Trump Disqualification 7: Final (For Now) Thoughts

By now we’re all a bit weary of this subject, but it could be quite important.

Since I began posting about the case in Colorado, another has been filed in Minnesota. It’s good to have these petitions filed in court rather than relying on individual election officials to make the initial decision.

The judge in Colorado plans to have a decision by the end of October to leave as much time as possible for appeals.

These cases have been filed in state court because there is a real question about whether anyone has “standing” to assert the claim in federal court. I understand why, but it is nonsensical that because the question is so important no one may have a sufficient personal stake to bring a claim for disqualification in federal court.

Sorry President Trump. The petitioners in these cases may be legally wrong (indeed, I do not believe that they are correct), but this is a valid question that should be resolved; it is not election interference.

There are those who believe that the decision should be made by the voters. I see their point, but the same can be said about any qualification for office. While you’re at it, repeal all term limits, which also interfere with voters’ freedom of choice.

Jay Bohn

September 28, 2023

Trump Disqualification 6: What Are Others Saying?

Now that I have completed my discussion of the elements that have to be established for Donald Trump to be disqualified under section 3 of the Fourteenth Amendment, here is a roundup of what others are saying:

CBS News “The Constitution’s disqualification clause and how it’s being used to try to prevent Trump from running for president,”

The Atlantic “The Constitution Prohibits Trump From Ever Being President Again” (paywall)

Baude, William and Paulsen, Michael Stokes, “The Sweep and Force of Section Three” (August 9, 2023). University of Pennsylvania Law Review, Vol. 172, Forthcoming , Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4532751

Tillman, Seth Barrett and Blackman, Josh, “Sweeping and Forcing the President into Section 3: A Response to William Baude and Michael Stokes Paulsen” (September 12, 2023), 28 TEX. REV. L. & POL. (forth. circa 2023-2024), Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4568771 

Eric Segall, The Difficult Legal and Political Questions Surrounding Trump’s Disqualification Under Section 3 of the 14th Amendment, Dorf on Law

Michael B. Mukasey, “Was Trump ‘an Officer of the United States’?Wall Street Journal (paywall)

Steven Calabresi, “Trump Is Disqualified from Being on Any Election Ballots,” The Volokh Conspiracy (agreeing with the Baude-Paulsen article above)

Steven Calabresi, “President Trump Can Not Be Disqualified,” Wall Street Journal (paywall) (Professor Calabresi changes his mind based on the Mukasey article)

Steven Calabresi, “Donald Trump Should be on the Ballot and Should Lose,” The Volokh Conspiracy

Adam Liptak, “An About-Face on Whether the 14th Amendment Bars Trump From Office,” New York Times, September 18, 2023 (Prof. Calabresi’s change of position)

Akhil Reed Amar, “An Officer and a President,” Amarica’s Constitution (podcast) (which apparently considers my thoughts on whether the President is an “officer” “a genuinely stupid argument”)

David Orentlicher, “Why the 14th Amendment shouldn’t disqualify Trump,” CNN (focusing on whether the events of January 6 were an “insurrection” and concluding that they were not)

Jay Bohn

September 25, 2023

Trump Disqualification 5: Did Donald Trump “Engage” in the Insurrection?

The most interesting question, and the one that is most intensely factual, is whether Donald Trump “engaged” in what I agree was an insurrection on January 6. As with every other decision related to this issue, it cannot be based upon whether one wants or doesn’t want Trump to be disqualified from future office.

No one has found a smoking gun, clear evidence that President Trump planned with others for the mob to attack the Capitol. The Anderson petition argues that it would not have happened but for Trump’s “false claims of election fraud, coercive tactics, inflammatory rhetoric, mob mobilization, promotion of political violence, instructions to march on the Capitol, and decision to pour fuel on the fire rather than tell the mob to disperse.” Perhaps so. Perhaps, even, he is responsible in some (serious) sense, certainly his actions or inactions were a negligent (or worse) dereliction of duty, but the case is far from clear that this conduct means that President Trump “engaged” in the insurrection.1

I am not suggesting that President Trump had to enter the Capitol or otherwise personally commit violence. I only say that based upon what facts I know (which are limited to what has been reported by the professional media), it is not obvious that President Trump intended an insurrection.

But our legal system is often called to make judgments about what people intended. Ultimately one or more courts is going to have to hear evidence and make a factual determination. President Trump should be compelled to testify about the what and why of his conduct.

