@bigheadtales No, that's not what the court said at all.
Yes, there's a lot of people putting out falsehoods about what's happened at the court, and we need to push back on those misleading claims.
@vij Well it's really the opposite.
It's not that the court opened a green lane but that it prevented states from closing it without federal authority.
@RejoinEU firstly, that has absolutely nothing to do with the Supreme Court ruling today. They were not addressing that question. It could very well be insurrection and yet the Supreme Court is pointing out that it's not up to states to make that determination.
Secondly, by the definition posted, it was not insurrection as it was attacking the wrong branch of government. You can't control the government through the legislature.
@hermitary@mastodon.world it's pretty orwellian to describe allowing more ballot access to be against democracy.
The Supreme Court is wrong, but it's pro-democracy, not anti.
The design of the US system puts guardrails around democracy and the Supreme Court is wrong to allow democracy to run amok. But let's be clear that this is a pro democracy ruling even though it shouldn't be.
@blogdiva well no, since the president doesn't have authority to be a dictator.
Yes, the president has all the authority of the office. No, it is not an authority of the office to declare dictatorship.
@McPatrick in the arguments the point was made that there is a difference: something like age is generally uncontested while something like guilt for insurrection is contestable and judiciable.
Except in outlier cases, every state will agree on the age of a candidate. But different states might conclude differently on the question of guilt for insurrection.
That's the difference.
@footsteps not quite, I don't think.
It's not that it's up to Congress to remove the person, but rather it's up to Congress to create some process by which the person would be deemed ineligible for election.
Congress should not pass a bill saying Trump is ineligible. Rather, Congress should pass a bill laying out a process to sort out eligibility in general that would apply to every single candidate.
@ClaraListensprechen4 The two are very different types of cases, though, one directly implicating constitutional matters and the other involving matters of criminal statutory conduct.
They are really apples and oranges.
@charlescwcooke: "The gap between what is actually a strong legal argument and what the press insists is a strong legal argument has rarely been wider."
#TrumpvAnderson #SCOTUS #PresidentTrump #2024election #14Am
https://twitter.com/charlescwcooke/status/1764679007415451796
@darulharb it's interesting that the tweet describes it as unassailable theory because it had this kind of life cycle where it began as a fringe theory that snowballed to the point where it was so strongly adopted and now relegated back to being fringe.
(To be clear, I'm not trying to say anybody is right or wrong, but just looking at the viral nature of the idea)
@goodreedAJ Well why would court challenges be the appropriate venue for remedy?
The constitution seems pretty clear that the running of elections is a matter for the other branches.
@GNUmatic what specific argument do you think is wrong?
It's one thing to just say the court is losing it, but specifically, where do you think their reasoning is wrong?
@darnell every state gets to run its own elections, so a decision to strike him from the ballot is not a decision made at the national level.
And the decision that was handed down today, while wrong, doesn't do anything to change that.
@rameshgupta I hold neither of those perspectives.
Thanks for asking, though. Better than just assuming.
Yes, you are wrong.
Or to be more accurate, you are misinformed because a whole lot of special interests are misinforming the public about what happened. A whole lot of people are spreading misinformation about what the ruling was about and what it said.
Which is just, very very sadly that happens every single day today.
No, that's not what the ruling said. At all. And the ruling went out of its way to try to head off that kind of misreporting, but the misreporting happened anyway.
@rberger Well right, that's how democracy works.
@darnell that is incorrect, though.
The question before the court is not whether Trump is banned from being on the ballot in every state, because that is not a federal question.
Every state manages its own elections. In the US elections are state processes.
US Politics
@matt never be sorry to post about politics. It's often the only way we can vent about how horrible things are.
As for #Haley vs #Trump I recently heard a primary voter saying that they were going to vote for Trump because there's no way Haley could win the primary.
...
I hope you see why this is relevant. This person was voting for the guy because he didn't think the alternative would get votes. It was the dumbest, most idiotic position I've heard, but I fear that a whole lot of #GOP primary voters are voting based on that same motivation.
So maybe the results aren't so confusing so long as you don't overestimate the American voter.
I think the most pressing and fundamental problem of the day is that people lack a practically effective means of sorting out questions of fact in the larger world. We can hardly begin to discuss ways of addressing reality if we can't agree what reality even is, after all.
The institutions that have served this role in the past have dropped the ball, so the next best solution is talking to each other, particularly to those who disagree, to sort out conflicting claims.
Unfortunately, far too many actively oppose this, leaving all opposing claims untested. It's very regressive.
So that's my hobby, striving to understanding the arguments of all sides at least because it's interesting to see how mythologies are formed but also because maybe through that process we can all have our beliefs tested.
But if nothing else, social media platforms like this are chances to vent frustrations that on so many issues both sides are obviously wrong ;)