Justice Alito contemplates in thinly veiled hypothetical whether Biden could be taken off ballots for aiding Iran



Justice Samuel Alito hinted Thursday that former President Donald Trump's removal from the ballot in Colorado could spell trouble for President Joe Biden.

Jason Murray, the lawyer for the six voters seeking to preclude their fellow Americans from voting for Trump in the Centennial State, attempted to make the disqualification case Thursday to the U.S. Supreme Court. It did not go well.

Conservative and leftist justices alike poked holes in Murray's arguments concerning the alleged application of Section 3 of the 14th Amendment to presidents and Trump's corresponding disqualification.

In addition to demonstrating that Murray's arguments were wanting — arguments endorsed in December by the Democratic appointees on the Colorado Supreme Court — the U.S. Supreme Court highlighted significant implications of a Trump disqualification that may come back to bite Democrats and further destabilize the Union.

Justice Samuel Alito contemplated whether the application of Section 3 of the 14th Amendment to presidents might pave the way for states to remove a president such as Joe Biden if accused of giving "aid or comfort to the enemies" of the United States.

"Suppose there is a country that proclaims again and again and again that the United States is its biggest enemy," said Alito. "And suppose that the president of the United Sates, for diplomatic reasons, thinks that it is in the best interest of the United States to provide funds or release funds so that they can be used by that country."

"Could a state determine that that person has given aid and comfort to the enemy and therefore keep that person off of the ballot?" asked Alito.

Iran routinely threatens the United States.

The regime's minister of defense said in November that if the U.S. did not implement a ceasefire in Gaza, it would "be hit hard," reported Reuters.

Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi vowed in September to take revenge on the Americans who ordered and engaged in the assassination of Iranian terrorist Qassim Suleimani.

Despite such threats, indications that Iran was involved in the Oct. 7 terror attacks on Israel, and warnings from Republicans that the Iranian regime could use the money to increase its funding of Hamas, Hezbollah, and Houthi terrorists, the Biden administration released $6 billion in frozen assets to Iran.

Murray answered Alito in the negative, saying, "This court has never interpreted the aid-and-comfort language, which also is present in the Treason Clause. But commentators have suggested — it's been rarely applied because treason prosecutions are so rare — but commentators have suggested that, first of all, that aid and comfort really only applies in the context of a declared war or at least an adversarial relationship where there is in fact a war."

The U.S. executed scores of airstrikes earlier this month on Iran-backed terrorist groups, which might also indicate an adversarial relationship.

Conservative commentator Larry Kudlow argued last week that by sponsoring 166 attacks against U.S. military assets, the regime has effectively declared war against the U.S. 166 times.

Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito smacks Joe Biden during Donald Trump's 14th Amendment Case before SCOTUS.\n\n"Suppose there is a country that proclaims again and again and again that the United States is its biggest enemy, and suppose that the president of the United States for\u2026
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Alito was not the only Supreme Court justice who contemplated the ramifications of Trump's disqualification and the potential for Section 3 weaponization by partisans.

Roberts suggested that if Colorado's position is upheld, "surely there will be disqualification proceedings on the other side, and some of those will succeed."

"Some of them will have different standards of proof. Some of them will have different rules about evidence," continued Roberts. "In very quick order, I would expect, although my predictions have never been correct, I would expect that a goodly number of states will say whoever the Democratic candidate is, you're off the ballot, and others for the Republican candidate, you're off the ballot."

"It'll come down to just a handful of states that are going to decide the presidential election," said Chief Justice John Roberts. "That's a pretty daunting consequence."

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Supreme Court justices weren't buying what the lawyer arguing for Trump's removal from Colorado ballot was selling



The U.S. Supreme Court heard roughly two hours of arguments Thursday concerning the effort by six Colorado voters to deny their fellow countrymen the opportunity to vote for the Republican front-runner in the 2024 election.

Jason Murray, a Denver lawyer representing the six voters, struggled to make a case for former President Donald Trump's disqualification, ostensibly tripping over simple questions and facts.

While conservative Justices Clarence Thomas and Brett Kavanaugh predictably exposed the various faults in Murray's arguments, even left-leaning Justices Elena Kagan and Ketanji Brown Jackson seemed unimpressed, casting doubt over whether Section 3 of the 14th Amendment applies and over whether the Centennial State should determine the fate of the nation.

Quick background

Six voters backed by a Democrat-aligned group, which is helmed by a former Biden official, sued in September 2023 to have Trump removed from Colorado ballots in the 2024 election, claiming both that Section 3 of the 14th Amendment concerning insurrection applies to Trump and that the former president's actions on Jan. 6, 2021, qualified.

The case was kicked up to the Democratic appointees on the Colorado Supreme Court, who ruled in a 4-3 December decision that Trump engaged in an insurrection on Jan. 6, is ineligible to be president, and cannot therefore appear on the ballot.