Jay Bohn

September 21, 2023

  1. Let me be clear. While President Trump had a duty to “See that the laws are faithfully executed” and to “preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution,” and these duties should have led him to take swift and decisive action to protect Congress from invasion by hostile forces. Trump failed miserably and his refusal to take action was, in my opinion, an impeachable offense. (However, as I have written before, the historical case that the Senate retained jurisdiction to try the impeachment after Trump’s term expired is weak.) ↩︎

Trump Disqualification 4: Did the Events of January 6, 2021, Amount to an “Insurrection”?

Getting beyond what some may see as overly technical conclusions as to whether the President is an “officer” of the United States and whether Donald Trump ever took an oath to “support” the Constitution, we get to the first of the meatier questions, was the attack on the Capitol an “insurrection or rebellion” as those terms are used in section 3 of the Fourteenth Amendment?

The Anderson petition ‘s position seems to be to rely upon various subsequent statements by different parts of the government that the events of January 6 were an insurrection. That’s too conclusory for me. Nor is it helpful to cite a modern dictionary definition.

The original Constitution uses that term “insurrection” exactly once, in Article I, section 8, where Congress is given the power to “To provide for calling forth the Militia to execute the Laws of the Union, suppress Insurrections and repel Invasions.” The only case to determine that one of the participants in the January 6 attack on the Capitol engaged in insurrection, New Mexico v. Griffin (decided just over a year ago), defined an insurrection as “an (1) assemblage of persons, (2) acting to prevent the execution of one or more federal laws, (3) for a public purpose, (4) through the use of violence, force, or intimidation by numbers.” The court cited the trial transcript as well as sources roughly contemporary to the adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment.

While I do not have ready access to the cited sources and that definition may not be perfect (I am concerned that it could bring in small stuff), the events of January 6, 2021, were not small stuff. An armed mob overwhelmed security, broke into the Capitol, and prevented Congress from doing its constitutional duty for several hours. People, including a police officer, died during these events. It was not a “mere” riot, or “just” a sit-in.

For these reasons, I am satisfied that the attack on the Capitol on January 6, 2021, was an “insurrection” and that, under section 3 of the Fourteenth Amendment, any person who had previously taken an oath, as a member of Congress, or as an officer of the United States, or as a member of any State legislature, or as an executive or judicial officer of any State, to support the Constitution of the United States and who engaged in that insurrection be a member of Congress, or presidential elector, or hold any office, civil or military, under the United States, or under any State.

In my last post on the elements of President Trump’s potential disqualification, I am going to consider whether he “engaged” in this insurrection.

Jay Bohn

September 18, 2023

Trump Disqualification 3: Did Trump Take an Oath to “Support” the Constitution of the United States?

The second of the elements I set forth in last week’s post about former President Donald Trump’s possible disqualification based upon Section 3 of the Fourteenth Amendment is the question of whether Trump took an oath to support the Constitution of the United States. Here again we face the unusual situation that the only time when he would have taken such an oath was when he was inaugurated as President on January 20, 2017, as he did not previously hold any public office that would have required an oath. But the oath he took that day does not promise to “support” the Constitution.

As I stated in my last post, Article VI requires an oath to “support” the Constitution be taken by “Senators and Representatives . . ., and the Members of the several State Legislatures, and all executive and judicial Officers, both of the United States and of the several States.” Uniquely, the wording of the oath required to be taken upon assuming the presidency is specifically set forth in the Constitution: “I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will faithfully execute the Office of President of the United States, and will to the best of my Ability, preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States.” A new President swears to “preserve, protect and defend” the Constitution, not to “support” it.1

The petition in Anderson v. Griswold, the Colorado case seeking to exclude Trump from the ballot, does not directly address this point. Paragraph 353 correctly references the wording of the oath that Trump was required to, and did, take, to “preserve, protect and defend” the Constitution, but paragraph 358 merely concludes that this oath was an “oath … to support the Constitution of the United States.”

As with the question of whether the President is an “Officer,” I do not believe that the authors of the Fourteenth Amendment affirmatively intended to immunize a President from potential disqualification, I just don’t think they were particularly worried about it or considered that the presidency would be the first public office a person would obtain.

Jay Bohn

September 14, 2023.

