Trials to strike Trump from ballot for Jan. 6 rolling
Share and Follow

Left: Judge Sarah B. Wallace speaks during a hearing for a lawsuit to keep former President Donald Trump off the state ballot in Denver District Court Thursday, Nov. 2, 2023, in Denver. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski, Pool). Right: Donald Trump closes his eyes against the sunlight as patriotic music plays before he gives remarks during a campaign event held at Trendsetter Engineering Thursday, Nov. 2, 2023, in Houston. (AP Photo/Michael Wyke)

Left: Judge Sarah B. Wallace speaks during a hearing for a lawsuit to keep former President Donald Trump off the state ballot in Denver District Court Thursday, Nov. 2, 2023, in Denver. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski, Pool). Right: Donald Trump closes his eyes against the sunlight as patriotic music plays before he gives remarks during a campaign event held at Trendsetter Engineering Thursday, Nov. 2, 2023, in Houston. (AP Photo/Michael Wyke)

The question of whether Donald Trump can remain on the ballot in Colorado for the 2024 election has continued to unfold rapidly and is nearing its conclusion as other challenges in different states are only starting to gather momentum.

The trial in Colorado launched on Monday before Second Judicial District Judge Sarah Wallace has already seen a slog of witnesses from either side appear. There have been constitutional scholars, experts on extremism, congressional lawmakers and activists alike who supported Trump’s 2020 campaign, as well as former Trump administration appointees who have testified. Police who defended the Capitol have also testified.

For the group of voters — including six Republicans and one unaffiliated voter —asking Colorado Secretary of State Jena Griswold to remove Trump from the ballot, they contend their case is a simple one: Trump’s conduct around Jan. 6 amounts to insurrectionist behavior in violation of Section III of the Fourteenth Amendment. The Civil War-era provision bars any person who has sworn an Oath to the U.S. Constitution and then engaged in insurrection from ever again serving in public office short of amnesty granted by Congress.

The disqualification also stretches to those who provided “aid and comfort” to insurrectionists.

Share and Follow
You May Also Like

Texas Man Shoots Utility Cable Installer in the Back After Accusing Him of Trespassing

A Texas man shot and seriously wounded a 19-year-old utility worker as…

Travis Decker: Sheriff Confirms Bloody Prints at Crime Scene Belongs to Father Accused of Suffocating 3 Young Daughters

Blood evidence has been confirmed in the search for Travis Decker, a…

Police say an officer issued a fake ticket to his ex-girlfriend while she was out of the country.

Inset: Miami Police Officer Zamir Vargas Valerio (Turner Guilford Knight Correctional Center).…

Kenneth Chesebro, Trump’s attorney, disbarred by appeals court

Inset: FILE – Kenneth Chesebro speaks to Fulton County Superior Court Judge…

Seeking Delayed Release: Abrego Garcia’s Lawyers Advocate for Freedom

Left: Kilmar Abrego Garcia, a Salvadoran citizen who was living in Maryland…

DIDDY ‘THE BARON OF BABY OIL’ AT ‘PEAK DIDDY’ DURING STATE’S CLOSING

Sean “Diddy” Combs used “violence and fear” to run a criminal enterprise…

Judge shows no leniency for man found guilty of hate-driven killing

Background: Courtroom video of Judge Donald Zuidmulder during Jackson Vogel”s sentencing hearing…

Outcome determined for man involved in moving body of 5-year-old

Left to right: Benjamin Rivera and Samuel Olson (Houston Police Dept.). A…