Trump's legal team appealed the verdict, maintaining that the former president did not engage in an insurrection; Section 3 does not apply to the president; the Colorado Supreme Court violated the Electors Clause; and Congress is the proper body to resolve such matters.

Murray swings and misses — repeatedly

Murray, who previously convinced Democratic appointees on the Colorado Supreme Court to declare Trump ineligible to appear on ballots in the state, attempted to repeat his success Thursday but soon discovered the road forward had not similarly been ideologically greased.

Justice Kagan, for instance, said to Murray, "The question you have to confront is why a single state should decide who gets to be president of the United States. In other words, you know, this question of whether a former president is disqualified for insurrection to be president again is — just say it — it sounds awfully national to me."

"So whatever means there are to enforce it would suggest that they have to be federal, national means," continued Kagan. "If you weren't from Colorado and you were from Wisconsin or you were from Michigan and ... what the Michigan secretary of state did is going to make the difference between, you know, whether candidate A is elected or candidate B is elected. That seems quite extraordinary, doesn't it?"

"Why should a single state have the ability to make this determination, not only for their own citizens, but for the rest of the nation?" added Kagan.

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Chief Justice John Roberts echoed Kagan's concern, suggesting states would likely weaponize such a precedent and proceed to knock other candidates off the ballot, reported CNN.

"It'll come down to just a handful of states that are going to decide the presidential election," said Roberts. "That's a pretty daunting consequence."

Justice Thomas was even less forgiving when questioning Murray.

Thomas pressed Murray to cite examples of national candidates who have similarly been disqualified — possibly Confederates running for high office "after Reconstruction and after the compromise of 1877 and during the period of Redeemers."

"There were certainly national candidates who were disqualified by Congress refusing to seat them," replied Murray.

"I understand that, but that's not this case," Thomas fired back. "States disqualified them; that's what we're talking about here. I understand Congress would not seat them."

"Again, your honor, [the absence of examples] is not surprising because there wouldn't have been — states certainly wouldn't have the authority to remove a sitting—," Murray said before being cut off by Thomas.

"So what was the purpose of the Section 3? States were sending people. The concern was that the former Confederate states would continue being bad actors, and the effort was to prevent them from doing this," said Thomas. "And you're saying that ... this also authorized states to disqualify candidates. So what I'm asking you for, if you are right, [is] what are the examples?"

Murray alluded to examples of states excluding candidates from holding state offices, but was cut off again by Thomas, who said, "I understand the states controlling state elections and state positions. What we are talking about are national candidates. ... Do you have any examples of this?"

Murray apparently did not.

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Justice Kavanaugh indicated there were already mechanisms in place to prevent insurrectionists from holding office, intimating Colorado was overreaching.

"Some of the rhetoric of your position — I don't think it is your position — but some of the rhetoric of your position seems to suggest unless the states can do this, no one can prevent insurrectionists from holding federal office," said Kavanaugh. "But obviously Congress has enacted statutes, including one still in effect, Section 2383 of Title 18 prohibits insurrection; it's a federal criminal statute. And if you're convicted of that, you are, it says 'shall be disqualified from holding any office.' And so there is a federal statute on the books, but President Trump has not been charged with that. So what are we to make of that?"

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Kavanaugh also suggested that the effort to remove Trump from the ballot "has the effect of disenfranchising voters to a significant degree."

Justice Brown cast doubt on whether the Framers intended Section 3 to be used as Murray argued it should be.

"I'm wondering really whether presidential elections were such a circumstance, that the Framers actually envisioned states enforcing Section 3 with respect to presidential elections as opposed to senatorial elections, representatives, the sort of more local concerns," said Brown.

"The more broad point I want to make is that what is very clear from the history is that the Framers were concerned about charismatic rebels who might rise through the ranks up to and including the presidency of the United States," said Murray.

"But then why didn't they put the word 'president' in the very enumerated list in Section 3?" asked Brown. "The thing that really is troubling to me is — I totally understand your argument — but they were listing people that were barred, and president is not there. So I guess that just makes me worried that maybe they weren't focusing on the president."

Brown added, "The fact that electors of vice president and president are there suggests that really what [the Framers] thought was, 'If we're worried about the charismatic person, we're going to bar insurrectionist electors and therefore that person is never going to rise."

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Supreme Court set to rule on Democratic appointees' decision to remove Trump from Colorado ballots. Here are the facts.



Colorado's Supreme Court, which comprises seven Democrat-appointed justices, decided to remove former President Donald Trump from the state's ballots in December at a Democrat-aligned group's urging. The reason given: Section 3 of the 14th Amendment concerning insurrection supposedly covers the presidency and Trump's actions qualified.

The U.S. Supreme Court is set to hear the Republican front-runner's appeal on Thursday morning.

The high court's ruling will likely impact the efforts by other blue states to deprive voters of a choice in the 2024 election. It will likely also serve to further politicize the court ahead of another contentious election.

