Can Donald Trump still run for president after Maine and Colorado rulings? – BBC.com

A chronicle of Donald Trump's Crimes or Allegations

Can Donald Trump still run for president after Maine and Colorado rulings? – BBC.com

Donald Trump has been disqualified from running as a presidential candidate in two states, Colorado and Maine. So what does it mean for next year's general election?
Mr Trump is the clear frontrunner to be the Republican nominee in November 2024 and challenge Joe Biden for the White House. His campaign described both decisions as "atrocious" and an "attempted theft of an election".
The top election official in Maine ruled the former president was ineligible to run because of his actions around the Capitol riot. Colorado's highest court issued a similar, unprecedented, ruling just days earlier.
But it is still uncertain whether Mr Trump's name will appear on the ballot when the two states pick their Republican candidate in the coming months, as both rulings are on hold while an appeals process plays out.
Unlike in Colorado, where the state's Supreme Court ruled on Mr Trump's eligibility, in Maine it was decided by the top electoral official because of a quirk in its constitution.
Secretary of State Shenna Bellows, a Democrat, issued a 34-page ruling that said Mr Trump must be removed from its Republican primary ballot because of Section 3 of the 14th Amendment.
Section 3 disqualifies people who engage in "insurrection or rebellion" from holding federal office.
Her order said Mr Trump "over the course of several months and culminating on January 6 2021, used a false narrative of election fraud to inflame his supporters and direct them to the Capitol".
Ms Bellows, an elected official, was accused of making a politically motivated decision by the Trump campaign. She denied this and said it was "thorough and based on the rule of law".
Speaking to BBC News after her ruling, Ms Bellows said it was her duty to uphold election laws in her state, and that she hoped the "Supreme Court will settle this matter nationwide".
On 19 December, the Colorado Supreme Court said it found "clear and convincing evidence that President Trump engaged in insurrection".
It was the first time Section 3 had been used to disqualify a presidential candidate.
The lengthy 213-page ruling said Mr Trump's actions in the build-up to 6 January 2021 did constitute insurrection.
His lawyers had argued in Colorado that he should not be disqualified because he did not bear responsibility for the riot.
They also noted that Mr Trump has not been charged with inciting insurrection.
Yes. These rulings only apply to Colorado and Maine respectively.
Hours after Maine's ruling, California's elected secretary of state, a Democrat, ignored calls to remove Mr Trump from the state's Republican primary ballot – saying it was a matter for the courts. Michigan's top court this week declined to hear a case seeking to disqualify Mr Trump.
Mr Trump is far ahead of his Republican rivals so can still win his party's nomination without competing in Colorado or Maine.
In the US, the two main parties nominate a presidential candidate by holding a series of state primaries and caucuses that begin in January.
In terms of the general election, in both states, Joe Biden won against Donald Trump in 2020 by a wide margin, and it is unlikely that Mr Trump will need to win the states to enter the White House once more.
It is now likely that the US Supreme Court will intervene to offer a ruling that would apply nationally.
That's because the Colorado Republican Party has appealed the state's ruling to the Supreme Court.
The top US court will decide whether to take up the case in the new year, but it is not clear when.
Mr Trump's name will remain on the ballot in Colorado until the Supreme Court makes a ruling or, in a less likely outcome, decides not to take up the case.
The Maine ruling is also on hold pending a legal appeal in the state's courts. Any decision by the US Supreme Court could supersede this and apply nationally.
The US justices will have to consider the legal arguments which will take time, but they will be under pressure to decide before the Colorado and Maine primaries on 5 March, the so-called Super Tuesday when the greatest number of states hold ballots.
The balance of that court has shifted to more conservative in recent years, thanks in part to three justices who were appointed by Mr Trump when he was president.
Almost everything about the situation is unprecedented, leaving lingering questions about how this may affect the general election.
Maeva Marcus, the director of the Institute for Constitutional Studies at George Washington University, says the same "rationale" behind the Colorado ruling that disqualified Mr Trump from the primary ballot would "hold for the general election".
But it's too early to say what will happen in the general election in November until the issue works its way through the courts, she said.
There are two key legal issues to consider.
One is whether Mr Trump's actions in the build-up to the storming of the US Capitol amount to insurrection.
The other is whether the office holders that Section 3 was aimed at barring should include the president.
A lower court in Colorado has already ruled that Mr Trump engaged in insurrection but the law did not apply to the office of the presidency.
The Colorado Supreme Court disagreed, and top legal scholars are divided on whether this law should apply to Mr Trump.
Lawyers for Mr Trump dispute that he engaged in insurrection and argue his remarks to supporters on the day of the 2021 riot were protected by his right to free speech.
Mr Trump's campaign said the latest ruling is another example of the justice system being used to persecute him.
But there could be wider implications for the general election.
Dozens of other US states have similar lawsuits trying to bar Mr Trump from running, and the decisions in Colorado and Maine could make it more likely some of them succeed.
If Mr Trump was stopped from running in a state where he and Mr Biden are neck-and-neck, that could be critical in a presidential race that is expected to be closely fought.
She plotted with her boyfriend to kill her abusive mother in a case that gripped the US media.
Secretary of State Shenna Bellows says it was her "sacred obligation" to follow evidence in the case.
The Constitution bars those "engaged in insurrection" from office. But does that apply to Mr Trump?
The decision increases pressure on the Supreme Court to rule on his eligibility to run for the presidency.
The state's top election official, Shenna Bellows, ruled Trump cannot run for president in 2024 in Maine.
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