Trump Praises Jan. 6 Criminals as SCOTUS Overrules Colorado Ballot Ban: A Closer Look
Summary
TLDRSeth Meyers dissects the Supreme Court's ruling that allows Donald Trump to remain on the presidential ballot, despite his role in the January 6th insurrection. Meyers criticizes Trump's unrepentant attitude, glorification of the insurrectionists, and his misleading claims about the 2020 election being 'rigged.' He also highlights the concerning implications of the court's conservative majority ruling that only Congress can disqualify candidates for insurrection, paving the way for future insurrectionists to hold office. With biting humor, Meyers underscores the importance of voter vigilance in the 2024 election to safeguard democracy.
Takeaways
- š² The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that Donald Trump can remain on the 2024 presidential ballot, overriding a Colorado court decision that declared him ineligible due to his role in the January 6th insurrection.
- š” Trump remains unrepentant about the January 6th insurrection and has turned it into a rallying cry, even playing a song by convicted insurrectionists at his rallies.
- š¬ There were reports that the Trump White House was rife with drug use, with staffers being given amphetamines and Xanax like candy.
- š¤Ŗ Trump has a new slogan 'Too Big to Rig' referring to his desire for a landslide victory that would be impossible to rig, despite his previous claims of rigged elections.
- š¤„ Trump glorified the convicted January 6th insurrectionists, calling them 'hostages' and celebrating their song which briefly topped a niche music chart.
- š The Supreme Court's conservative majority ruled that only Congress can disqualify candidates under the 14th Amendment's insurrection clause, essentially giving future insurrectionists a green light.
- š¤ The liberal justices were furious at this ruling, saying it attempts to insulate all alleged insurrectionists from being barred from office.
- š¤ The ruling didn't directly address whether Trump engaged in insurrection, avoiding that controversial question.
- šØ Republicans in Congress are unlikely to disqualify Republican candidates involved in insurrection, so it is up to voters to stop them.
- ā The 2024 election is being framed as a sequel to 2020, a rematch against Trump's efforts to undermine democracy.
Q & A
What was the Supreme Court's ruling regarding Donald Trump and the 2024 presidential ballot?
-The Supreme Court ruled that Donald Trump can remain on the 2024 presidential ballot in Colorado, overriding a decision by the Colorado state Supreme Court that had declared him ineligible due to the Constitution's ban on insurrectionists holding office.
How did Trump respond to the January 6th insurrection and the 2020 election results?
-Trump has remained completely unrepentant about the January 6th insurrection and his attempt to overturn the 2020 election results. In fact, he has a new slogan at his rallies, repeating the deranged lie that the 2020 election was rigged, saying 'We want a landslide that is too big to rig.'
What is the significance of the 'J6 Prison Choir' and how did Trump feature them?
-The 'J6 Prison Choir' is a group of convicted insurrectionists detained on charges related to the January 6th insurrection. Trump played their recording of the national anthem at his campaign rallies, glorifying the insurrectionists and calling them 'hostages' and 'heroes.'
How did the Supreme Court's conservative majority rule on the disqualification of candidates under the 14th Amendment's insurrection ban?
-The Supreme Court's conservative majority ruled that only Congress can disqualify a candidate under the 14th Amendment's insurrection ban, essentially insulating all alleged insurrectionists from future challenges to their holding federal office.
What was the reaction of the Supreme Court's liberal justices to the conservative majority's ruling?
-The liberal justices were furious at the ruling, writing that the conservative majority attempts to insulate all alleged insurrectionists from future challenges to their holding federal office.
How did the host respond to Trump's claim that the 'J6 Prison Choir' song became the 'number one song'?
-The host fact-checked Trump's claim, explaining that while the song reached number one on the Digital Song Sales chart, it was misleading to call it the 'number one song' given its relatively low streams and radio audience compared to other popular songs at the time.
What concerns did the host express regarding the headlines and public perception of the Supreme Court's ruling?
-The host was concerned that the headlines would be misleading, making it sound like even the liberal justices said no candidate can ever be disqualified for engaging in insurrection, when in fact the conservative majority's ruling went much further in protecting alleged insurrectionists.
How did the host characterize the potential consequences of the Supreme Court's conservative majority ruling?
-The host suggested that the conservative majority's ruling essentially gave all future insurrectionists the green light to run for and hold public office, leaving it up to voters to stop them, just as they did in 2020.
What analogy did the host use to describe the upcoming 2024 election in light of the Supreme Court's ruling?
-The host likened the 2024 election to a sequel, calling it 'Too big to rig,' a play on Trump's slogan and the potential for insurrectionists to run for office.
What other notable revelation about the Trump White House did the host mention but did not have time to fully discuss?
