By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
The GenerationThe GenerationThe Generation
  • USA
    USA
    Show More
    Top News
    Some Manhattan Residents Stuck In Third Day Without Heat And Hot Water
    February 7, 2024
    Deadly California Storm Triggers Flooding, Mudslides, Power Outages
    February 10, 2024
    At Least 60% Of US Population May Face ‘Forever Chemicals’ In Tap Water, Tests Suggest
    February 29, 2024
    Latest News
    Senate Republicans Push Forward Trump’s Tax and Spending Cuts Bill After Late-Night Drama
    June 29, 2025
    Supreme Court Revisits Birthright Citizenship: What’s Next for Children Born in the U.S.?
    June 28, 2025
    Trump Blasts Mamdani as ‘100% Communist Lunatic’ After Shocking Mayoral Primary Win
    June 26, 2025
    Elon Musk’s X Sues New York To Block Content Moderation Law
    June 25, 2025
  • New York
    New York
    Show More
    Top News
    G Train Service Resumes
    September 15, 2024
    Deputy Mayor of Public Safety Philip Banks III Resigns, Embattled Adams Confirms
    October 10, 2024
    Democratic US Rep. Mikie Sherrill Announces Run For New Jersey Governor
    November 24, 2024
    Latest News
    Vibrant Picnic Organized by JIBON Brings Joy to the Bangladeshi Community in Queens
    June 30, 2025
    Rent Board Vote Today: Mamdani and Adams Face Off Over Housing Policy
    June 30, 2025
    Zohran Mamdani Rises Strong: Heads to Harlem After Historic NYC Primary Upset”
    June 29, 2025
    Zohran Mamdani Hires Security, Citing ‘New Level’ of Threats in NYC Mayor’s Race
    June 25, 2025
  • Politics
    Politics
    Show More
    Top News
    Joe Biden Plans To Ban Logging In US Old-growth Forests In 2025
    December 26, 2023
    Donald Trump Ranked As Worst US President In History, With Joe Biden 14th
    February 29, 2024
    Lawmakers Say They Should Analyze Protests Response
    May 31, 2024
    Latest News
    With Bernie Sanders’ Backing, Zohran Mamdani Gains Momentum in NYC Mayoral Race”
    June 18, 2025
    New York City Comptroller Brad Lander Detained by ICE During Immigration Court Visit
    June 17, 2025
    Mamdani Secures Second Cross-Endorsement in Battle to Unseat Cuomo in NYC Mayoral Race
    June 17, 2025
    New York City Mayoral Primary 2025: Latest Polls & Progressive Shift
    June 15, 2025
  • World
    World
    Show More
    Top News
    Bangladesh Calls DW Report ‘False and Fallacious’
    June 17, 2024
    UN says ex-Pakistan Premier Imran Khan’s Detention Arbitrary, must be Released Immediately
    July 26, 2024
    60 Killed as Dam Bursts in War-Torn Sudan
    September 2, 2024
    Latest News
    UN Chief Condemns Israel’s ‘Unacceptable’ Killing of Aid Seekers in Gaza
    June 25, 2025
    Iran–Israel Ceasefire in Effect Amid Tensions, Accusations, and Uncertainty
    June 24, 2025
    Is The World Close To A Nuke Radiation Incident?
    June 23, 2025
    Trump Leaves G7 Summit Early as Iran-Israel Conflict Intensifies
    June 23, 2025
  • Finance & Business
    Finance & Business
    Show More
    Top News
    How Banks And The Fed Are Preparing For A US Default – And Chaos To Follow
    September 3, 2023
    Corporate Greed is not to Blame for High Inflation, SF Fed Says
    June 16, 2024
    Latest News
    Corporate Greed is not to Blame for High Inflation, SF Fed Says
    June 16, 2024
    How Banks And The Fed Are Preparing For A US Default – And Chaos To Follow
    September 3, 2023
  • EpaperNew
Search
  • About Us
  • Our Awards
  • My Bookmarks
  • Opinion
  • Crime
  • Science & Technology
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Economy
  • Fashion
  • Election
  • Feature
  • Charity
  • Literature
  • Security
  • US & Canada
  • Nature
  • Cooking
Copyright @2023 – All Right Reserved by The Generation.
Reading: US Supreme Court Justices Have Strange Views On Whether Trump Is Disqualified
Share
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
Font ResizerAa
The GenerationThe Generation
  • USA
  • New York
  • Politics
  • World
  • EpaperNew
Search
  • Crime
  • Economy
  • Election
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion
  • US & Canada
  • Finance & Business
  • Charity
  • Cooking
  • Fashion
  • Feature
  • Literature
  • Nature
  • Science & Technology
  • Security
  • Sports
Follow US
  • About Us
  • My Bookmarks
Copyright @2023 – All Right Reserved by The Generation.
Opinion

