The United States Supreme Court ruled 9 to 0 to reverse Colorado’s highest court and to restore former President Donald Trump to the state’s ballot – in time for Colorado’s presidential primary tomorrow. By their decision, the Supreme Court restored the right of 4.5 million registered voters to determine for themselves who should be President of the United States.
The court in Colorado claimed that Trump was guilty of “insurrection” even those Trump has never been charged, indicted, or convicted of insurrection. In their article at The Daily Signal, Hans von Spakovsky and Charles Stimson explained how the Colorado court’s use of the Fourteen Amendment was not good enough.
The Colorado court claimed that because Trump was guilty of "insurrection," it could remove him from the ballot under Section 3 of the U.S. Constitution's 14th Amendment.
The 14th Amendment is one of three Reconstruction amendments adopted after the end of the Civil War, and its Section 3 was intended to keep certain Confederate military and government officials from serving in state and federal government.
Section 3 provides that:
No person shall be a Senator or Representative
in Congress, or elector for President and Vice President, or hold any office,
civil or military, under the United States … who having previously taken an
oath, as a member of Congress, or as an officer of the United States … to
support the Constitution of the United States, shall have engaged in
insurrection or rebellion against the same … But Congress may, by a vote of
two-thirds of each House, remove such disability.
But all nine justices of the Supreme Court
agreed in Monday’s decision that Colorado could not remove Trump from the
ballot. As the unsigned opinion says, since “the Constitution makes Congress,
rather than the States, responsible for enforcing Section 3 against federal
officeholders and candidates,” state courts and state officials have no power
to remove federal candidates from the ballot.
Section 5 of the 14th Amendment
has language found in many other amendments, namely: “Congress shall have the
power to enforce, by appropriate legislation, the provisions of this article.”
The high court concluded that Congress’
power under Section 5 to pass appropriate legislation to enforce the 14th
Amendment “is critical when it comes to Section 3.” The court noted that the “terms
of the Amendment speak only to enforcement by Congress,” not the states, and the
text “does not affirmatively delegate such power to the States.”
Although the states retain sovereign power
to determine the qualifications of their own state officeholders, the court
ruled, they have no such power over federal officeholders. Granting the states
such “authority would invert the Fourteenth Amendment’s rebalancing of federal
and state power,” the nine justices said.
Nor is there “any tradition of state
enforcement of Section 3 against federal officeholders or candidates in the years
following ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment.”
In addition to the above reason for the 9
to 1 vote, the court indicated that letting states enforce Section 3 would
result in a “patchwork” effect and “would be quite unlikely to yield a uniform
answer consistent with the basic principle that ‘the President … represent[s] all
the voters in the Nation.’”
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