-The host mentioned a report that the Trump White House was a 'pill mill,' handing out drugs like speed and Xanax 'like candy,' but said there was too much going on to discuss it in detail.
Outlines
š¤„ Trump's Unrepentant Stance on Jan 6 Insurrection and His New Rallying Cry
The paragraph discusses Trump's continued denial and lack of remorse regarding the January 6th insurrection and his attempt to overturn the 2020 election results. It highlights his new slogan at rallies, "Too big to rig," which perpetuates the lie about the 2020 election being rigged. The paragraph also mentions reports of drug use in the Trump White House and Trump's peculiar way of pronouncing words slowly. Additionally, it touches on Trump's claim that even if God were the vote checker, he would have won California, and his accusations of cheating against God.
š¶ Trump's Glorification of Insurrectionists and the J6 Prison Choir
The paragraph focuses on Trump's glorification of the January 6th insurrectionists by featuring a song by the so-called "J6 Prison Choir" at his rallies. It discusses how Trump played the choir's rendition of the national anthem, recorded from behind bars, with footage of the January 6th violence in the background. The paragraph highlights the absurdity of Trump celebrating and praising these convicted insurrectionists as "hostages" and "heroes." It also critiques the misleading claim that the choir's song became the "number one song" based on specific chart metrics.
āļø Supreme Court Ruling on Trump's Eligibility and the Conservative Majority's Stance
The paragraph discusses the Supreme Court's ruling that Trump can remain on the 2024 presidential ballot in Colorado, overriding a state court decision that had disqualified him due to the constitutional ban on insurrectionists holding office. It highlights the court's unanimous decision but emphasizes the divided ruling from the conservative majority, which stated that only Congress can disqualify candidates based on the 14th Amendment's insurrection clause. The paragraph criticizes this stance as giving future insurrectionists a green light to run for office and places the responsibility on voters to stop them, likening the 2024 election to a sequel.
Mindmap
Keywords
š”Insurrection
š”Supreme Court
š”Unrepentant
š”Rigged
š”J6 Prison Choir
š”Landslide
š”14th Amendment
š”Hostages
š”Conservative Majority
š”Voters
Highlights
Trump has remained completely unrepentant about the insurrection on January 6th, and his attempt to overturn the 2020 election results, and end American democracy.
Trump has a new slogan at his rallies, repeating the deranged lie that the 2020 election was rigged: 'We want a landslide that is too big to rig.'
There's a new report out that the Trump White House was awash in drugs, which would explain Trump's slow pronunciation of words.
Trump featured a song by the 'January the 6th Choir', a group of convicted insurrectionists, at his campaign rallies, glorifying domestic terrorists.
Trump called the January 6th insurrectionists 'hostages' and praised them as heroes, comparing them to policemen, firemen, accountants, and lawyers.
The Supreme Court ruled that Trump can remain on the ballot, overriding a decision that declared him ineligible due to the Constitution's ban on insurrectionists holding office.
The Supreme Court's conservative majority ruled that only Congress can disqualify a candidate, essentially giving future insurrectionists the green light to run for and hold public office.
The Supreme Court's liberal justices were furious at the ruling, stating that the conservative majority attempts to insulate all alleged insurrectionists from future challenges to their holding federal office.
Trump claimed that if God came down and was the vote checker, he believes Republicans would win California, implying voter fraud.
Trump's song by the 'January the 6th Choir' debuted at number one on Billboard's Digital Song Sales chart, but was misleading given the low streaming and radio numbers compared to other popular songs.
The commentary highlights the absurdity and hypocrisy of Trump and his supporters glorifying the January 6th insurrection and convicted insurrectionists.
The commentary criticizes the Supreme Court's ruling as dangerous and extreme, giving future insurrectionists a pass to hold public office.
The commentary emphasizes the importance of voters stopping insurrectionists from holding office, likening the 2024 election to a sequel of the 2020 election.
The commentary pokes fun at Trump's speech patterns and mannerisms, comparing them to reading a children's book or someone under the influence of drugs.
The commentary highlights the conflicting messages from the Supreme Court's unanimous ruling and the conservative majority's more divisive ruling on Congress' role in disqualifying candidates.
Transcripts
-The Supreme Court ruled today
that Donald Trump can remain on the ballot,
overriding a decision by the Colorado state Supreme Court
that declared Trump ineligible
due to the Constitutionās ban on insurrectionists holding office.
For more on this, itās time for A Closer Look.
āŖāŖ
Trump has remained completely unrepentant
about the insurrection on January 6th
and his attempt to overturn the 2020 election results
and end American democracy.
In fact, heās got a new slogan at his rallies
repeating the deranged lie that the 2020 election was rigged.
-We want a landslide that is too big to rig --
too big to rig. Thatās what we need.
