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Supreme Court Could Force States to Keep Trump on the 2024 Ballot

2024-01-04 5,645 Dailymotion

Supreme Court Could, Force States to Keep , Trump on the 2024 Ballot.<br />'Newsweek' reports that the United States Supreme Court <br />could potentially force all 50 states to keep former <br />President Donald Trump on the 2024 presidential ballot.<br />According to Jeffrey Clark, a former U.S. Department <br />of Justice assistant attorney general, the court <br />could cite Section 5 of the 14th Amendment.<br />Clark, who is currently facing charges for his alleged <br />involvement in efforts to overturn the results of the 2020 <br />election, made the claim on One America News Network.<br />Clark, who is currently facing charges for his alleged <br />involvement in efforts to overturn the results of the 2020 <br />election, made the claim on One America News Network.<br />According to Clark, individual states should not <br />be allowed to decide whether Trump violated <br />Section 3 of the 14th Amendment, which he has <br />been accused of in a number of legal actions. .<br />In December, Colorado's Supreme Court ordered <br />Trump to be removed from the state's 2024 presidential <br />primary ballot, citing Section 3 of the 14th Amendment.<br />Days after the Colorado ruling, Maine Secretary of State <br />Shenna Bellows reached the same conclusion, ordering <br />Trump's name to be removed from the state's 2024 ballot. .<br />Clark argues that Trump has not been charged or <br />convicted of insurrection in a criminal court, which would <br />mean that neither Section 5 nor Section 3 are applicable. .<br />There's Section 5 of the 14th Amendment, <br />which gives Congress the power to enforce <br />the rest of the 14th Amendment and it looks <br />like the enforcement mechanism that they <br />chose is a federal criminal statute for <br />insurrection which, of course, <br />President Trump has not been <br />charged with let alone convicted of, Jeffrey Clark, Former U.S. Department of Justice <br />assistant attorney general, via 'Newsweek' .<br />There's Section 5 of the 14th Amendment, <br />which gives Congress the power to enforce <br />the rest of the 14th Amendment and it looks <br />like the enforcement mechanism that they <br />chose is a federal criminal statute for <br />insurrection which, of course, <br />President Trump has not been <br />charged with let alone convicted of, Jeffrey Clark, Former U.S. Department of Justice <br />assistant attorney general, via 'Newsweek' .<br />'Newsweek' reports that Clark went on <br />to suggest that the matter will end up <br />being decided by the U.S. Supreme Court. .<br />There's only one court that can speak <br />with finality about the meaning of <br />that provision of the Constitution <br />and that's the U.S. Supreme Court, Jeffrey Clark, Former U.S. Department of Justice <br />assistant attorney general, via 'Newsweek'

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