Legal AF by MeidasTouch - Trump’s NEW Lawyers SCREW THEMSELVES with Supreme Court
Episode Date: January 20, 2024Trump’s new set of appeals lawyers have just filed a brief with the US Supreme Court arguing that if Trump isn’t left on the ballots even if an insurrectionist, “chaos and bedlam” will ensue. ...Michael Popok of Legal AF puts aside the dystopian threats of Trump’s legal team and picks apart their legal arguments as the Supreme Court gets ready for oral argument on 2/8. Thanks to HIMS! Start your free online visit today at https://hims.com/legalaf for your personalized ED treatment options. Visit https://meidastouch.com for more! Remember to subscribe to ALL the MeidasTouch Network Podcasts: MeidasTouch: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/meidastouch-podcast Legal AF: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/legal-af The PoliticsGirl Podcast: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/the-politicsgirl-podcast The Influence Continuum: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/the-influence-continuum-with-dr-steven-hassan Mea Culpa with Michael Cohen: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/mea-culpa-with-michael-cohen The Weekend Show: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/the-weekend-show Burn the Boats: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/burn-the-boats Majority 54: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/majority-54 Political Beatdown: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/political-beatdown Lights On with Jessica Denson: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/lights-on-with-jessica-denson On Democracy with FP Wellman: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/on-democracy-with-fpwellman Uncovered: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/maga-uncovered Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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This is Michael Popak, Legal AF.
We are one step closer to the United States Supreme Court, making a decision about whether
Donald Trump is an insurrectionist and engaged in rebellion under
the 14th Amendment Section 3 and should be banned by various states, including Colorado and Maine,
from their ballot primary and for the general election in November. That oral argument is
going to be on the 8th of February before the full United States Supreme Court. And now we're in the throes of briefing, filed briefs by both sides.
And Donald Trump, who is the petitioner,
or the appellant taking the appeal
from the Colorado Supreme Court decision against him.
In a case we call Trump versus Anderson
has now filed his 53 page brief.
And let me break it down for you right now on this hot tick.
So you understand the arguments. I'm gonna focus on the ones that I think are the
most important and give you some sort of inside baseball knowledge so that you
can make your own decisions and then we'll get the brief from Jack Smith in
opposition a reply brief from Donald Trump and it will all time out just
before the oral argument on the 8th of February which will not be in in video
we won't be able to see the oral argument.
The Supreme Court never does that.
But I think given the historical importance
of this particular case, we will get the audio
of their oral argument and we'll be able to report from there.
Let's talk about their argument.
Their argument is relatively straightforward.
And we've covered it at length before, but
one, it's that Donald Trump did not engage in insurrection or rebellion as that term
is used under the 14th Amendment section three, which is the disqualification provision, which
was put in by the drafters of this particular amendment after the Civil War in America during the Reconstruction period as a loyalty test
to keep out Confederate officers
who had served the Confederacy,
rebelled against the Union,
rebelled against the United States
from ever holding office again,
unless Congress by two-thirds vote
of the House and the Senate
takes away the disqualification of the House and the Senate takes away the disqualifying, the disqualification of the person
and allows him to take his seat. So firstly, you've got the argument that they're raising that he
did not engage in insurrection or rebellion. And that has to do with confusion about what is the
insurrection or rebellion. I am from the Judge Michael Ludwig School that the insurrection is not
the attack on the Capitol on Jan 6. That was just one tactic that was used. The strategy
of insurrection or rebellion is the interference with the peaceful transfer of power and to
violate the oath of office against the Constitution, Cause it's not an insurrection or rebellion
against the United States,
as that term is used in the constitution.
It's an insurrection or rebellion against the constitution.
How do you rebel or insurect against a document, right?
Our governing charter, you do that
by refusing to peacefully transfer your power
to Joe Biden, the rightful winner of the election.
So there's too much focus in my view.
And of course, I'm a student here of Michael Ludig,
the well-respected Federalist Society,
former federal judge, Republican,
who's come out against Donald Trump's legal strategies
and legal thinking.
So that's one, we'll talk more about that
as I continue in the hot take.
Secondly, they make the argument
that the 14th Amendment, section three,
is not applicable to the president of the United States,
that he's not an officer under the United States.
He's not an officer of the United States,
that he's separate and apart from that,
that he is the United States,
is not an officer under it,
that the only thing that that applies to
is to appointed officers, not elected officers
like president and vice president.
That's another argument where they take pick and choose
from historical references and legislative history,
I think the wrong way to reach that conclusion.
Similarly, they argue that the president
doesn't take the right oath of office
to have the 14th Amendment section three apply to him.
He takes an oath and office to preserve, protect and defend the
constitution, not to support the constitution.
And that difference for them indicates that the framers and the drafters of
that section didn't intend it to apply to a president.
Now let me stop right there.
One of the reasons we're getting into all of this,
what did they mean when they wrote that in the Constitution
is because they didn't actually write
the president and or vice president
can be disqualified from the ballot
by engaging in insurrection or rebellion.
They used more broader terms.
They listed some officers,
but then when it got to the catchall,
they said any officer under or of the United States who swears that
oath to support the Constitution can be disqualified here under.
