Trump v. Anderson
Trump v. Anderson
Unbiased Case Analysis:
After former President Donald Trump
lost the 2020 election, he refused to accept the results and challenged the outcome
in court and in the media. He sparked a rally on January 6, 2021, which results
in a protest and chaos at the Capital. He is running again for president in
2024 and needs the Republican Party’s nomination in every state to have a chance
to win. The Colorado Supreme Court banned Trump from being listed on the state’s
ballot. The Colorado Supreme Court based their argument around Section Three of
the Fourteenth Amendment. The section specifically bans individuals who incited
insurrection from holding the office of president.
The Supreme Court heard the case and
ruled on it. The Court ruled unanimously in favor of Trump. The Court found
that states cannot remove federal officials from office under Section 3 of the
Fourteenth Amendment. Although the Court did rule unanimously together, the
justices provided a variety of differing opinions. The Court’s conservative majority
found that only Congress can enforce the insurrection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
The Court’s liberal majority strongly disagreed with this decision and found
the majority went too far in their ruling. The Court’s unanimous decision was a
per curiam decision meaning it was issued in the name of the Court itself. Despite
the differing opinions on the specifics of the ruling the Court found it
important to appear unified in this decision.
Personal
Perspective:
I agree with the Court’s decision
that states do not and should not have the power to remove federal officials from
office. This would create complete chaos throughout the country divided along
party lines. I am conflicted about the majority’s decision to limit the
enforcement of the insurrection clause to Congress. This prevents federal
courts from weighing in on insurrection cases involving federal officials. They
perhaps did go too far in their ruling and should have waited to make such a
ruling in a more relevant case. This seems to continue a recent trend of the
Court’s majority making decisions somewhat unrelated to the cases.
Media
Critique and Analysis:
Media outlets were divided on the
coverage of this case. I was hard pressed to find left leaning outlets covering
the results of this case. Notable outlets such as CNN declined to write an
article on the final decision. The few I found seemed to be neutral or leaning
towards the liberal minority’s thoughts. The Washington Post did write an
article on the case which supported the ruling but disagreed with the
conservative majority’s extra steps. Right leaning outlets such as the National
Review praised the Court’s decision. They supported the Court’s majority decision
to limit the enforcement of the insurrection clause to Congress.
Sources:
Unanimity
in the Trump v. Anderson Judgment Refutes the Court’s Critics | National Review
Takeaways
from Supreme Court’s Trump ballot ruling - The Washington Post
Great post Ian, I was waiting for your perspective on this. I agree that tha states had no real right to remove Trump from the ballot and in doing so per state would be very civil war-esque. I also think the majority opinion should have withheld at siding with Trump without adding to future cases. Though in this case Colorado had no legal standing, maybe one day they will. Also the other side may one day need to do the same under different circumstances and we shouldn't have to rely on which team owns Congress at that point.
ReplyDeleteThanks for all the cool posts and blog throughout the semester. Best of luck to you sir.