it wont go to congress. the highest court in the state made a ruling regarding a state law. for there to be a national disqualification, the justice department will have to file charges and he will be tried in a federal court. congress could spearhead this by investigating, but its up to the executive branch to file charges, and up to the judicial branch to reach a verdict. only if trump is a convicted insurrectionist can congress decide to disqualify him from running
Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. will doubtless seek consensus or, at least, try to avoid a partisan split of the six Republican appointees against the three Democratic ones. He may want to explore the many paths the court could take to keep Mr. Trump on state ballots without addressing whether he had engaged in insurrection or even assuming that he had.
Among them: The justices could rule that congressional action is needed before courts can intervene, that the constitutional provision at issue does not apply to the presidency or that Mr. Trump’s statements were protected by the First Amendment.
They’re just saying that the court could rule that the amendment by itself is inactionable until the legislature enacts laws to create a process to disqualify candidates. Similar to how Article III declared a judiciary branch, but it wasn’t actually established until Congress passed the Judiciary Act, describing what kind of courts there would actually be, what their jurisdictions would be, how many justices would comprise the court, etc. etc.
But in this case, the amendment is clearly prohibiting an action. With a reasonable court, I can’t imagine how they’d just allow somebody to continue violating the Constitution until Congress passed additional legislation to stop it. It’s as ludicrous as saying that the executive branch can unreasonably search and seize anything they’d like until Congress explicitly spells out each and every action that’s unreasonable and provides the exact remedy process to follow when the 4th amendment is violated.
I mean, it’s a pretty moot point because the court has already shown that they’re perfectly willing to create whatever calvinball rules they want. But of course good old liberal media has to get in there and grant an air of credibility to whatever flimsy justification they come up with that’s even the slightest bit plausible sounding.
If the court wants to come out and say that they judge the President isn’t an officer of the United States or that he wasn’t personally engaged in an insurrection, then that’s one thing. But kicking it over to Congress to legislate exactly what’s prohibited by the Constitution and/or what the remedies are is just opening up a huge can of worms.
They’re just saying that the court could rule that the amendment by itself is inactionable until the legislature enacts laws to create a process to disqualify candidates.
I agree this isn’t a likely outcome because there is already a federal offence for rebellion or insurrection
“congressional action is needed before courts can intervene” meaning that congress needs to investigate for insurrection in order to charge him for the crime. it would still eventually come back to the courts to decide on a verdict.
edit: my wording of “it wont go to congress” was clumsy. i meant that congress wont be the ultimate body making that decision. congress can decide to not disqualify even if hes found guilty, but thats if both houses pass a 2/3 vote
it wont go to congress. the highest court in the state made a ruling regarding a state law. for there to be a national disqualification, the justice department will have to file charges and he will be tried in a federal court. congress could spearhead this by investigating, but its up to the executive branch to file charges, and up to the judicial branch to reach a verdict. only if trump is a convicted insurrectionist can congress decide to disqualify him from running
The NYT disagrees and says it could.
They’re just saying that the court could rule that the amendment by itself is inactionable until the legislature enacts laws to create a process to disqualify candidates. Similar to how Article III declared a judiciary branch, but it wasn’t actually established until Congress passed the Judiciary Act, describing what kind of courts there would actually be, what their jurisdictions would be, how many justices would comprise the court, etc. etc.
But in this case, the amendment is clearly prohibiting an action. With a reasonable court, I can’t imagine how they’d just allow somebody to continue violating the Constitution until Congress passed additional legislation to stop it. It’s as ludicrous as saying that the executive branch can unreasonably search and seize anything they’d like until Congress explicitly spells out each and every action that’s unreasonable and provides the exact remedy process to follow when the 4th amendment is violated.
I mean, it’s a pretty moot point because the court has already shown that they’re perfectly willing to create whatever calvinball rules they want. But of course good old liberal media has to get in there and grant an air of credibility to whatever flimsy justification they come up with that’s even the slightest bit plausible sounding.
If the court wants to come out and say that they judge the President isn’t an officer of the United States or that he wasn’t personally engaged in an insurrection, then that’s one thing. But kicking it over to Congress to legislate exactly what’s prohibited by the Constitution and/or what the remedies are is just opening up a huge can of worms.
I agree this isn’t a likely outcome because there is already a federal offence for rebellion or insurrection
“congressional action is needed before courts can intervene” meaning that congress needs to investigate for insurrection in order to charge him for the crime. it would still eventually come back to the courts to decide on a verdict.
edit: my wording of “it wont go to congress” was clumsy. i meant that congress wont be the ultimate body making that decision. congress can decide to not disqualify even if hes found guilty, but thats if both houses pass a 2/3 vote