort to overthrow our government. Those are the elements of the 14th Amendment which bar him from office. Congress has not voted to remove that disability. But the Supreme Court will ignore the text and history of the Constitution in order to allow Trump to hold office. |
And Trump is the reason for all of that. These are scary times. |
I think the only Justice who will vote to uphold Colorado is Jackson. And she too may join the majority. But I think you underestimate how bad this day was for the Colorado attorneys. |
Yes 3rd party candidates are different than those of the major parties. |
Arguments have closed. It looks as if Justices will strike down the CO ruling, on the grounds that one state cannot make a decision that necessarily affects all the others. |