OPINION
JESSE
WEGMAN
Is Donald Trump Ineligible to Be President?
Nov. 24,
2022
Jesse
Wegman
By Jesse
Wegman
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/11/24/opinion/trump-14th-amendment.html
Mr. Wegman
is a member of the editorial board.
How does a
democracy protect itself against a political leader who is openly hostile to
democratic self-rule? This is the dilemma the nation faces once again as it
confronts a third presidential run by Donald Trump, even as he still refuses to
admit he lost his second.
Of course,
we shouldn’t be in this situation to begin with. The facts are well known but
necessary to repeat, if only because we must never become inured to them:
Abetted by a posse of low-rent lawyers, craven lawmakers and associated
crackpots, Mr. Trump schemed to overturn the 2020 election by illegal and
unconstitutional means. When those efforts failed, he incited a violent
insurrection at the United States Capitol, causing widespread destruction,
leading to multiple deaths and — for the first time in American history — interfering
with the peaceful transfer of power. Almost two years later, he continues to
claim, without any evidence, that he was cheated out of victory, and millions
of Americans continue to believe him.
The best
solution to behavior like this is the one that’s been available from the start:
impeachment. The founders put it in the Constitution because they were well
acquainted with the risks of corruption and abuse that come with vesting great
power in a single person. Congress rightly used this tool, impeaching Mr. Trump
in 2021 to hold him accountable for his central role in the Jan. 6 siege. Had
the Senate convicted him as it should have, he could have been disqualified
from holding public office again. But nearly all Senate Republicans came to his
defense, leaving him free to run another day.
There is
another, less-known solution in our Constitution to protect the country from
Mr. Trump: Section 3 of the 14th Amendment, which bars from public office
anyone who, “having previously taken an oath” to support the Constitution,
“engaged in insurrection or rebellion” or gave “aid or comfort” to America’s
enemies.
On its
face, this seems like an eminently sensible rule to put in a nation’s governing
document. That’s how Representative David Cicilline of Rhode Island, who has
drafted a resolution in Congress enabling the use of Section 3 against Mr.
Trump, framed it. “This is America. We basically allow anyone to be president,”
Mr. Cicilline told me. “We set limited disqualifications. One is, you can’t
incite an insurrection against the United States. You shouldn’t get to lead a
government that you tried to destroy.”
This was
also the reasoning of the 14th Amendment’s framers, who intended it to serve as
an aggressive response to the existential threat to the Republic posed by the
losing side of the Civil War. Section 3 was Congress’s way of ensuring that
unrepentant former Confederate officials — “enemies to the Union” — were not
allowed to hold federal or state office again. As Representative John Bingham,
one of the amendment’s lead drafters, put it in 1866, rebel leaders “surely
have no right to complain if this is all the punishment the American people
shall see fit to impose upon them.”
And yet
despite its clarity and good sense, the provision has rarely been invoked. The
first time, in the aftermath of the Civil War, it was used to disqualify
thousands of Southern rebels, but within four years, Congress voted to extend
amnesty to most of them. It was used again in 1919 when the House refused to
seat a socialist member accused of giving aid and comfort to Germany in World
War I.
In
September, for the first time in more than a century, a New Mexico judge
invoked Section 3, to remove from office a county commissioner, Couy Griffin,
who had been convicted of entering the Capitol grounds as part of the Jan. 6
mob. This raised hopes among those looking for a way to bulletproof the White
House against Mr. Trump that Section 3 might be the answer.
I count
myself among this crowd. As Jan. 6 showed the world, Mr. Trump poses a unique
and profound threat to the Republic: He is an authoritarian who disregards the
Constitution and the rule of law and who delights in abusing his power to harm
his perceived opponents and benefit himself, his family and his friends. For
that reason, I am open to using any constitutional means of preventing him from
even attempting to return to the White House.
At the same
time, I’m torn about using this specific tool. Section 3 is extraordinarily
strong medicine. Like an impeachment followed by conviction, it denies the
voters their free choice of those who seek to represent them. That’s not the
way democracy is designed to work.
And yet it
is true, as certain conservatives never tire of reminding us, that democracy in
the United States is not absolute. There are multiple checks built into our
system that interfere with the expression of direct majority rule: the Senate,
the Supreme Court and the Electoral College, for example. The 14th Amendment’s
disqualification clause is another example — in this case, a peaceful and
transparent mechanism to neutralize an existential threat to the Republic.
Nor is it
antidemocratic to impose conditions of eligibility for public office. For instance,
Article II of the Constitution puts the presidency off limits to anyone younger
than 35. If we have decided that a 34-year-old is, by definition, not mature or
reliable enough to hold such immense power, then surely we can decide the same
about a 76-year-old who incited an insurrection in an attempt to keep that
power.
