Opinion: It's time for Illinois to turn the tables on Trump
By Howard
Tullman
Credit: Bloomberg
August 24, 2023 10:01 AM AN HOUR AGO
Illinois has a rare opportunity to be one of the first states to adopt the position of many conservative legal scholars and foil the ex-president's ambitions, writes Chicago tech leader Howard Tullman.
One of the saddest of former President
Donald Trump’s legacies is how he has so often made a mockery of the courts and
the law. He understands better than anyone that the courts move painfully slow
— even when they aren’t acting corruptly in his interests — and that delay is
always in the criminal’s favor.
Trump — as indicated by the actual
memos and written proposals of his co-conspirators — also understands that the
current U.S. Supreme Court is more than willing to promote his schemes and
plans by hiding behind bogus formulations about the need for the court not to
interfere with political actions in order to let MAGA supporters do as they
please in terms of election interference.
One of the greatest exposures we have
as a country in the upcoming 2024 election cycle is that Trumpists will
suppress votes, illegally bar voters, and otherwise interfere with and
intimidate election officials and voters, and that the bureaucracy of the
courts at every level and their hidebound protocols won’t be able to quickly
address and respond in a timely manner to prevent these criminal acts before
the elections in question are completed. Trump is an absolute master at using
every right and process which we hold dear to further his corrupt plans and
attacks on our democracy. We could be looking at Bush v. Gore all over again.
But Illinois has a rare opportunity to
be one of the first states to turn the tables and use Trump’s typical tricks
and his mastery of delay against him by adopting the position of many
highly-regarded conservative legal scholars and other academics that Trump is
automatically disqualified from running for president again under Section 3 of
the 14th Amendment to the Constitution by virtue, at a minimum, of his giving
aid and comfort to the mob of insurrectionists trying to prevent Congress from
confirming President Biden’s election. Illinois should announce that it has
determined that Trump's name cannot be included in the 2024 presidential
ballots.
Taking such a position shortly before
the ballots are printed presents a rare opportunity for Illinois to hoist Trump
and the rest of the MAGA crowd on their own petards. There’s no need to await
the outcome of the current trials, which allege a massively more substantial
and long-term plan by Trump and his corrupt cronies to steal the election when
he lost, because we all have seen and heard with our own eyes and ears direct
evidence of Trump’s own actions and attempts to illegally interfere with the election.
The trick is to shift the burden from the good guys to the crooks.
Instead of falling into the morass of
suits, appeals, delays, and the likely and unfortunate outcome that no court
action will confirm Trump’s disqualification in time to remove him from the
ballots, the states should instead take the affirmative action of preventing
his inclusion relying on the self-executing provisions of Section 3 which
require no enforcement any more than the age or other stated limitations and
put the burden of the Trumpists to petition and demand that the courts (up to
and including the Supreme Court) interfere with and interrupt the deliberate
actions of the states to determine and proscribe their own individual voting
rules and requirements.
The obvious karmic charm of this
approach is twofold: Trump will run out of time in seeking relief, and even
this ludicrously slanted and corrupt Supreme Court has repeatedly and
consistently stated that these kinds of political matters (along with abortion
issues) must be left to the individual states. As the oracles say: What comes
around, goes around.
Howard Tullman is
former CEO of 1871 in Chicago, former executive director of the Kaplan
Institute at the Illinois Institute of Technology, and past president of
Kendall College and Tribeca Flashpoint Media Arts Academy.