  1. I am not aware that anyone has ever taken the position that the President must take an oath under Article VI in addition to the oath prescribed by Article II, and there is certainly no suggestion that President Trump actually did so. ↩︎

Trump Disqualification 2: Is the President an “Officer” of the United States?

A few days ago I started what is going to be a multi-post thread in which I propose to discuss whether Section 3 of the Fourteenth Amendment disqualifies Donald Trump from being reelected as President of the United States due to his actions with respect to the January 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol.

The first “element” as it were of the case for Trump’s disqualification is whether the President is an officer of the United States. This is important because the disqualification only applies to persons “who, having previously taken an oath, as a member of Congress, or as an officer of the United States, or as a member of any State legislature, or as an executive or judicial officer of any State.” Donald Trump, so far as I understand his biography, has only been President, so unless the President is “an officer of the United States,” he is not subject to disqualification.

The Constitution uses the term “officer” twelve times:

  • Article I, §2, refers to the Speaker and other Officers of the House of Representatives;
  • Article I, §3, refers to the “other Officers” of Senate (besides the Vice President of the United States who is its President);
  • Article I, §8, mentions “Officer” twice; it refers to the Appointment of Officers of the Militia and, in the “Necessary and Proper” clause it mentions “Powers vested “Powers vested by this Constitution in the Government of the United States, or in any Department or Officer thereof;”
  • Article II, §1, uses “Officer” twice when referring to who would exercise the powers and duties of the President in “the Case of Removal, Death, Resignation or Inability, both of the President and Vice President;”
  • Article II, §2, uses the term “Officer” three times: the President’s ability to require the written opinion “of the principal Officer in each of the executive Departments;” and the appointment of “Officers of the United States,” either “by and with the Advice and Consent of the Senate” or (for inferior Officers as authorized by Law by “the President alone, in the Courts of Law, or in the Heads of Departments.;”
  • Article II, §3, provides that the President “shall Commission all the Officers of the United States;”
  • Article II, §4, renders liable to removal upon Impeachment and Conviction the ” President, Vice President and all [not “all other”] civil Officers of the United States;” and, finally,
  • Article VI requires an oath to “support” the Constitution be taken by “Senators and Representatives . . ., and the Members of the several State Legislatures, and all executive and judicial Officers, both of the United States and of the several States.”

I submit that there is nothing in this language describes the President as an Officer and several provisions which suggest that he is not: neither he nor the Vice President is commissioned, the impeachment provision does not refer to “other” officers and the wording of the oath of office of the President (but not the Vice President) is specifically provided elsewhere.

The petition is Anderson v. Griswold, the case before a Colorado state court that seeks the declaration of disqualification, relies upon the position that because the presidency is an “Office,”1 its holder must be an “Officer.” and an attorney general’s opinion contemporaneous with the adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment.

I will acknowledge that it at least seems counter-intuitive that a local dogcatcher who swore an oath (will little ceremony) to support the Constitution could be disqualified but the President is not. While I doubt that there was a policy reason for the difference, it may have been overlooked because Franklin Pierce, the only former President who took the side of the Confederacy, was already dead.2

At this point I am not convinced that Trump’s having taken an oath as President satisfies the first element as I have defined it. It will be interesting to see what other arguments are made, but I hope the desired end of disqualification does not lead to an unjustified conclusion on this point.

Jay Bohn

September 11, 2023

  1. I’m not going to go through all the times that the Constitution uses the term “Office,” some exclusively referring to the Presidency, but I do agree that the Presidency is an “Office” of the United States, so any person who is disqualified cannot be President. ↩︎
  2. While I do not think that Section 3 is limited to the Civil War, it was certainly written with that in mind. ↩︎

Trump Disqualification 1: Initial Thoughts on CREW Lawsuit

I have read with some interest what commercial media companies have published about the position espoused by some that the Section 3 of the Fourteenth Amendment disqualifies Donald Trump from being reelected as President of the United States due to his actions with respect to the January 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol. Let me put my biases right up front. I believe neither that Trump won the 2020 election nor that he should win (or even run) in the 2024 election, so I have read such articles with some interest. Ultimately, I have been disappointed (but not entirely surprised) that they tend to deal with personalities, labelling of those who espouse their favored position as experts, or just re-hashing of prior reports. Now that an advocacy organization, Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW) has filed a lawsuit (press release | petition) in Colorado state court to obtain a definitive ruling, it’s time to discuss some of my initial thoughts about this issue.