So could
Section 3 really be used to prevent Mr. Trump from running for or becoming
president again? As a legal matter, it seems beyond doubt. The Capitol attack
was an insurrection by any meaningful definition — a concerted, violent attempt
to block Congress from performing its constitutionally mandated job of counting
electoral votes. He engaged in that insurrection, even if he did not physically
join the crowd as he promised he would. As top Democrats and Republicans in
Congress said during and after his impeachment trial, the former president was
practically and morally responsible for provoking the events of Jan. 6. The
overwhelming evidence gathered and presented by the House’s Jan. 6 committee
has only made clearer the extent of the plot by Mr. Trump and his associates to
overturn the election — and how his actions and his failures to act led
directly to the assault and allowed it to continue as long as it did. In the
words of Representative Liz Cheney, the committee’s vice chair, Mr. Trump
“summoned the mob, assembled the mob and lit the flame of this attack.”
A few legal
scholars have argued that Section 3 does not apply to the presidency because it
does not explicitly list that position. It is hard to square that claim with
the provision’s fundamental purpose, which is to prevent insurrectionists from
participating in American government. It would be bizarre in the extreme if Mr.
Griffin’s behavior can disqualify him from serving as a county commissioner but
not from serving as president.
It’s not
the legal questions that give me pause, though; it’s the political ones.
First is
the matter of how Republicans would react to Mr. Trump’s disqualification. An
alarmingly large faction of the party is unwilling to accept the legitimacy of
an election that its candidate didn’t win. Imagine the reaction if their
standard-bearer were kept off the ballot altogether. They would thunder about a
“rigged election” — and unlike all the times Mr. Trump has baselessly invoked
that phrase, it would carry a measure of truth. Combine this with the
increasingly violent rhetoric coming from right-wing media figures and
politicians, including top Republicans, and you have the recipe for something
far worse than Jan. 6. On the other hand, if partisan outrage were a barrier to
invoking the law, many laws would be dead letters.
The more
serious problem with Section 3 is that it is easy to see how it could morph
into a caricature of what it is trying to prevent. Keeping specific candidates
off the ballot is a classic move of autocrats, from Nicolas Maduro in Venezuela
to Aleksandr Lukashenko in Belarus to Vladimir Putin. It sends the message that
voters cannot be trusted to choose their leaders wisely — if at all. And didn’t
we just witness Americans around the country using their voting power to
repudiate Mr. Trump’s Big Lie and reject the most dangerous election deniers?
Shouldn’t we let elections take their course and give the people the chance to
(again) reject Mr. Trump at the ballot box?
To help me
resolve my ambivalence, I called Representative Jamie Raskin of Maryland, who
sits on the Jan. 6 committee and taught constitutional law before joining
Congress. He acknowledged what he called an understandable “queasiness” about
invoking Section 3 to keep Mr. Trump off the ballot. But Mr. Raskin argued that
this queasiness is built into the provision. “What was the constitutional
bargain struck in Section 3?” he asked. “There would be a very minor incursion
into the right of the people to elect exactly who they want, in order to obtain
much greater security for the constitutional order against those who have
demonstrated a propensity to want to overthrow it when it is to their
advantage.”
The
contours of the case for Mr. Trump’s disqualification might get stronger yet,
as the Justice Department and state prosecutors continue to pursue multiple
criminal investigations into him and his associates and as the Jan. 6 committee
prepares to release its final report. While he would not be prohibited from
running for office even if he was under criminal indictment, it would be more
politically palatable to invoke Section 3 in that case and even more so if he
was convicted.
I still
believe that the ideal way for Mr. Trump to be banished for good would be via
the voters. This scenario is democracy’s happy ending. After all,
self-government is not a place; it is a choice, and an ongoing one. If
Americans are going to keep making that choice — in favor of fair and equal
representation, in favor of institutions that venerate the rule of law and
against the threats of authoritarian strongmen — they do it best by themselves.
That is why electoral victory is the ultimate political solution to the
ultimate political problem. It worked that way in 2020, when an outright
majority of voters rejected Mr. Trump and replaced him with Joe Biden.
But it’s
essential to remember that not all democracies have happy endings. Which brings
us to the most unsettling answer to the question I began with: Sometimes a
democracy doesn’t protect itself. There is no rule that says democracies will
perpetuate themselves indefinitely. Many countries, notably Hungary and Turkey,
have democratically undone themselves by electing leaders who then dismantled
most of the rights and privileges people tend to expect from democratic
government. Section 3 is in the Constitution precisely to help ensure that
America does not fall into that trap.
Whether or
not invoking Section 3 succeeds, the best argument for it is to take the
Constitution at its word. “We undermine the importance of the Constitution if
we pick and choose what rules apply,” Mr. Cicilline told me. “One of the ways
we rebuild confidence in American democracy is to remind people we have a
Constitution and that it has in it provisions that say who can run for public
office. You don’t get to apply the Constitution sometimes or only if you feel
like it. We take an oath. We swear to uphold it. We don’t swear to uphold most
of it. If Donald Trump has taught us anything, it’s about protecting the
Constitution of the United States.”
Surely the
remedy of Section 3 is worth pursuing only in the most extraordinary
circumstances. Just as surely, the events surrounding Jan. 6 clear that bar. If
inciting a violent insurrection to keep oneself in office against the will of
the voters isn’t such a circumstance, what is?


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