I read an opinion on social media by someone named Jay Kuo that stated as follows:
The opinion, and importantly all of the judge’s factual findings, line up pretty much against Trump. She finds he engaged in insurrection. She finds the First Amendment did not protect his speech at the Ellipse. But then she bafflingly gives him a pass, holding that the presidency is not an office within the meaning of Section 3 of the Fourteenth Amendment, that the president is not an officer of the United States, and that he did not in fact take an oath to “support the Constitution of the U.S.”
Maybe the judge wanted to queue this all up for the appellate court, but not be the target of MAGA hate for keeping Trump off the ballot. I have zero proof that this happened, and there could never be any, so I’m admittedly engaging in a thought experiment here. But when the other reasons don’t make much sense, you’re often left wondering if the wildest one is actually true.
Stay with me a moment on this, and consider this: Whether she did it because she just got the law really wrong, or because she didn’t want to go down in the history books (and be in the headlines) as the judge who knocked Trump off the first state presidential ballot, she did tee this up almost perfectly for a successful appeal.
After all, if the only thing that gets reversed is her ruling about Trump not being an officer for purposes of Section 3, then we are essentially left with a ruling that he *can* be kept off. Except it won’t be her making that ruling. It will be a higher court, perhaps even the Supreme Court. If I were a district court judge sitting on this case and didn’t want my family targeted and harassed and threatened for all time, this path certainly would cross my mind.
It’s certainly an interesting case now that is heading up for appeal. It will be very hard to knock out her factual findings, but not as hard to knock out the very wobbly legal grounds she has for ruling Trump’s way. In other words, this ain’t close to over.
The opinion, and importantly all of the judge’s factual findings, line up pretty much against Trump. She finds he engaged in insurrection. She finds the First Amendment did not protect his speech at the Ellipse. But then she bafflingly gives him a pass, holding that the presidency is not an office within the meaning of Section 3 of the Fourteenth Amendment, that the president is not an officer of the United States, and that he did not in fact take an oath to “support the Constitution of the U.S.”
Maybe the judge wanted to queue this all up for the appellate court, but not be the target of MAGA hate for keeping Trump off the ballot. I have zero proof that this happened, and there could never be any, so I’m admittedly engaging in a thought experiment here. But when the other reasons don’t make much sense, you’re often left wondering if the wildest one is actually true.
Stay with me a moment on this, and consider this: Whether she did it because she just got the law really wrong, or because she didn’t want to go down in the history books (and be in the headlines) as the judge who knocked Trump off the first state presidential ballot, she did tee this up almost perfectly for a successful appeal.
After all, if the only thing that gets reversed is her ruling about Trump not being an officer for purposes of Section 3, then we are essentially left with a ruling that he *can* be kept off. Except it won’t be her making that ruling. It will be a higher court, perhaps even the Supreme Court. If I were a district court judge sitting on this case and didn’t want my family targeted and harassed and threatened for all time, this path certainly would cross my mind.
It’s certainly an interesting case now that is heading up for appeal. It will be very hard to knock out her factual findings, but not as hard to knock out the very wobbly legal grounds she has for ruling Trump’s way. In other words, this ain’t close to over.
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