US Supreme Court Justices Have Strange Views On Whether Trump Is Disqualified

Published February 26, 2024
Share
8 Min Read
SHARE

Tuesday, February 13, 2024
Year : 2, Issue : 7

by Moira Donegan

Elena Kagan once referred to Jonathan Mitchell sarcastically as “some genius”. That was in oral arguments surrounding SB8, the bounty-hunter abortion ban that Texas succeeded in passing before the overturn of Roe v Wade, which Mitchell wrote, pioneering a cockamamie scheme for evading judicial review.

Mitchell, a far-right lawyer currently vying for a spot in the second Trump administration, is a fan of this kind of bald, legal bad faith: you can’t quite call him duplicitous, because he never quite pretends that the law really leads him to the conclusions he’d like to reach. He’s more about coming up with novel legal schemes to get to his desired outcome and trusting that the federal judiciary, captured as it is by Federalist Society acolytes and wingnut cranks, will go along with him because they share his political proclivities.

That’s what worked for him with SB8: the supreme court allowed Texas’s abortion ban to go into effect long before Dobbs: not because Mitchell made a convincing argument, but because he offered them an opportunity to do what they wanted to do anyway.

Something similar happened in Thursday’s oral arguments in Trump v Anderson, a question about whether Donald Trump is disqualified from holding federal office under section three of the 14th amendment.

The case reached the supreme court after a Colorado court found that Trump’s actions on January 6 disqualified him. The court wanted to disagree and was desperate to find a way to restore Trump to the Colorado ballot without addressing the underlying question of whether Trump committed an insurrection or not. Mitchell, Trump’s lawyer, gave them very little help: he gave a shoulder-shrugging argument to the justices, after filing a bizarre and strained brief that primarily focused on the absurd claim that the president is not an “officer.” Left to their own devices, the justices went fishing, looking for an argument that could plausibly allow them to exit the case, since Mitchell did not provide them one.

The winning entry came from Justice Samuel Alito, who first offered the suggestion that a state like Colorado did not have the authority to enforce section three of the 14th amendment without congressional permission. The rest of the justices seemed to like the sound of that and were soon all asking questions about the scope of state authority over the administration of federal elections.

It was a bit of an odd argument: the court recently came close to embracing a much more wide-reaching vision of the authority of state legislatures to govern federal elections in their borders, in its address of a rightwing legal curiosity called the “independent state legislature theory”. And the notion that section three of the 14th amendment requires congressional action to go into effect is on its own peculiar: no other section of the amendment has been found to require such instigating legislation from Congress, and the language of the amendment itself suggests that the disqualification of onetime insurrectionists is something that Congress has to act to turn off, but not to turn on.

It is strange, too, that the court, which in past years has made dramatic and ruinous changes to American life out of its professed loyalty to our nation’s “history and traditions”, chose to more or less completely ignore the suggestions of history here. The 14th amendment’s section three has seldom been enforced – in part because of the rarity of insurrections – and so there are few impediments to the court’s self-styled originalists delving headfirst into the history of the amendment’s intention and context.

But instead the justices chose to dismiss the considerable evidence that the framers of the 14th amendment intended section three to be used precisely to protect the republic from a figure like Trump. They attend themselves instead not to the lessons of the past, but to the incentives of the present.

