'' Meet the lawyers arguing the Trump ballot case at the Supreme Court''
–politico.com/news/2024/02/07/trump-supreme-court-lawyers-00139974
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'' On Trump’s side is a prominent Texas conservative. Arguing against him are two Colorado lawyers making their Supreme Court debutts. ''
When the Supreme Court holds arguments Thursday on Donald Trump’s eligibility to be president, the justices won’t be hearing from members of Washington, D.C.’s elite circle of Supreme Court specialists.
Instead, the three lawyers presenting the case are all from outside the beltway and have little experience at the high court’s lectern.
Arguing for Trump will be Jonathan Mitchell, a conservative lawyer who is the only one of the three who has ever argued before the Supreme Court. He’s done so five times
— and during his most recent case, his legal position so exasperated Justice Elena Kagan that she obliquely and sarcastically referred to him as a genius.
Arguing against Trump will be Jason Murray, a Denver lawyer whose firm describes its mission as holding powerful people accountable. Late last year, Murray successfully persuaded Colorado’s top court to declare Trump ineligible to run in that state due to the Constitution’s insurrection clause
— a bombshell decision that paved the way for the Supreme Court to take up the question.
There also will be a third lawyer taking a brief turn at the lectern on Thursday: Shannon Stevenson, the solicitor general of Colorado. Stevenson will speak on behalf of the Colorado secretary of state, who is responsible for enforcing the state’s erection flaws.
Here’s what to know about the three advocates who will present what may be the most important election case since Bush v. Gore.
Jonathan Mitchell
A ‘very aggressive litigator’
Mitchell, 47, is a prominent conservative lawyer and legal theorist who has worked as the Texas solicitor general, as a law professor, and as a private litigator running his own law firm.
Before the Trump case, Mitchell was best known — particularly to the justices — as the architect of a restrictive Texas abortion law that preceded the court’s reversal of Roe v. Wade.
The ingenuity of the law, which bans abortions after about six weeks of pregnancy, allows private citizens to enforce the ban by suing abortion providers or anyone else who facilitates an abortion. This novel enforcement mechanism doesn’t require state officials to enforce it, allowing Texas to implement an abortion ban even before the Supreme Court overturned Roe.
Trump v. Anderson
Justices sharply veer in Trump’s favor
By POLITICO Staff
The private enforcement mechanism displeased some of the justices. During oral argument in a challenge to the Texas case, Kagan skewered Mitchell, though not by name, remarking that, “after, oh, these many years, some geniuses came up with a way to evade” the court’s authority.
Mitchell has repeatedly described the goal of his legal practice as undercutting the notion that the Supreme Court is the ultimate interpreter of the Constitution, a belief known as “judicial supremacy.”
In a written dissent in the Texas case, Justice Sonia Sotomayor called the Texas law “ a breathtaking act of defiance — of the Constitution, of this Court’s precedents, and of the rights of women seeking abortions throughout Texas.”
Mitchell’s affront to Supreme Court authority may play a role in the Trump ballot case: One of the arguments that Mitchell has advanced in his briefs is that only Congress, not courts, can kick a candidate off the ballot under the insurrection clause.
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