"The Court holds that states can and have applied Section 3 pursuant to state statutes without federal enforcement legislation," Wallace wrote.
Moreover, Wallace said the trial is scheduled to last all week and will address nine topics, including whether Section 3 of the Fourteenth Amendment applies to presidents; the interpretation of "engaged" and "insurrection" under the section; whether the actions of Trump fall under the criteria of disqualification; and whether the amendment is "self-executing." Trump, who has consistently denied any wrongdoing regarding the events of Jan. 6, 2021, pleaded not guilty to both state and federal charges for his alleged attempts to overturn the 2020 election results. The former president and his campaign team have vehemently condemned the lawsuits and called them "anti-democratic" for trying to interfere with the 2024 presidential election.Trump to disprove "WITCH HUNT" GA indictments with irrefutable election fraud report.
'Detailed but irrefutable': Trump to present report on 2020 election fraud in Georgia next week.
Former Trump national security adviser warns that DEEP STATE operatives within the FBI, CIA and DOJ are planning to rig the 2024 elections.Donald Trump pleads not guilty to ginned-up charges of attempting to overturn 2020 election results.
Sources include: DNYUZ.com TheHill.com Edition.CNN.com Brighteon.comBiased IRS accused of TARGETING conservative watchdog that exposed Biden admin nominees
By Laura Harris // Share
Chicago holds JOB FAIR for MIGRANTS amid rising number of UNEMPLOYED Black residents in the city
By Ramon Tomey // Share
Globalist death cult’s ‘trans’-human digital agenda demands your submission, or else…
By News Editors // Share
Controversy surrounds Bill Gates-backed synthetic fruit and vegetable coating
By willowt // Share
Authorities intercept more than 600,000 pounds of precursor chemicals for METH
By ramontomeydw // Share
Trump says Israel has lost "total control" over Congress, warns of PR disaster in Gaza War
By kevinhughes // Share
Lawyer: U.K.'s Ofcom can't play SPEECH POLICE on U.S. soil
By ramontomeydw // Share