ROUNDUP/Supreme Court: Trump cannot be excluded from primaries

WASHINGTON (dpa-AFX) – The former US President Donald Trump According to the US Supreme Court, can take part in his party’s presidential primaries. The Supreme Court ruled on Monday that the removal of his name from the ballot in the US state of Colorado was unlawful.

The court’s decision is a great success for Trump – but no surprise. At a hearing at the beginning of February it was already indicated that the nine judges would decide in his favor.

For many experts, the Supreme Court’s decision had a historical dimension even before the actual verdict, because the judge’s ruling has a direct influence on the course of the presidential election. The decision was made immediately before the so-called “Super Tuesday” – the court thus provided clarity before the important election day. On Tuesday, Republicans and Democrats will hold party primaries in more than a dozen states – including Colorado.

Trump wants to run again for the Republicans in the US presidential election at the beginning of November. Anyone who wants to run as a presidential candidate must prevail in internal party primaries. Plaintiffs have been trying for some time in various states to prevent Trump from participating in the primaries and to have the 77-year-old’s name removed from ballot papers.

The background to the dispute is the unprecedented attack on the US parliament building almost exactly three years ago. Trump supporters violently stormed the Capitol in Washington on January 6, 2021. Congress met there to formally confirm Democrat Joe Biden’s victory in the 2020 presidential election.

Trump had previously incited his supporters during a speech with unsubstantiated claims that the election victory had been stolen from him through massive fraud. Trump’s opponents are of the opinion that Trump should not be allowed to move into the White House again because of his behavior after the 2020 election. They argue with the so-called insurrection clause in the Constitution. It basically means that no one who has previously taken part in an uprising against the state as an official may hold a higher office in the state. Although some examples of such higher offices are given in the passage, the office of president is not explicitly mentioned.

An explosive verdict in December got the ball rolling. The highest court in the state of Colorado ruled that former President Trump was disqualified from the Republican primary for the presidential nomination in the state because of his role in the storming of the US Capitol. Trump appealed. The judgment was suspended until the issue was finally resolved. The case ultimately ended up in the highest court in the USA. Similar decisions were made in the states of Maine and Illinois.

At the hearing a few weeks ago, the Supreme Court justices listened to arguments from both sides. They appeared skeptical about expelling Trump from the highest office in the state and seemed open to the arguments of Trump’s lawyer.

The Supreme Court is currently dealing with another case, but it has nothing to do with the question of the ballot paper. The court wants to clarify whether former presidents are protected from prosecution for actions while in office. The background is the criminal trial against Trump in Washington for attempted election fraud. A hearing before the US Supreme Court is scheduled for the end of April./nau/DP/nas

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