And that based on the legislative history that I'm familiar with and has been cited
by the Jack Smith team in Colorado is sufficient to capture a president who is an insurrectionist
or commits rebellion against his constitutional oath.
And you can see the legislative history of how they did that. They never saw,
the framers of it never foresaw that Jefferson Davis, the president of the Confederacy, would
be able to take office again or be on the ballot again. Then they argue, their third major argument
in their brief is that Congress must do something
in terms of disqualifying somebody from the ballot, that it's not self-affecting that
provision. You have to go back to Congress. And of course, they're in control of MAGA
Congress right now. So they think, oh, we're home free if that's the case. And that so
their position is that Congress has to do something. And a related argument is that the
provision, the 14th Amendment, Section 3 doesn't ban you from the ballot. A Secretary of State from
Colorado or other states can't ban someone from the ballot. It just makes it so the person is
disqualified once elected from taking the office. Let me unpack that for a minute. It means that
they can get elected and then it's up to Congress to decide by
two thirds vote, whether the person can take office or not, whether their
disability can be removed as an insurrectionist or participant in rebellion.
That's another argument.
Um, and so with all of those in place, they then go through, you know, point by
point, and I'm going to go through it myself and give you the two major points
of their argument at the heart of
their argument why I think they're ultimately going to lose. Let me first talk about who drafted this. Who's arguing this?
Because it's a new set of lawyers. Why not? Donald Trump's latest set of lawyers. And I know this, at least the major part of this
lawyers that are prosecuting this particular appeal, Harmeet Dillon from a law firm in California,
a very well-respected person in Republican circles.
She primarily only represents Republican interests.
She tried and failed to win
the Republican National Committee chairmanship,
tried to take it from Rona McDaniels, that failed.
And now she's going back to being a practicing lawyer.
It's almost always on the right wing,
slash, maga slash Trump side, never on the other side.
And I've done cases where she's been opposed to me for the Midas Touch Network.
I mean, Dylan represented Marjorie Taylor Green when we had a case for
Midas Touch when Midas Touch was blocked from Marjorie Taylor Green's then Twitter
account improperly,
since she used it for official business
and under First Amendment rights,
she didn't have the right to do that.
And we resolved that case with Ms. Dillon,
but she's leading the charge here,
along with Scott Gensler,
the former, one of the former attorney generals
for Colorado, and their briefing.
Now look, I've read their brief, I get it.
I've got the arguments.
Who's missing from the brief is brief as somebody like John Sorrow, who was the, who's, who's
the lawyer or Sauer, who's the lawyer for Donald Trump in the immunity case.
It's not the same guy that just argued a week or two ago in front of the DC court of appeals
on immunity.
So Donald Trump is using different people for different appeals on different issues.
I don't know if that's right, if I'm right, wrong or indifferent on that, but that's what he is doing.
I thought that was a little interesting connection to the My His Touch network.
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Now let me get into the brief itself
because I think that's very important
and sort of give it to you.
So on page 18 of the brief,
which we're gonna put up on the screen
as I fumble my way through this, my computer to find it.
It says summary of argument, which is a required section of any Supreme Court brief.
And what it says is the court one, the court, this is their lead argument.
The court should reverse because President Trump is not subject to section
three.
He's not an officer of the United States as that term is used under the
constitution.
He never swore an oath before he became president that could trigger Section Three.
I'll talk about that here in detail.
His second best argument for them is the court should also reverse because
President Trump did not engage in insurrection.
I love their leading argument is not that he's not an insurrectionist or didn't
commit rebellion against the Constitution.
It, if that's their second best argument, as far as I'm concerned. And there, they're arguing that the insurrection, and I think wrongly here, is the attack on
the Capitol and the speech on the ellipse that led to the attack on the Capitol.
The insurrection and rebellion again against the Constitution is his failure to peacefully
transfer power to Joe Biden and all of the elements and steps, tactics,
and strategies used by Donald Trump to do that, one of which at the very end,
won the last link in the chain, as the Jan 6 committee put it, it was the attack on the Capitol
when all else felled. And we'll talk about that. Three, they say that the Congress has to create a remedial scheme to implement the 14th Amendment
Section 3.
It's missing from the literal text, and therefore we have to go back to Congress to figure out
what they want to do next in their currently, of course, in control of Congress.
And then they also say that allowing secretaries of states to determine who's on the ballot or who off the ballot
undermines the congressional, sorry, the constitutional requirement that the Congress determine who's eligible for the ballot for presidency, not individual states.
And then they argue that this argument that it's 14th Amendment section three is not a ballot stripping provision.
It's an office holding prevention provision. He can still be on the ballot, should be on the ballot,
and then after there's an election, then it's up to Congress to decide whether they're going to allow
him to take the office or not. And so their first argument is the president is not
an officer of the United States. And they go through entire analysis. Now, literally,
he is an officer of the United States. But their argument is when you look at legislative history,
that president and vice president is not included in officers of the United States is usually,
usually a appointed person, part of the civil service body in the cabinet and that type of thing,
and not an elected position.
