Trump says he never swore to 'support' the Constitution so he can run again

Authored by msnbc.com and submitted by StuFromSilverSpring
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Among the points backing Donald Trump’s argument that the 14th Amendment doesn’t disqualify him from office is one that, at first glance, is a mix of laughable and disturbing: He never took an oath to "support" the Constitution.

Why would the former president emphasize such a thing? That’s because Section 3 of the amendment disqualifies insurrectionists who have “previously taken an oath ... to support the Constitution.” Thus, the argument goes in his Colorado Supreme Court appeal, he’s eligible for the presidency again in 2024 because he swore to “preserve, protect, and defend” the Constitution, not support it.

It’s a level of hairsplitting that seems absurd, and perhaps it is. But his lawyers actually didn’t make it up. Indeed, in District Judge Sarah Wallace’s ruling earlier this month, aspects of which are being attacked by both sides, she ultimately rejected the challenge to Trump’s eligibility based partly on that same idea. She found that Trump engaged in insurrection but that the constitutional provision at issue doesn’t apply to presidents.

The voters who brought the case have countered in their own brief to the state’s top court that protecting Trump from disqualification on that basis is counterintuitive. The “natural reading” of “oath to support the Constitution,” they wrote, “includes the stronger Presidential oath to ‘preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution.’” More broadly, they argued the “common sense” point that there would be “no reason to allow Presidents who lead an insurrection to serve again while preventing low-level government workers who act as foot soldiers from doing so.”

We should get a better sense of which side may prevail when the state Supreme Court hears argument in the case on Dec. 6.

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BarBarJinxy on November 29th, 2023 at 15:21 UTC »

Okay, so the guy who says he never swore an oath to support the Constitution wants to get elected so that he can swear an oath to preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution...

Oh. My. Freaking. Orange. Jeebus.

CaptainNinjaClassic on November 29th, 2023 at 14:58 UTC »

Not only did you swear to support the Constitution, you waste of cells, you swore to preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution!

Saying something like should disqualify him, on the spot. The moment you say that, you shouldn't be anywhere near any type of political power.

Those are treason words.

CurrentlyLucid on November 29th, 2023 at 14:50 UTC »

If this does not show his incompetence, what will?