So lots of people pointing out that "this is a win for the orange turd" are missing this is also a loss for all the red states which would love to kick Biden/other dems off their ballots.
An interesting way of spinning a failed attempt of blue states being the first one to do it. We've just dodged all the consequences that action was going bring. Not really a loss for red states, because dems don't
really want Biden anyway, and polls aren't optimistic on Biden beating Trump.
This guy makes a pretty good point that the weakness of the dissents makes the case for his disqualification better than the actual arguments did: https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2023/12/dont-read-the-colorado-ruling-read-the-dissents/676920/
P.S.: This aged like milk. 9-0.
Old stuff I didn't get to over the holidays:
If you’re a Libertarian you should be aghast that, from your perspective, both parties are infringing on electoral rights rather than whatabouting that the Dems “started it first” so it’s okay that the Republicans are doing it too.
You don’t get more free by making people less free, surprisingly.
Requiring driver's licenses to drive makes people less free. There's a world of difference in requiring somebody to show an ID to vote and just flat out preventing someone from voting for their preferred candidate.
Illinois court wasn't even hiding their language (p.38):
The Illinois State Board of Election shall remove Donald J. Trump from the ballot for the General Primary Election on March 19, 2024, or cause any votes cast for him to be suppressed, according to the procedures within their administrative authority.
There must be an avenue for legal recourse. If SCOTUS claims the sole authority to enforce 14A §3 lies at the federal level, it creates the obligation at the federal level for that authority to be exercised regarding the Colorado case. Colorado had the right to bring the case forward because the federal government did not.
I don't think that's how the Supremacy Clause works. If Congress
specifically gives an authority to the federal government, that means it belongs to the fed and
not the states.
Put your "proving innocence" and " reasonable doubt" aside and watch enough of the court proceedings to form an opinion based on what you see and not what the "news" repeats. I'll debate you about the videos, not about what the "news" said... I didn't see the defense bring up anything worthy to defend Trump and I didn't see partisan behavior by the court. Besides my uneducated opinion, plenty of esteemed conservative lawyers agreed with the court findings.
There was way too much for me to watch here, and it's moot now. Not sure who these "esteemed" conservatives were, but it seems they were wrong according to SCOTUS.
Particularly laughable in this whole saga was Maine's decision, where the Secretary of State took it upon herself to try to kick Trump off the ballot based solely on her own expert opinion that she saw Trump do an insurrection, without any ruling from a Maine court. Now she's saying it's up to voters to "save" democracy. (Yes, that's how it works, genius.)