Trump wins again in the courts: he will be on the primary ballots in Michigan
After the Minnesota ruling, a state court rejects that the 14th Amendment disqualifies the former president's candidacy due to the events of January 6.
A Michigan court ruled that Donald Trump can move forward with his candidacy in the state's Republican primary, rejecting the claim that the 14th Amendment would disqualify him for the crime of "insurrection" due to his alleged participation in the events of the January 6th. Last week, the Minnesota Supreme Court also allowed the former president to be included on the ballot so conservative voters can decide if he will be the GOP headliner in the 2024 presidential election.
"Left-wing anti-constitutional fantasies"
Trump campaign spokesman Steven Cheung celebrated the ruling, while describing the cases presented in this regard as "anti-constitutional fantasies of the left," orchestrated by wealthy allies of the Biden campaign who intend to hand the election to the courts and deny the American people the right to elect their next president.
After the Michigan ruling, Trump's legal team is awaiting the ruling on the lawsuit also filed based on the 14th Amendment in Colorado, which should soon be made public.