The political parties are private clubs. Legal precedent was set with Ron Paul and Bernie Sanders, they can ignore primary votes and put whoever they want on the ballot.
But the fact is he is campaigning. It suggests outside of all this other hoohaw, it is a legitimate process.
I doubt he'll be disqualified from running. He is running. Being elected is even more absurd. It is upto the voters at that point.
Whether he becomes the party candidate is still debatable. The frontrunner when the gap closes. Who knows. A court might be a more persuasive argument on him not being that candidate. Who knows?
But it goes to the Supreme Court. No other court has that final say.
How long until that decision is even made? In the meantime it does that job. It causes those questions by other voters. Right. It has cost votes.
Section 3 of the 14th Amendment gives Congress the power to disqualify someone who has already held a public office from holding "any office" if they participate in an "insurrection or rebellion" against the United States. The disqualification clause was originally intended to prevent former Confederate officials from gaining power in the reconstructed government following the Civil War.2 The provision has mostly laid dormant since the Reconstruction Era, but conservative legal scholars believe it could prevent Donald Trump from running for president in 2024.
Trump will corral all his support like a Bernie Sanders style and then endorse and ask his supporters to go vote for the GOP shill candidate with false promises that some of Trump's policy will be implemented in the future administration and Trump will get legal pardons from all the bogus lawfare criminal cases against him.
Trump's pending criminal cases will be utilized as excuse for several states to boot him from the ballot, or at least threaten to, which will cause a rutkus of infighting inside the GOP and they will ultimately go this route and Trump will use his base and support as leverage in some kind of deal.
Average democracy fan
It goes to the Supreme Court.
Somehow I doubt Trump cannot run for Office? It would be surprising. He's campaigning for office. Mistake you cannot run. You're cancelled.
How does that work? It doesn't. It's more American bullshit.
Whether or not he's a frontrunner, is a bigger argument?
The political parties are private clubs. Legal precedent was set with Ron Paul and Bernie Sanders, they can ignore primary votes and put whoever they want on the ballot.
Yea frontrunner.
But the fact is he is campaigning. It suggests outside of all this other hoohaw, it is a legitimate process.
I doubt he'll be disqualified from running. He is running. Being elected is even more absurd. It is upto the voters at that point.
Whether he becomes the party candidate is still debatable. The frontrunner when the gap closes. Who knows. A court might be a more persuasive argument on him not being that candidate. Who knows?
But it goes to the Supreme Court. No other court has that final say.
How long until that decision is even made? In the meantime it does that job. It causes those questions by other voters. Right. It has cost votes.
Yeah GOP standing with Trump with criminal record seems unlikely.
GOP char is romney family.
More evidence that my prediction will come true:
https://patriots.win/p/17r9DjiNgW/the-republicans-have-more-eviden/c/
Trump will corral all his support like a Bernie Sanders style and then endorse and ask his supporters to go vote for the GOP shill candidate with false promises that some of Trump's policy will be implemented in the future administration and Trump will get legal pardons from all the bogus lawfare criminal cases against him.
Trump's pending criminal cases will be utilized as excuse for several states to boot him from the ballot, or at least threaten to, which will cause a rutkus of infighting inside the GOP and they will ultimately go this route and Trump will use his base and support as leverage in some kind of deal.