Trump's defense so far

Trump's legal team has so far argued that:

  • "Section 3 of the Fourteenth Amendment prohibits individuals only from holding office[.] ... It does not prevent anyone from running for office, or from being elected to office, because Congress can remove a section 3 disqualification at any time";
  • The Colorado Supreme Court violated the Electors Clause by "flouting the statutes governing presidential elections";
  • Trump did not engage in insurrection, especially not "'insurrection' as understood at the time of passage of the Fourteenth Amendment [which] meant the taking up of arms and waging war upon the United States." Rather he engaged in political rhetoric, not unlike that routinely employed by Democratic lawmakers on the Hill;
  • Section 3 is inapplicable to the president. "To find that section 3 includes the presidency, one must conclude that the drafters decided to bury the most visible and prominent national office in a catch-all term that includes low ranking military officers, while choosing to explicitly reference presidential electors"; and
  • Congress is the proper body to "resolve questions concerning a presidential candidate's eligibility," not a partisan state court.

Who's looking to eliminate voter choice in Colorado?

Blaze News previously reported that Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington brought the case against Trump on behalf of six Colorado voters.

Among the six voters named in the suit are Norma Anderson, Michelle Priola, Claudine (Cmarada) Schneider, and Krista Kafer.

Priola is the wife of Democratic state Sen. Kevin Priola.

Kafer is a Never-Trumper Denver Post opinion writer.

Schneider is a registered Republican and former congresswoman for Rhode Island who reportedly endorsed Barack Obama in 2008, Hillary Clinton in 2016, and Joe Biden in 2020.

CREW is a partisan activist group that touts itself as a government watchdog, which was optimized as an attack dog for the Democratic Party by Media Matters founder David Brock in advance of the 2016 election.

The move to eliminate the Republican front-runner from contention in Colorado was executed under CREW's current president Noah Bookbinder. Bookbinder was until recently a member of the Biden Department of Homeland Security's Homeland Security Advisory Council.

Federal Election Commission records indicate he repeatedly dumped money into Democratic causes, including former President Barack Obama's re-election campaign.

Through the courts

In September 2023, the six voters with CREW's backing filed a complaint requesting Trump's removal from the primary ballot. Their complaint suggested it would be "improper" and a "breach or neglect of duty" for Colorado's Democratic Secretary of State Jena Griswold to allow Biden's top rival to make it onto the 2024 ballot.

This complaint made its way to the district court.

Colorado District Court Judge Sarah Wallace ruled against the effort to ban Trump from the ballot, noting Section 3 did not apply to the president. Wallace did, however, agree with the petitioners' assertion that Trump had engaged in insurrection.

Dissatisfied with the result, the petitioners successfully appealed to the Colorado Supreme Court, which ultimatelyruled in a 4-3 decision that Trump engaged in an insurrection on Jan. 6, is ineligible to be president, and cannot therefore appear on the ballot.

The court stayed its decision until the U.S. Supreme Court could weigh in.

A spokesman for the Trump campaign, Stephen Cheung, noted that the Democratic appointees "issued a completely flawed decision."

"We have full confidence that the U.S. Supreme Court will quickly rule in our favor and finally put an end to these unAmerican lawsuits," added Cheung.

The U.S. Supreme Court agreed to hear the case and fast-tracked it, ostensibly to deliver a decision before the Colorado and Maine primaries in March.

A recent Democratic poll shows Biden's popularity dropping off in Colorado ahead of the election. 58% of registered voters hold an unfavorable opinion of the geriatric president.

Axios noted that even in the solidly blue state, Biden's lead over Trump has dropped to single digits in a hypothetical general election contest. Trump continues to lead Biden nationally in the polls. The latest Morning Consult poll had the Republican up by five points.

Possible impact

The Associated Press indicated that a definitive ruling from the Supreme Court affirming that Trump engaged in an insurrection might start a chain reaction whereby various other states could keep the Republican front-runner off their ballots.

Already similar efforts to spare the 81-year-old Democratic president from serious competition in the forthcoming elections have been undertaken in Maine, California, and Michigan.

Maeva Marcus, the director of the Institute for Constitutional Studies at George Washington University, told the BBC, the "rationale" behind the Colorado ruling would "hold for the general election."

While such an outcome would be advantageous for the incumbent president, longtime Democrat David Axelrod has expressed concern.

Blaze News reported last month that the Obama campaigner said, "I do think it would rip the country apart if he were actually prevented from running because tens of millions of people want to vote for him."

Axelrod added, "You know, he's only gained since he started getting indicted. What you thought might be kryptonite for him has been battery packs. This is a big one for him."

In addition to disenfranching voters, the decision may also impact the court.

Raoul Berger Professor of Law Emeritus Stephen Presser noted in January that "when the Supreme Court inevitably corrects Colorado and Maine’s misguided decisions — as it must — Trump’s critics will attack it as arbitrary and undemocratic. One can’t help but speculate that the Colorado and Maine decisions might be calculated to undermine the authority of the Supreme Court itself."

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