22-12-2023
DENVER, COLORADO: One of the court challenges to Donald Trump’s eligibility to run for president in 2024 has finally struck gold.
The Colorado Supreme Court’s ruling to disqualify the former president from the Republican Party’s upcoming primary ballot is yet another unprecedented moment in US politics.
It’s a decision that further blurs the lines between America’s political and judicial systems, setting up a fresh collision between the election campaign and the courts.
However, this latest legal setback is unlikely to seriously damage Trump’s bid to return to the White House and he is already using it to his political advantage.
The activists who brought the case in Colorado, a liberal watchdog group and collection of anti-Trump Republican and independent voters may be celebrating their victory but the response so far by Democratic politicians, the ones who will stand before voters next year and are working to defeat Trump at the ballot box tells a different story.
This isn’t a fight they want.
Colorado Secretary of State Jena Griswold who had declined to act unilaterally to block Trump from the state’s primary issued a response to the court’s decision on Wednesday that didn’t exactly drip with enthusiasm.
“This decision may be appealed,” she said. “I will follow the court decision that is in place at the time of ballot certification.”
Part of the reason for her seeming reluctance to weigh in and the relative silence of other Democrats is that the ultimate outlook for the Colorado challenge isn’t bright.
Trump’s campaign is already promising to appeal the decision directly to the US Supreme Court. According to Samuel Issacharoff, a professor of constitutional law at New York University, the appeal will almost certainly be granted, particularly given that other state courts have considered, and rejected, similar lawsuits.
“It cannot be that the national candidacy for presidency is determined on a state by state basis,” he said. “That would be a breakdown of the democratic order.”
The Supreme Court currently has a six-to-three conservative majority. And while the justices, even the three appointed by Trump, have shown a willingness to rule against the former president in previous cases, Issacharoff believed they would be extremely reluctant to be seen as limiting voters’ options at the ballot box.
Democrats may also be concerned that the legal challenges and the Colorado ruling plays into one of the central messages of Trump’s campaign, that the ruling elite is threatened by his political movement and are willing to subvert the will of the people to keep him from power.
Trump Campaign Spokesman Steven Cheung called the Colorado ruling “completely flawed”. He said it was a sign that Democrats had lost faith in President Joe Biden and “are now doing everything they can to stop the American voters from throwing them out of office next November”. (Int’l Monitoring Desk)