The Colorado Supreme Court is mulling over whether to keep Donald Trump off its state ballots ahead of the impending 2024 presidential election due to a 55-year-old ruling involving a former Black Panther leader, which could set a precedent for several other states.
A district court judge already ruled that Trump “engaged in insurrection” in direct violation of Section 3 of the 14th Amendment. That clause bars anyone from “hold(ing) any office, civil or military, under the United States” if they have “previously taken an oath … as an officer of the United States” to “support the Constitution,” and then engaged in insurrection or rebellion.
That clause was heavily exercised in the period after the Civil War against former Confederate soldiers but might be employed again because of the Capitol riot on Jan. 6, 2021. Last year, a New Mexico court removed a GOP county commissioner from office who had participated in the attack.
That lower court ruling comes just a few months ahead of a trial Trump will face after he was criminally indicted in connection to the insurrection. Federal prosecutors will have to prove whether Trump purposely tried to overturn President Joe Biden‘s electoral victory by inciting rioters to storm the U.S. Capitol.
For now, justices for Colorado’s highest court are hearing arguments on whether to ban Trump from the state ballot in 2024 because of that lower court ruling.
According to Newsweek, Derek T. Muller, a law professor at the University of Notre Dame in Indiana, highlighted several instances in a court briefing in which presidential candidates were disqualified from the ballot because they were deemed ineligible under the U.S. Constitution.
One of those cases features Eldridge Cleaver, a former Black Panther leader who ran for president in 1968 under the Peace and Freedom Party. Cleaver, who was 33 at the time, was excluded from the ballot in California because he didn’t reach the…
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