Legal counsel for six Colorado voters whose petition ended with a disqualification of former President Donald Trump as a candidate in the Colorado Supreme Court are now asking the U.S. Supreme Court to affirm that ruling.
The local voters are represented by the activist group Citizens for Ethics & Responsibility in Washington (CREW), which has been fundraising for the upcoming arguments before the high court Feb. 8.
Last December, Colorado became the first state to find President Trump disqualified from running for office under Section 3 of the 14th Amendment. The once little-known Civil War-era statute has since gained national prominence, as several other states now grapple with dozens of challenges filed by voters to disqualify President Trump or President Joe Biden from the ballot as primary elections are underway.
In the two weeks after the Supreme Court agreed to hear President Trumpâs petition challenging the Colorado Supreme Court ruling, some 40 amicus briefs were filed by third parties urging the court to settle the matter for all states.
The respondents sidestepped the issue of chaos arising in other states and argued their case in regard to Colorado election law. They also sought to reframe the question President Trump posedâwhether the Colorado Supreme Court erred in its rulingâand presented five other questions.
The respondents asked whether President Trumpâs actions on Jan. 6, 2021, amounted to âengag[ing] in insurrectionâ as stated in Section 3 of the 14th Amendment, whether President Trump showed the facts found by the trial court were âerroneous,â whether Section 3 applies âto insurrectionist former Presidents,â whether states can exclude presidential candidates from primary ballots after finding they are ineligible under Section 3, and whether President Trump forfeited his Elector Clause challenge in the Colorado case.
âInsurrectionâ
The respondentsâ position is that there is no question that Jan. 6 constituted an insurrection and framed the questions and arguments in such a manner.
However, the outline of the insurrection argument is derived from the controversial January 6 Select Committee report, which President Trumpâs attorneys sought to have excluded from evidence as a partisan report. The lower courts had faulted the intervenors for not refuting point-by-point the facts in the report they had issue with.
To date, few jurisdictions have heard arguments over whether Jan. 6 constituted an insurrection, including a Colorado district court, the Maine secretary of state, and most recently, the general counsel for the Illinois Board of Elections on Jan. 26.
These arguments were heard in the context of state election code challenges and range from a few hours to, in the case of Colorado, a five-day trial.
Several other state and federal judges have dismissed similar challenges, finding it imprudent to rule on the issue of insurrection via an administrative statute. More than a thousand defendants have been charged with crimes related to Jan. 6, and none of them were charged with âinsurrection.â
The respondents argue that more than 140 law enforcement officers were injured and members of Congress had to âflee for their livesâ on Jan. 6, and that President Trump âspearhead[ed] this attackâ and therefore âengaged in insurrection against the Constitution.â
âHolding Officeâ
Another key issue raised by parties is whether a potential Section 3 disqualification pertains to running for office or holding office.
The respondents argued that there was no true conflict.
âCongress can grant it [amnesty] at any time. But in the meantime, Colorado has an election to run,â they argued. âIf an oath-breaking insurrectionist receives amnesty too late to qualify in this election cycle, they can run in the next [cycle] or seek some other office.â
âTo hold that Trumpâs eligibility cannot be determined until after election day would be disastrous,â they added, arguing that if the matter is not resolved soon, âtens of millions of Americansâ might end up voting for President Trump only to have the votes not count.
The dozens of lower court and administrative decisions arising from the ever-growing number of Section 3 challenges seem to have raised more legal questions than they have answered, and the Supreme Court appears to be cognizant of the snowballing issue.
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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