Colorado Supreme Court Repeatedly Quotes Trump Out of Context to Ban People From Voting for Him
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Even though Donald Trump is now the nationβs front-running presidential candidate in both polls and betting odds, the Colorado Supreme Court has issued a 4β3 decision that bans the citizens of Colorado from voting for him. The supposed grounds for their decision is that Trump canβt be the president under the U.S. Constitutionβs 14th Amendment because he βengaged in insurrection on January 6, 2021.β
To support that claim, the Colorado judges β all appointed by Democrats β repeatedly quote Trump out of context to make it seem like he said things that he did not.
βVery Different Rulesβ
In their decision, the majority of judges assert that Trump βtold his supportersβ on January 6th that βthey were βallowed to go by very different rulesββ and that those words βwere intended to produce imminent lawless action.β
The judges repeat the phrase βvery different rulesβ four different times, but they never reveal the words that immediately follow. These prove that Trump was not talking about his βsupporters,β as the judges allege, but Mike Pence. Per the transcript of Trumpβs speech:
When you catch somebody in a fraud, youβre allowed to go by very different rules. So I hope Mike has the courage to do what he has to do.
Those words refer to Trumpβs call for Pence to send the electors βback to the States to recertify,β as Trump said in the same speech.
The broader context also reveals that Trump was speaking about Congress, a point he raised four times in his speech. Thatβs because Congress was debating on that day whether the 2020 election was carried out in accord with the U.S. Constitution and whether the federal Electoral Count Act allowed Congress to object to βStates that did not follow the constitutional requirement for selecting electors.β
Trumpβs statement was true at the time, as shown by the text of the Electoral Count Act, which specified very different rules for cases of potential fraud. However, Democrats, several Republicans, and President Biden changed this law in 2022 to remove certain checks against election fraud.
βFight Like H***β
Echoing the 2021 impeachment resolution of Trump, the Colorado judges claim that Trump βgave a speech in which he literally exhorted his supporters to fight at the Capitol.β Their alleged proof of this is that Trump βused the word βfightβ or variations of itβ 20 times on January 6.
Yet, the judges only cite the following cases of Trump using the word βfight,β none of which literally calls for violence:
- βRepublicans are constantly fighting like a boxer with his hands tied behind his back. Itβs like a boxer. And we want to be so nice. We want to be so respectful of everybody, including bad people. And weβre going to have to fight much harder.β
- βAnd we fight. We fight like h***. And if you donβt fight like h***, youβre not going to have a country anymore.β
Seemingly ignorant of the fact that the words βliteralβ and βcodedβ have opposing meanings, the judges claim that the statements above were βcoded languageβ that Trump used as βliteral calls to violence.β
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More importantly, the full record of Trumpβs remarks show that he was talking about legal and verbal fighting, not physical violence. Ten of the 20 times in which Trump used the word βfightβ are found in the following statements where the context is unmistakable:
- Rudy Giuliani has βguts, he fights. He fights.β
- βJim Jordan, and some of these guys. Theyβre out there fighting the House.β
- βIf they donβt fight, we have to primary the h*** out of the ones that donβt fight. You primary them.β
- βThe American people do not believe the corrupt fake news anymore. They have ruined their reputation. But it used to be that theyβd argue with me, Iβd fight. So Iβd fight, theyβd fight. Iβd fight, theyβd fight. β¦ They had their point of view, I had my point of view. But youβd have an argument. Now what they do is they go silent. Itβs called suppression. And thatβs what happens in a communist country.β
Exposing the double standards of those who claim that Trumpβs use of the word βfightβ was a call for violence, video footage shows Congressional Democrats using the word βfightβ more than 200 times, including more than a dozen times in which they used the exact phrase for which they impeached Trump: βfight like h***.β
βTo the Capitolβ
Another phrase that the Colorado judges focus on is βto the Capitol,β which Trump used three times in his speech. The judges allege that these words were part of Trumpβs plot to engage βin an insurrectionβ by physically preventing βCongress from certifying the 2020 presidential election and stop the peaceful transfer of power.β
In reality, the context shows the polar opposite is true. The first time Trump used the phrase βto the Capitol,β he said:
We have come to demand that Congress do the right thing and only count the electors who have been lawfully slated, lawfully slated. I know that everyone here will soon be marching over to the Capitol building to peacefully and patriotically make your voices heard.
The judges bury the fact that Trump told his supporters to protest βpeacefully and patrioticallyβ β 127 pages into their ruling. Then they dismiss this fact in two sentences by arguing that Trump told the crowd an hour later to βfight like h***β just before he told them to go to the Capitol. Here again, the full context of Trumpβs words reveals no explicit or implicit calls for violence:
Weβre going [to] walk down to the Capitol, and weβre going to cheer on our brave senators, and congressmen and women. Weβre probably not going to be cheering so much for some of them because youβll never take back our country with weakness. You have to show strength, and you have to be strong.
The same applies to Trumpβs other use of the phrase βto the Capitol,β in which he called for a protest to sway the votes of βweakβ Republicans, not to stop the proceedings:
So weβre going to, weβre going to walk down Pennsylvania Avenue, I love Pennsylvania Avenue, and weβre going to the Capitol and weβre going to try and give β the Democrats are hopeless. Theyβre never voting for anything, not even one vote. But weβre going to try and give our Republicans, the weak ones, because the strong ones donβt need any of our help, weβre going to try and give them the kind of pride and boldness that they need to take back our country.
Conclusion
Near the end of their ruling, the Colorado Supreme Court adjudicates whether Trump intended to βproduce violent or lawless action.β They then cram all of their out-of-context quotes into a single sentence which asserts that Trump urged his supporters to go βto the Capitol,β βfight like h***,β and go by βvery different rules.β
In reality, the full context of Trumpβs words show that he told his supporters to:
- go βto the Capitolβ peacefully and patriotically.
- βfight like h***β politically and verbally.
- encourage Mike Pence and Congress to follow the βvery different rulesβ that federal law specified for cases of potential election fraud.
James D. Agresti is the president of Just Facts, a research institute dedicated to publishing facts about public policies and teaching research skills.
Originally published at JustFactsDaily.com.