Maine Secretary of State Shenna Bellows has appealed the Maine Superior Court decision to defer to the U.S. Supreme Court on matters of former President Donald Trumpâs eligibility as a candidate.
The notice is a procedural form and does not include merit arguments.
âThe Secretary agrees that there are many overlapping issues between this case and the Anderson case now before the U.S. Supreme Court,â he wrote in a filing on behalf of Ms. Bellowsâ office. âWhile Mr. Trump appears to assume that he will prevail in the Supreme Court, the mere fact that the Supreme Court has taken the case does not guarantee that its decision will definitively resolve this matter.â
âThe Supreme Court could, for example, affirm the Colorado Supreme Court decision,â he argued. âIt likewise could rule on a specific point, e.g., that the Colorado courts ran afoul of the Electors Clause … by not adhering to the timeframes set forth in the Colorado Statute.â
The high court may decline to rule at all, he added, and end up putting Maine in a âprecarious position.â
Issues of Timing
In the event that the Supreme Court does not resolve the matter before Maineâs March 5 primary, Ms. Bellows intends to lift the stay of her decisionâthus removing President Trump from the ballot. By this time, early voting ballots would have already been mailed out.
âAnd then precious additional days would be spent litigating whatever legal issues, be they of state or federal law, remain in this case,â Mr. Frey wrote. âAll the while, absentee voters would continue to fill out ballots with Mr. Trumpâs qualification still in doubt.â
âVoters in the Republican primary, including those who had already cast a vote by that point, may therefore also suffer harm,â he wrote. âThis is an untenable, and avoidable, outcome.â
While asking the Maine court to move forward with a ruling, which it ultimately did when it ordered the secretary to defer to the Supreme Court, Ms. Bellows also pointed out that she had already agreed to pause her removal of President Trump from the ballot pending a higher court decision.
Challenges to President Trumpâs eligibility as a candidate have been made under Section 3 of the 14th Amendment in 30 states across the country already. While most state secretaries have declined to take an official position on the candidateâs eligibility for a presidential primary, Ms. Bellows had argued that Maine law makes it her duty to do so, even if it meant adjudicating issues of âinsurrection.â
âMr. Trump knowingly incited an attack on the Capitol to prevent the peaceful transfer of power. The record is such that the Secretaryâconsistent with the deferential standard of reviewâpermissibly concluded that Mr. Trump engaged in insurrection and is accordingly not qualified for the office of the President by operation of Section Three of the Fourteenth Amendment,â the secretary stated in a court filing opposing President Trumpâs appeal of her decision.
Allegations of Bias
Shortly before Ms. Bellows was set to issue her decision, President Trump requested she recuse herself from the process citing several social media posts she made supporting his impeachment and referring to Jan. 6, 2021, as an âinsurrection.â
She declined, and in court filings Mr. Frey pushed back against the allegation, defending Ms. Bellowsâ use of âinsurrectionâ because âit was common parlance at the time.â
âMembers of both parties referred to January 6 as such, and it was how the news media described what transpired,â he wrote. âFurthermore, neither of the âinsurrectionâ tweets suggest that the Secretary prejudged the specific issue in this case, namely whether the events of January 6, 2021, constitute an insurrection based on that termâs meaning in Section Three of the Fourteenth Amendment.â
Ms. Bellows was highly critical of President Trumpâs defenses in the Maine proceedings, describing them as âspecious,â âwithout merit,â and âgeneralized,â and faulted him for not adhering to the timelines set by Maine law in bringing up various arguments in court but not before her office.
âThe sooner that Mr. Trumpâs qualification for office is settled, the fewer voters who risk voting for a candidate who is unqualified, or who decide to vote for an alternate candidate given the potential of the disqualification.â
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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