Former President Donald Trump has time and again largely avoided political accountability, which has granted an aura of invincibility to his brazenness. So the hope that the text of the Constitution might halt his return to power was always a dim glimmer. The Supreme Court on Monday snuffed that hope out, issuing a ruling that washed their hands of the matter entirely.
The court declared unanimously that Colorado erred in booting Trump off the state’s primary ballot, overturning the state’s supreme court. The justices concluded that the states lack the authority to enforce the disqualification clause of the 14th Amendment, drafted in the aftermath of the Civil War to block former insurrectionists from holding office, against federal candidates. Five of the justices further asserted that that power must solely lie with Congress and requires new legislation. They made this assertion over the objections of the court’s liberal wing and, to a lesser extent, Justice Amy Coney Barrett, all of whom felt the court need not decide that question. With this ruling, the court found the perfect loophole to avoid ruling on Trump’s eligibility outright — and it lines up Congress to follow suit in the coming months, clearing the path for Trump’s triumphant victory over the rule of law.
Five of the justices further asserted that that power must solely lie with Congress and requires new legislation.
The thrust of the court’s unanimous holding is logical. The patchwork of state election laws has hampered the push to invoke the 14th Amendment from the beginning, as not all secretaries of state are equally empowered to judge candidates’ qualifications. Colorado law specifically grants this power to its secretary of state, leading to the state supreme court decision that the justices overturned on Monday. The justices determined that the only way to evenly apply disqualification at the federal level is to find that no state should have that power.
In focusing on this specific aspect of the extremely broad question the Trump petition put forward — “Did Colorado err in ordering President Trump excluded from the 2024 presidential primary ballot?” — the court avoided ruling on whether the terms of the amendment apply to Trump specifically. The opinion takes no position on whether Trump has violated the terms of Section 3 in his actions, as the respondents asserted and the words of the amendment suggest, or that his actions leading up to the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol were entirely innocent as his lawyers claimed in their briefings. Issuing an opinion that found the former would have, as the conservative legal scholars who first elevated the case for disqualification last year argued, placed the onus of enforcement on the men and women who print the ballots around the country.
In refusing to make such a judgement, the justices have punted the task of drafting enforcement legislation onto Congress with no guidance as to whether the behavior Trump exhibited meets the amendment’s bar. And given the GOP’s continued willingness to go to bat for him, including members of Congress who themselves will be federal candidates that should be disqualified for supporting insurrection, there is no hope of such legislation passing Congress. Even supposing that a law did somehow manage to arrive on President Joe Biden’s before November, there is nothing in the ruling’s wording to suggest that a majority would not simply find that the new legislation was not properly tailored to “reflect ‘congruence and proportionality’ between preventing or remedying that conduct ‘and the means adopted to that end.’”
A close read of the ruling also seems to foreclose the potential that Congress could act on its own previously enacted authority. Last year, I walked through how the 2022 Electoral Count Reform Act could be used to disqualify Trump under Section 3. The ECRA contains a provision allowing for members of Congress to object to a state’s slate of electoral votes because the “vote of one or more electors has not been regularly given,” a condition that may apply if the candidate they voted for is ineligible under the Constitution.