We want a landslide. We have to win.
We have to win so that itās too big to rig.
Too big to rig.
-Why is he saying it so slowly?
It tells you how little he thinks of his crowd,
that he pronounces one syllable words
the way I read Hop on Pop to my three year old.
All, ball. We all play ball.
Big, rig. Too big to rig.
Thereās a new report out that
the Trump White House was awash in drugs,
which would make sense because Trump
is starting to slowly pronounce words
like he just took a giant bong rip.
"You know whatās a funny word? 'Rig.'
It sounds like 'big.' Too big to rig.
Whoaaaa.
Is it just me, or is that windmill spying on us?
I know youāre killing birds, windmill,
and one of these days, Iām going to prove it.
Oh, it just moved. It just moved.
Did you guys see that?"
Also, Iām not making up that story about the drugs.
There was a full inspector generalās report
that the Trump White House was a pill mill.
And then a new report yesterday that said the Trump White House
was just handing out speed and Xanax like candy.
And that story just came and went
because thereās too much going on.
We didnāt have time to talk about it.
Us! Eight years ago, you told me thereād be a story
about the White House pharmacy handing out goodie bags
full of benzos and amphetamines,
I would have figured thatād be a week of Closer Looks.
And now my reaction is, we donāt have time
for that Mickey Mouse bull [bleep].
Anyway, back to Trump. What would a landslide victory
thatās too big to rig even look like?
Because youāve already claimed that Democrats
rigged the result in California,
where you lost by over 5 million votes
just in one state.
-I always hear Republicans canāt win California.
You canāt win. I will tell you,
if God came down and God was the vote checker,
I believe we would win.
-So now you need a landslide thatās too big to rig,
and you need God to be the vote checker?
I doubt God wants anything to do --
If God came down and counted the votes,
Iām sure youād accuse him of cheating too.
"I find -- I find the robe very suspicious.
The long, the long, flowing robe which he wears.
Even in the summer. Even in the summer, a robe.
You see the videos of him walking into the voting center.
The robe is normal. And then he walks out.
The robe is bulky.
Because heās hiding ballots under the robe,
but no one will check the robe because weāre all too woke now."
Trump is unrepentant about January 6th.
In fact, heās worse than unrepentant.
Heās turned January 6th into a rallying cry
at his campaign events, playing a song by a choir
of convicted insurrectionists.
-At a rally in Houston, Texas, Trump entered with a song
by the so-called January the 6th Choir,
a group of inmates detained on charges
related to the insurrection.
And then he called those individuals "hostages."
-The former president of the United States
stood on a stage and glorified domestic terrorists.
He made a song with the so-called J6 Prison Choir.
Yes, that is a real thing.
Actual January the 6th insurrectionists
in prison, singing together.
-Trump and his campaign
have elevated the so-called J6 Choir,
a group of prisoners who recorded a version
of the national anthem from behind bars.
Trump played their recording with video images
of the violence on January 6th,
running in the background at the very first campaign
rally of his 2024 campaign.
-Man, these Trump rallies are [bleep] weird.
Theyāre like half megachurch and half Comic-Con,
but with way worse merch.
I mean, put aside -- put aside the fact
that Trump is glorifying a violent insurrection.
Thereās nothing Iād rather listen to less
than a choir of adult men
singing a parody version of the national anthem.
And you know who else would think that sounded [bleep]?
Any Trump supporter before you told him what it was about.
Imagine if I walked into a MAGA rally saying,
"Want to hear my new national anthem parody song?
I recorded it over prison phone lines."
They'd kick my ass. Unless I said itās pro-Trump,
in which case they beg to know where they could download it.
Iām really starting to think these people are hypocrites.
Trump, again, featured a song
from the so-called J6 Prison Choir over the weekend,
and praised them for being heroes.
-You heard the hostages singing -- that was hostages.
Theyāre the J6 Hostages,
I call them, because they are hostages.
Theyāre policemen, theyāre firemen,
theyāre accountants, theyāre lawyers.
-I feel like Trump only knows jobs
that were in a Richard Scarry book.
"Theyāre policemen, theyāre firemen,
and one of them is a little worm who drives an apple to work.
But you canāt trust him. Heās a lowly worm."
But Trump continued.
-Theyāre put in jail for extended periods of time.
For very long periods of time.
Theyāre hostages. You heard them singing.
You heard the spirit that they had.
The spirit is unbelievable.
That song became the number one song.
-This guy is talking about his dumb little novelty song
like heās Ed [bleep] Sheeran.
"The Shape of You" is one of the most streamed songs of all time.
The shape of Trump is,
I donāt know, drumstick with googly eyes.
And that was todayās unnecessary use of googly eyes.
Give me the [echoing] googz.