The constitutional text reads:

No person shall be a Senator or Representative in Congress, or elector of President and Vice-President, or hold any office, civil or military, under the United States, or under any State, who, having previously taken an oath, as a member of Congress, or as an officer of the United States, or as a member of any State legislature, or as an executive or judicial officer of any State, to support the Constitution of the United States, shall have engaged in insurrection or rebellion against the same, or given aid or comfort to the enemies thereof. But Congress may by a vote of two-thirds of each House, remove such disability.

So, disqualification requires the following to be true:

  • that the President is an officer of the United States
  • that Donald Trump took an oath to support the Constitution of the United States
  • that the events of January 6, 2021, amounted to an “insurrection,” and
  • that Donald Trump “engaged” in the insurrection.

(Note that I am dismissing any contention that the events of January 6 constituted a “rebellion” or that Trump’s conduct constitutes “aid” or “comfort” to the “enemies” of the United States.)

There are non-frivolous (but not necessarily convincing) arguments against each of these points, and I propose to discuss them in somewhat more detail in subsequent posts.

I don’t know anything about the way pleadings like a petition are generally worded in Colorado, but this one reads more like a legal brief. Whatever its formal merits as a legal pleading, this means that the arguments on these points are spelled out pretty clearly. After reading it there are some good arguments about the first three elements, but I’m not quite there yet with the proof that Trump “engaged” in the insurrection by means of his false claims and incendiary remarks.

The issue is very important and needs to be decided based upon the constitutional text, not one’s position on whether Trump should or should not be reelected, but it’s unrealistic to expect most media coverage to focus on the actual legal issues rather than politics and personalities.

Jay Bohn

September 7, 2023

Best Judicial Decisions Rely on Process, Not Policy.

In one of my earliest posts, COVID-19 and Emergency Powers, I said: “Unfortunately, attempts to rein in the use of emergency powers have been viewed through the prism of politics or the perceived merits of the action taken rather than process considerations or the constitutional separation of powers.” The same goes for any governmental action where an official’s power to take some action is questioned: “the [insert relevant official or agency] should have the power because the [relevant official or agency] makes better choices than the [whoever we’re opposed to].”

This trust was recently shown in connection with the decision by Judge Robert Kirsch who sits on the U.S. District Court for the District of New Jersey. At issue was the extent to which New Jersey could legislatively prohibit private parties from contracting with the federal government to execute federal policies with which New Jersey disagrees. The specific policy here is the detaining of aliens who enter the country illegally. U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) does not operate its own detention centers and has relied on both public and private jails to house detainees. Because New Jersey’s present administration opposes such detention, a statute was passed which not only prohibited counties and municipalities from entering into or renewing contracts to house detainees, but also prohibited private prison operators from doing the same.

The operator of the Elizabeth Detention Center filed suit. You see, the U.S. Constitution has this thing called the “Supremacy Clause,” which says that federal law supersedes state law. In fact, a famous early Supreme Court decision,1 overturned a Maryland law which attempted to impede the operation of the Bank of the United States by a special tax.2

In an extensive written opinion, Judge Kirsch overturned the New Jersey law because the prohibition of private prison operators3 from contracting with federal government interfered with federal execution of federal policy.

Besides the opinion itself, I have had the opportunity to read two accounts of the matter. NJ.com predictably gave more ink to Governor Murphy and others who oppose the detention of those whose initial entry into, or continued presence within, this country is contrary to law, but New Jersey Monitor, which actually provided a link to the opinion,4 concentrated more on the ruling itself.

The New Jersey attorney general has promised to appeal, but I see merit in such an effort as the decision was really inevitable.

Jay Bohn

September 4, 2023

  1. McCulloch v. Maryland, 17 U.S. (4 Wheat.) 316, 4 L. Ed. 579 (1819). ↩︎
  2. The opinion has one of my favorite lines, “The power to tax involves the power to destroy.” ↩︎
  3. The prohibition on municipalities and counties was not challenged and would likely have been upheld because the Tenth Amendment has been interpreted as having an “anti-commandeering” principle which means that the States cannot be compelled to execute federal law. ↩︎
  4. NJ.com also linked to the opinion, but on New Jersey Monitor‘s site as well, as I have. ↩︎