Friends,
The most obvious question in American politics today should be: Why is the guy who committed treason just over two years ago being allowed to run for president?
Answer: He shouldn't be.
Remember? Donald Trump lost reelection but refused to concede and instead claimed without basis that the election was stolen from him, then pushed state officials to change their tallies, hatched a plot to name fake electors, tried to persuade the vice president to refuse to certify Electoral College votes, sought access to voting machine data and software, got his allies in Congress to agree to question the electoral votes and thereby shift the decision to the House of Representatives, and summoned his supporters to Washington on the day electoral votes were to be counted and urged them to march on the U.S. Capitol, where they rioted.
This, my friends, is treason.
Can any of us who saw (or have learned through the painstaking work of Congress's January 6 committee) what Trump tried to do to overturn the results of the 2020 election have any doubt he'll once again try to do whatever necessary to regain power in 2024, even if illegal and unconstitutional?
But he is running for reelection—despite the explicit language of Section 3 of the 14th Amendment to the Constitution, which prohibits anyone who has held public office and who has engaged in insurrection against the United States from ever again serving in public office.
The reason for the Constitution's disqualification clause is that someone who has engaged in an insurrection against the United States cannot be trusted to use constitutional methods to
regain office.
Can any of us who saw (or have learned through the painstaking work of Congress's January 6 committee) what Trump tried to do to overturn the results of the 2020 election have any doubt he'll once again try to do whatever necessary to regain power in 2024, even if illegal and unconstitutional?
Sure, the newly enacted Electoral Count Reform Act of 2022 (amending the Electoral Count Act of 1887) filled some of the legal holes—creating a new threshold for members to object to a slate of electors (one-fifth of the members of both the House and the Senate), clarifying that the role of the vice president is "solely ministerial," and requiring that Congress defer to slates of electors as determined by the states.
But what if Trump gets secretaries of state and governors who are loyal to him to alter the election machinery to ensure he wins? What if he gets them to prevent people likely to vote for Biden from voting at all?
What if he gets them to appoint electors who will vote for him regardless of the outcome of the popular vote?
What if, despite all of this, Biden still wins the election—but Trump gets more than 20% of Republican senators and House members to object to slates of electors pledged to Biden, and pushes the election into the House, where Trump has a majority of votes?
Does anyone doubt the possibility—no, the probability—of any or all of this happening?
Trump tried these tactics once. The likelihood of his trying again is greater now because his loyalists are in much stronger positions throughout state and federal government.
Yes, they were held back in the 2022 midterms. But in state after state, and in Congress, Republicans who stood up to Trump have now been purged from the party. And lawmakers in what remains of the Republican Party have made it clear that they will bend or disregard any rule that gets in their way.
In many cases, the groundwork has been laid. As recently
reported in The New York Times, for example, the Trump allies who traveled to Coffee County, Georgia, on January 7, 2021, gained access to sensitive election data. They copied elections software used across Georgia and uploaded it on the internet—an open invitation to election manipulation by Trump allies in 2024.
If anything, Trump is less constrained than he was in 2020. "In 2016, I declared I am your voice," Trump said in a speech last month at the Conservative Political Action Conference and repeated at his first 2024 campaign rally in Waco, Texas, a few weeks later. "Today, I add: I am your warrior. I am your justice. And for those who have been wronged and betrayed, I am your retribution."
Filing deadlines for 2024 presidential candidates will come in the next six months, in most states.
Secretaries of state—who in most cases are in charge of deciding who gets on the ballot—must refuse to place Donald Trump's name on the 2024 ballot, based on the clear meaning of Section 3 of the 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
What do you think?