TRUMP V ANDERSON - NATURAL BORN CITIZEN REFERENCES
23-719_feah.pdf (supremecourt.gov)
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1 IN THE SUPREME
COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
2 - - - - - - - - - -
- - - - - - -
3 DONALD J. TRUMP, )
4 Petitioner, )
5 v. ) No. 23-719
6 NORMA ANDERSON, ET
AL., )
7 Respondents. )
8 - - - - - - - - - -
- - - - - - -
9
10 Washington, D.C.
11 Thursday, February
8, 2024
12
13 The above-entitled
matter came on for oral
14 argument before
the Supreme Court of the United
15 States at 10:08
a.m.
16
17 APPEARANCES:
18 JONATHAN F.
MITCHELL, ESQUIRE, Austin, Texas; on behalf
19 of the Petitioner.
20 JASON C. MURRAY,
ESQUIRE, Denver, Colorado; on behalf
21 of Respondents
Anderson, et al.
22 SHANNON W.
STEVENSON, Solicitor General, Denver,
23 Colorado; on
behalf of Respondent Griswold.
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20 MR. MURRAY: No, Your Honor, because
21 different states can have different procedures. Some
22 states may allow insurrectionists to be on the
23 ballot. They may say we're not looking past the
24 papers; we're not going to look into federal
25 constitutional questions. It's the sort of -- even
Heritage Reporting Corporation
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1 in this election cycle, there are -- there are
2 candidates who are on the ballot in some states even
3 though they're not natural-born citizens and off the
4 ballot in other states. And that's just a function
5 of states' power to enforce -- to preserve their own
6 electors and avoid disenfranchisement of their own
7 citizens.
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2 MS. STEVENSON: I think you should be
3 concerned about it, Your Honor, but I think the
4 concern is not as high as maybe it's made out to be
5 in particularly some of the amicus briefs. And,
6 again, under Article II, there is a huge amount of
7 disparity in the candidates that end up on the ballot
8 on -- in different states in every election.
9 Just this election, there's a candidate who
10 Colorado excluded from the primary ballot, who is on
11 the ballot in other states even though he is not a
12 natural-born
citizen. And that's just -- that's a
13 feature of our process. It's not a bug.
14 And then I think, with respect to the
15 decision-making and -- you know, we're here so that
16 this Court can give us nationwide guidance on some of
17 the legal principles that are involved. I think that
18 reduces the potential amount of disparity that would
19 arise between the states.
20 And then with respect to the factual record
21 and how that gets issued and implemented, the states
22 have processes for this. And I think we need to let
23 that play out and accept that there may be some
24 messiness of federalism here because that's what the
25 Electors Clause assumes will happen. And if Heritage
Reporting Corporation
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1 different states apply their principles of -- of
2 collateral estoppel and come to different results,
3 that's okay. And -- and Congress can act at any time
4 if -- if it thinks that it's truly federalism run
5 amok.
It is sad but the parties do not care about natural-born citizen! We were defeated by the Texas Election Commission when we tried to get HB 650 passed to insure candidates were qualified by making the SOS insure US President candidates were qualified under the US Constitution. We were defeated again when we challenged the Texas Republican party in the 2016 cycle and then defeated by the Texas Supreme Court when they refused our request for a writ of mandamus to make the SOS insure candidates were qualified under article 2 section 1 clause 5.
ReplyDeleteI do care and refuse to stop until this is fixed!
Thanks Suntango! I agree with you.
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