Donald Trump won’t be on the ballot in Colorado if the state’s Supreme Court — and then the U.S. Supreme Court — heeds the simple yet powerful observation that insurrectionists can’t be president.
Among the arguments in their brief Monday to the state’s high court, lawyers for challengers to Trump’s eligibility made what they called the “common sense” point that “there would be no reason to allow Presidents who lead an insurrection to serve again while preventing low-level government workers who act as foot soldiers from doing so.”
You might wonder how anyone could disagree. But state judge Sarah Wallace’s opinion last week found Trump engaged in insurrection but can still be president again. She reasoned that the constitutional provision at issue — Section 3 of the 14th Amendment — doesn’t cover presidents.
The appeal from the challengers — six voters — received a big endorsement from retired federal judge J. Michael Luttig, who called it “the most powerful, most compelling brief on a question of (profoundly important) constitutional law that I have ever read.”
This is the most powerful, most compelling brief on a question of (profoundly important) constitutional law that I have ever read. There is simply no answer to the constitutional case made by @CREWcrew for the former president's disqualification . https://t.co/DnWcvuTYZd








