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Judge Upholds Rep. Marjorie Taylor Green’s Eligibility


A judge in Atlanta has rejected an appeal by a group of voters and affirmed the Georgia secretary of state’s decision that U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene is eligible to run for reelection.

The five voters from Greene’s district sought to have her removed from the ballot, saying that she played a significant role in the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol that disrupted Congress’ certification of Biden’s presidential victory. That was a violation of a rarely invoked provision in the 14th Amendment against insurrection or rebellion, they argued.

Represented by Free Speech for People, a national election and campaign finance reform group, the voters filed a complaint with Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger in March.

Greene was questioned extensively during a daylong hearing in April before Georgia Administrative Law Judge Charles Beaudrot, who ruled on May 6 that Greene should not be disqualified. Raffensperger immediately affirmed the decision.

The voters appealed in Fulton County Superior Court, where Chief Judge Christopher Brasher affirmed Raffensperger’s adoption on Monday.

The voters said Beaudrot made four legal errors, but Brasher found that Beaudrot acted properly.

Free Speech for People said in a statement that Brasher ruled “with minimal legal analysis,” and that it has not decided whether to appeal to the Georgia Supreme Court.

The challenge to Greene’s eligibility was based on a section of the 14th Amendment that says no one can serve in Congress “who, having previously taken an oath, as a member of Congress … to support the Constitution of the United States, shall have engaged in insurrection or rebellion against the same.”

Ratified shortly after the Civil War, it was meant in part to keep representatives who had fought for the Confederacy from returning to Congress.

Beaudrot found that the voters hadn’t produced sufficient evidence that Greene’s actions before, during and after the Capitol siege encouraged and helped facilitate a violent attack on the U.S. government and democracy in violation of the U.S. Constitution.

Greene won about 70% of the vote in the May Republican primary, easily defeating five challengers who tried to unseat her. She faces Democrat Marcus Flowers in November’s general election.

(AP)



2 Responses

  1. As stupid and despicable as she may be, the Judge made the right decision. Its a slippery slope when candidates who win their party primary are “rejected” by election officials under the vague language of the 14th amendment.

  2. The whole challenge was illegitimate and dishonest from the beginning. It shouldn’t have taken a “daylong hearing” to reject it. it should have been dismissed in five minutes, on at least three separate grounds:

    1. Greene was not sworn in until January 3 2021. Even if she’d participated in an actual rebellion before that date she would not be disqualified.

    2. There was no insurrection or rebellion against the constitution, so she couldn’t have participated in it. There was a minor riot, in which she played no role whatsoever, but even if she had it was not an insurrection or rebellion.

    3. The 14th amendment explicitly says that Congress can remove the disability. Congress did exactly that in 1872, not just for those alive at that time, but from “all persons whomsoever”. That includes anyone who engages in an insurrection today.

    4. Even if she were disqualified, that would not give the NC elections board the right to keep her off the ballot. She would still have to be included on the ballot, and then if she were elected it would be up to the House to disqualify her.

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