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  • Jonathan Mitchell, one of Trump's attorneys, is currently trying to argue the whole "president isn't an officer" garbage.

    Edit: Mitchell is giving a master class on how to split inconsequential hairs.

    Edit 2: Kavanaugh and Gorsuch have been asking some surprisingly good (and pointed) questions of Mitchell that make me wonder what their actual positions will ultimately be.

    Edit 3: KJB picking at Trump's legal team's arguments pretty effectively.

    Edit 4: Trump's team is done for now. Now the real lawyers are up.

    Edit 5: Thomas asking for examples of national candidates being disqualified at the state level.

    Edit 6: Thomas is such a gas bag when he deigns to speak.

    Edit 7: Roberts clearly signals that he wants to punt this to Congress.

    Edit 8: Multiple justices questioning whether this is a state-level decision.

    Edit 9: Roberts bringing up the possibility of retaliatory attempts to remove candidates if Trump is removed. Seems awfully specious, but it's more signaling that he really doesn't want to make a decision on this.

    Edit 10: Conservatives on the court spent the last five minutes or so arguing from a position that if Trump is held to be an insurrectionist, anyone can be held to be an insurrectionist.

    Edit 11: Honestly, I think Jason Murray (lawyer for Colorado) is doing an absolutely phenomenal job with some extremely hostile - and ridiculous - questioning.

    Final edit: That's it for live-blogging this, I have shit to do. But applause for Murray, he's rocked it.

  • Trump only needs to be removed from the ballot of so few states and hopefully some of those states where it's barred from writing in an ineligible candidate.

    Once he loses any state, few or more, he's automatically lost. Also, Colorado is like 10 votes to the electoral college, which is a decent chunk of the votes.

    • There would have to be enough to deny him the 270 count, Colorado wasn't going to Trump anyway, so -10 there doesn't necessarily hurt him.

      If he gets removed from red states or toss-up states like Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, Georgia, Arizona, Nevada, and so on that would be the make or break.

  • Why is no one mentioning, that under the 14th amendment, there is literally no statement on whether or not its state or congress power. All it says is they just become ineligible when they committed the insurrection. The only power given to congress is, you can override it and allow them to run again. Supreme Court seems to ignore the entire wording, if they agree that trump committed the insurrection is factual, than he should be ineligible per the wording.

    The wording is similar to criminal law rather than amendment, be a politician who decides to rebel or commit an insurrection than no more politics for you. This was also written to make sure no one in the confederacy to run in politics, and if that's the case than its also the case that trump cannot run, as its automatically applied.

  • This is the best summary I could come up with:


    The justices will consider whether Republican front-runner Donald Trump can be disqualified from a state primary ballot because he allegedly engaged in an insurrection to try to cling to power, after he lost the 2020 election to Joe Biden.

    "Those who drafted section 3 of the 14th Amendment back in the 1860s were very clear that they understood this provision not just to cover former Confederates but that it would stand as a shield to protect our Constitution for all time going forward and so this is not some dusty relic," said Jason Murray, their lawyer.

    "In an ideal world, it would have been great to have years to build cases in different states and different parts of the country regarding defendants at different levels," said Noah Bookbinder, the president of Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, which is backing the lawsuit.

    Murray said there's a reason to revive dormant language in the Constitution now, in this case: "No other American president has refused to peacefully hand over the reins of power after losing an election," he said.

    The case puts the Supreme Court in the middle of the presidential election for the first time since it stopped the Florida recount and handed the White House to George W. Bush in 2000.

    The Supreme Court hasn't offered a time table for its decision, but some legal experts think the justices could rule before the Super Tuesday primaries, in early March.


    The original article contains 1,497 words, the summary contains 241 words. Saved 84%. I'm a bot and I'm open source!

  • It is so annoying that lemmy.world politics community is only about US. Either make it not only-US or rename it to US politics.

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