How left and right justices found common ground in restoring Trump to the ballot
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Let’s cut through the legal jargon: the Supreme Court yesterday did the only thing it could do, and did it unanimously.
The justices rejected the notion that a Colorado court – all-Democratic appointees – could simply kick Donald Trump off the ballot. Just on the face of it, the idea was ludicrous, absurd and anti-democratic, and the court explicitly banned any other state from trying such a stunt.
On Sunday’s "Media Buzz," I was griping about the fact that the justices were taking so long, and said they must be honing their opinions and concurring opinions. That turned out to be the case.
In the unsigned opinion, all nine justices declared that "nothing in the Constitution requires that we endure such chaos – arriving at any time or different times, up to and perhaps beyond the inauguration."
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While legal observers say the court moved at rocket speed, the ruling came on the last day before voters in Colorado head to the polls, along with those in the other Super Tuesday states.
Much of the back and forth had to do with the 14th Amendment, but put that aside for a moment.
When Colorado’s court first made its ruling, a veritable army of anchors, correspondents and legal analysts, especially on MSNBC, cheered the move,