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Colorado stunner: Ballot ruling against Trump could aid him

The Colorado Supreme Court may have just put a big gift under Donald Trump’s Christmas tree.

In fact, the court’s blockbuster 4-3 ruling Tuesday disqualifying the former president from Colorado’s Republican primary ballot presents him with multiple gifts: It fuels his argument that a politicized American legal system is out to “get” him – and deprive voters of their choice of candidates. It has spurred even his fiercest GOP presidential primary foes to rush to his defense. And it deflects attention from the latest Trump controversy, rhetoric on immigrants that has summoned Hitler comparisons.

Why We Wrote This

A Colorado court ruling barring Donald Trump from the state presidential primary ballot because of “insurrection” is reverberating nationwide. It raises unprecedented legal questions – and also comes as a political gift to the former president.

The Colorado high court ruled that former President Trump had engaged in “insurrection” and was therefore ineligible to become president again under the 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. The decision, based on Mr. Trump’s apparent efforts to overturn the 2020 election, is on hold pending an expected emergency appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court.

The fresh turmoil around 2024 adds to an already fraught election season, featuring two older, unpopular men, and threatens to heighten concerns about the health of American democracy.

“It’s a stunning decision that will have legal and political consequences,” says Leonard Steinhorn, a professor of political communication and recent American history at American University.

The Colorado Supreme Court may have just put a big gift under Donald Trump’s Christmas tree. 

In fact, the court’s blockbuster 4-3 ruling Tuesday disqualifying the former president from Colorado’s Republican primary ballot presents him with multiple gifts: It fuels his argument that a politicized American legal system is out to “get” him – and deprive voters of their choice of candidates. It has spurred even his fiercest GOP presidential primary foes to rush to his defense. And it deflects attention from the latest Trump controversy, rhetoric on immigrants that has summoned Hitler comparisons. 

The Colorado high court ruled that former President Trump had engaged in “insurrection” and was therefore ineligible to become president again under the 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. The decision, based on Mr. Trump’s apparent efforts to overturn the 2020 election, is on hold pending an expected emergency appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court. 

Why We Wrote This

A Colorado court ruling barring Donald Trump from the state presidential primary ballot because of “insurrection” is reverberating nationwide. It raises unprecedented legal questions – and also comes as a political gift to the former president.

But the implications go far beyond Democratic-leaning Colorado, whose primary is March 5 and which is likely to vote Democratic anyway next November. Similar efforts to get Mr. Trump off the ballot in other states, including Arizona, Michigan, and New Hampshire, all general-election battlegrounds, could be more consequential if he is stricken from those ballots as well. National polls show Mr. Trump with an enormous lead for the GOP nomination and in a tight race with President Joe Biden in the general election. 

The fresh turmoil around 2024 adds to an already fraught election season, featuring two older, unpopular men, and threatens to heighten concerns about the health of American democracy. 

“It’s a stunning decision that will have legal and political consequences,” says Leonard Steinhorn, a professor of political communication and recent American history at American University.

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