By the end of the arguments, it was clear: what the justices will write will be a 9-0 or 8-1 decision (only Sonia Sotomayor voiced much dissent) saying that section three is not self-enacting, or at any rate that the states cannot enact it themselves. They will have arrived at this conclusion not because the argument was made persuasively or at all by Trump attorney Mitchell – it wasn’t – and not because it is the place where the text compels them to arrive – it isn’t. They will instead have fabricated this reasoning out of whole cloth, because it gets them out of an inconvenient question: the question of whether the constitution’s substantive protections for democracy can withstand the stress Trump applies to them.

One point that several of the justices touched on, and which has been taken up by those skeptical of the Colorado case and similar efforts to disqualify Trump from office on 14th amendment grounds, is the notion that his disqualification would be somehow anti-democratic, disenfranchising the people who would like to vote for him and would not get a chance to.

But democracy means more than the simple ability to vote; it requires a commitment to constitutional principles – to the limits of an office, to the rights of the minority, to the separation of private and public interests among those in power and to the willingness to place the dignity of the country before the petty preferences of the man who leads it.

Trump has no intention of upholding these principles. We know: he tells us all the time. To disqualify him would not be to undermine democracy but to protect it, by averting the seizure of the republic by the man who has been quite frank about his intention to destroy it.

Meanwhile, section three of the 14th amendment now seems set to be orphaned – denied its status as self-effecting, curtailed in its enforcement by the states. If section three is still the law, and if insurrectionists are still barred from taking federal office, then how can this law be enforced? And that’s where the court, in its apparent effort to avoid having to take much of a stand on the issue, seems to have planted a loaded gun. Because if states can’t enforce the ban on insurrectionists in office, then only Congress can. And where would Congress do that? At the certification of the electoral votes – on 6 January 2025.

Author is a The Guardian US columnist

You Might Also Like

No Bail for Rape Accused: A Legal Reform We Urgently Need

Chanchal Mahmud — The Eye That Captured Light and Life

Boeing 787 Dreamliner: A Marvel in the Sky or a Machine of Growing Doubts?

US. Senator Handcuffed: A Democracy Under Question?

Cuomo vs. Mamdani: A Tight Race Shakes Up NYC Mayoral Primary

Sign Up For Daily Newsletter

Be keep up! Get the latest breaking news delivered straight to your inbox.
By signing up, you agree to our Terms of Use and acknowledge the data practices in our Privacy Policy. You may unsubscribe at any time.
Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Whatsapp Whatsapp Copy Link Print
Previous Article The Democratic Party Needs To Quell Fears Of Biden’s Age And Acuity
Next Article Messi Has ‘Invitation’ To Play For Argentina At Olympics: Mascherano

Stay Connected

1.2kFollowersLike
13kFollowersFollow
1.2kFollowersFollow
1.4kSubscribersSubscribe

Latest News

Vibrant Picnic Organized by JIBON Brings Joy to the Bangladeshi Community in Queens
New York June 30, 2025
Rent Board Vote Today: Mamdani and Adams Face Off Over Housing Policy
New York June 30, 2025
Senate Republicans Push Forward Trump’s Tax and Spending Cuts Bill After Late-Night Drama
USA June 29, 2025
Zohran Mamdani Rises Strong: Heads to Harlem After Historic NYC Primary Upset”
New York June 29, 2025
Supreme Court Revisits Birthright Citizenship: What’s Next for Children Born in the U.S.?
USA June 28, 2025

Quick links

  • About Us
  • Our Awards
  • My Bookmarks

Sign Up for Our Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!

Editor
Sadia J. Choudhury
Executive Editor
Shah J. Choudhury, Mubin Khan & Salman J. Choudhury
Member of Editor’s Board
Husneara Choudhury, Fauzia J. Choudhury, Santa Islam & DevRaj A. Nath.

A Ruposhi Bangla Entertainment Network

By

Office Address
New York Office:
70-52 Broadway 1A, Jackson Heights, NY-11372, United States.
Contact
Tel: +1 (718) 496-5000
Email: info@thegenerationus.com
newsthegeneration@gmail.com
The GenerationThe Generation
Follow US
Copyright @2023 – All Right Reserved by The Generation.