Abstract
The Reconstruction Congress envisioned a comprehensive set of rights and structural protections in the Fourteenth Amendment to establish and preserve a multiracial democracy. The Fourteenth Amendment’s third section, the Insurrection Clause, may seldom have been enforced in recent memory, but it remains a vital part of the Amendment’s framework. The Insurrection Clause bars any state or federal government official who participates in a rebellion or insurrection after taking an oath to support the Constitution from serving in such a position again. In Trump v. Anderson, the Supreme Court was given a choice to either enforce the Insurrection Clause’s protection of Black political participation or condone insurrection. In keeping with its long tradition of anti-Black jurisprudence, the Court chose the latter.
Original language | American English |
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Journal | California Law Review Online |
DOIs |
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State | Published - Jan 2025 |