By BRADLEY JAYE
Maine Secretary of State Shenna Bellows unilaterally ruled that former President Donald Trump is unqualified to appear on the 2024 primary ballot despite lacking a law degree and substituting YouTube videos for due process.
Bellows, who previously worked as Executive Director of the Maine Chapter of the ACLU but is not an attorney and did not attend law school, made the legal conclusion in her ruling that âthe declaration on [Trumpâs] candidate consent form is false because he is not qualified to hold the office of the President under Section Three of the Fourteenth Amendment.â
The secretary of state, a Democrat whose social media is littered with photos of President Joe Biden, justified her ruling based on Section 3 of the Fourteenth Amendmentâs âInsurrection Clause.â The statute has never been used to disqualify a president from the ballot and has generally been understood not to apply to the office of the president, although left-leaning plaintiffs have sued across the country in long-shot hopes of keeping Trump from appearing on primary ballots.
Bellowsâ ruling that Trump engaged in the crime of insurrection comes despite Trump having never been convicted of that â or any other â crime, or even been charged in court with the crime of insurrection. He was acquitted by the U.S. Senate of charges of engaging in insurrection and continues to deny wrongdoing.
Her decision has met with widespread scrutiny.
CNN senior legal analyst Elie Honig said Thursday on Anderson Cooper 360 that Bellowsâ decision to bar Trump from the ballot was based on âYouTube clips, news reportsâ and âthings that would never pass the bar in normal court.â
While acknowledging the case is âlegally unknown territoryâ â the Supreme Court has never ruled on Section 3 of the Fourteenth Amendment â the alarmed Honig argued that Trump has a good case that he did not receive due process.
âWere the processes, were the hearings fair?â he asked. âDid they comport with due process?â
He continued, âThey heard from one fact witness, a law professor. [Bellows] based her ruling on a lot of documents, but also YouTube clips, news reports, things that would never pass the bar in normal court.â
Maineâs Congressional delegation also took issue with Bellowsâ ruling.
Sen. Angus King, an independent who caucuses with Democrats, said the decision whether to vote for Trump should ârest with the people.â …
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