I don't think that squares with the legislative history, and I think you can pick out other
places in the Constitution where that is not the case, to make it a broader application
when the framers were writing what they wrote.
You can only use the literal text of what they wrote.
Legislative history may be an aid if there's ambiguity,
but without ambiguity, it applies to all officers.
And since Donald Trump himself has called himself
a federal officer when he tried to use removal statute
to take a state prosecution case to federal court,
I think he sort of sunk there.
We'll see what Jack Smith and how Jack Smith
responds to that in their brief that's doing about a week.
Then you have their argument that he didn't take the right oath.
He took an oath concerning the constitution to defend it and preserve it and protect it,
but he didn't take an oath to support it.
And so whereas the Colorado Supreme Court said, it's the same thing here.
He says, no, the framers of the 14th Amendment were signaling that they didn't want the president
because it's the wrong oath.
I think that is how many angels dance on the head of a pin argument.
And I think that fails as well.
His oath is virtually the same as anybody else's oath.
And therefore that can't be the argument.
Let me turn to the argument that he did not engage in insurrection.
That's on page 33 of his brief.
And there again, it's a very narrow, too narrow focus on his role or speeches that he gave
on the ellipse.
The Jan 6 committee report is very detailed.
They were not just talking about what they say here.
Listen to these words.
President Trump's words that day called for peaceful and patriotic protests and respect
for law and order.
Does anybody having seen the ellipse speech or read the Jan 6 report believe that that's
all that Donald Trump did that day?
We know the tick tock leading into the Jan 6.
We know about the war room at the Willard Hotel, staff with Bannon and Flynn and Giuliani
and others. We knew that this
was their last stand, right? This was their last battle. This was their alamo to try to take back
the presidency from the rightful winner, Joe Biden. He knew they were armed in the audience of his
speech. He asked for the magnetometers and the metal detectors to be taken down. He pointed a fomented group that he wound up and called for them to fight like hell.
And knowing they were armed, pointed them at his political enemies in the Capitol
and set them loose. That's what happened. It's not about his First Amendment right to
say that the election was stolen.
It's about all the things he did leading into that.
And then the other arguments again,
that they're just narrowly focused on the speech
on the ellipse.
And then they go on to say complete distortion
of the record, the historical record
that Trump also told his supporters on page 34 to remain
peaceful and stay peaceful.
And he released a video and told him to go home.
We all know of the, you know, the long periods of dereliction of duty as he sat in the dining
room watching the Capitol burn, not doing anything.
We've seen the speeches and the changes in the speeches that he was supposed to give.
He was supposed to give it earlier.
We know about the text messages
from around the Republican and MAGA world,
you know, telling the president,
including his own children to tell them to go home
and to stop the attack and he didn't do it.
Instead, he wanted Mike Pence hanged.
He called them the P word.
He said he was ineffectual,
that Mike Pence should have never let this happen and the like.
So the fact finding attack is also wrong after the one week long trial in Denver and the
results of that.
And then they go on to say, because they're focused again, that that is the insurrection.
And again, I'm going to pause it here.
And I think the United States Supreme Court will have it framed for them by Jack Smith.
The insurrection and rebellion is not against the capital.
It's against the Constitution.
And it's all the things that Donald Trump did to try to interfere with the peaceful transfer of power.
The fake electors, the using the voter fraud to whip up his supporters, the pressure campaign on Mike Pence, right? The
meetings with the lawyers in his oval office to talk about seizing voting machines and using the
military against the United States electorate, you know, to declare martial law and use the insurrection act,
that is, among other things,
the rebellion and insurrection against the constitution,
not this narrow thing.
And I think Jack Smith's gonna call out that as well.
And then they end with on page 38 through 40,
that, well, that language seems interesting
in the constitution, this is my summary,
but you gotta go back to Congress. Congress has to pass seems interesting in the Constitution. This is my summary, but you got to go back to Congress.
Congress has to pass appropriate legislation in this area.
And then their related argument is that Donald Trump needs to be on the ballot,
that that's not a ballot stripping provision,
that's an office holding disqualification provision,
and that that's going to be resolved one way or the other,
thumbs up or thumbs down by a two-thirds vote of Congress,
but you can't have them off the ballot because that disenfranchises tens of
millions of people.
Now we're going to see what Jack Smith does in his response,
which is going to be coming up very, very soon.
We'll continue to follow it and give you this kind of hard hitting analysis or
not blowing smoke or sunshine.
We're just giving you the facts based on our legal experience,
arguing cases in courtrooms, just like the ones that we're talking about.
And we do it on legal AF. Yes, the title is exactly what you think. It sits at the intersection of law, politics, and justice. So you don't have to. And we do it on Wednesdays and Saturdays with
our full hour long curated podcasts called Legal AF. And then on hot takes, the leaders of Legal
AF do it like this right here. Don't change that dial. The Midas Touch Network.
Every hour, every hour, we talk about it all.
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women's right to choose, civil rights, immigration,
immigration rights, anything that ends up in the courtrooms
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And we explore right here with lawyers who know what they're talking about this particular set of historical facts.
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So until my next hot take, until my next legal AF, this is Michael Popak reporting.