Also, I canāt believe
Iām about to spend time fact checking this, but here it goes.
It is true that after it debuted,
Trump supporters propelled the song
to number one on Billboardās Digital
Song Sales chart, but saying it was the number one song
is very misleading given that at the time,
the track drew 442,000 official streams
and 25,000 in radio audience,
compared to Morgan Wallenās "Last Night,"
which drew 38.9 million streams, and Miley Cyrus' "Flowers,"
which drew 106.7 million in airplay audience.
And, by the way, me explaining how music downloads work
is why we donāt have time to talk about how the Trump
White House was handing out Ambien like they were Tic Tacs.
Well played, you sound asleep sons of bitches.
Also, just because youāre number one
in a super specific category,
it doesnāt mean youāre number one overall.
This show is the number one
NBC show in the 12:30 a.m. time slot.
But if I said "Late Night with Seth Meyers"
is the number one show on TV,
I think weād get some angry phone calls
from the cast of "The Bear,"
and I donāt want to get in a fight with Jeremy Allen White.
Have you seen that guy without a shirt?
Better question. Have you seen him with a shirt?
Did someone steal this manās shirt?
Could you give it back?
Because itās making some of us feel bad about our beach bodies.
So Trump is not only unrepentant about January 6th,
he openly celebrates it at his rallies,
and today he got a big assist from the Supreme Court
when they ruled he could stay on the ballot
despite the 14th Amendmentās ban on insurrectionists.
-The High Court just said
moments ago that Mr. Trump
can stay on this yearās presidential ballot in Colorado,
after that state barred him from its Republican primary.
The Colorado Supreme Court had disqualified
Mr. Trump under a constitutional provision
that bars people who engage in insurrection
from holding office.
-It doesnāt take on and say that Donald Trump
did not engage in insurrection.
In other words, the issue of the facts,
is he an insurrectionist or not, was not before the court,
and they do not in any way that Iāve seen so far, in a quick,
quick skimming, take that on.
-So the court didnāt actually touch the question
of whether Trump engaged in insurrection.
Of course they didnāt. Any rational human
who hasnāt currently a Republican office holder
or member of an insurrection themed choir,
can see with their own eyes -- or with a pair of googly eyes --
that it was obviously an insurrection.
The court stayed away from that question
the same way you react when your wife asks
if you think her sister is hot. "What? You have a sister?
I donāt even remember what she looks like."
With all that said, Iām afraid the headlines from this ruling
are going to be misleading because on the one hand,
the court ruled unanimously that Trump could stay on the ballot,
which makes it sound like even the liberal justices
said no candidate can ever be disqualified
for engaging in insurrection. But thatās not what they said.
There was basically a second, much more divided ruling
from the courtās conservatives that went much further and said
only Congress can disqualify a candidate.
-The specific question at hand,
did the Colorado Supreme Court err
in ordering President Trump
excluded from the 2024 presidential ballot?
Well, that the Supreme Court unanimously agreed as yes.
But from there, we see some divisions among the justices.
-Where there was that five-four split was in the particulars.
Five of the justices here,
the majority, so thatās what rules,
said that states canāt unilaterally decide
to take presidents or any federal officers off the ballot.
And instead, thatās a decision
that Congress would have to make in the form of legislation
to decide which candidates could be disqualified
by the 14th amendment's so-called insurrection ban.
-So basically, you have to read the fine print
on the ruling to find out just how dangerous and extreme
the ruling from the courtās conservatives was.
Itās like when you play McDonaldās monopoly
and you think you won, but then you turn it over
and thereās an asterisk that says...
The courtās liberals seem furious at this ruling.
They wrote that the conservative majority attempts to insulate
all alleged insurrectionists from future challenges
to their holding federal office.
Because we all know Republicans in Congress
would never vote to disqualify a Republican candidate
who engaged in insurrection.
The courtās conservatives essentially
gave all future insurrectionists the green light
to run for and hold public office,
which means itās up to us, the voters, to stop them,
just like we did in 2020. 2024 is the sequel.
Itās like "2 Fast 2 Furious, except itās called...
-Too big to rig.
-This has been A Closer Look.
āŖāŖ
Hey, everybody. Thanks for watching A Closer Look.
And as a reminder, my brother Josh and I
have started a -- [bleep]
have an established -- podcast
called "Family Trips with the Meyers Brothers."
We hope you listen. We hope you like it.
Weāll see you soon.
5.0 / 5 (0 votes)
Supreme Court overturns Trump Colorado ballot ban in unanimous ruling
Colorado secretary of state responds to Supreme Court ruling Trump can stay on ballot
Trump-Biden Rematch Set After Haley Drops Out; Greene Humiliated in Interview: A Closer Look
Jack Smith STRIKES BACK at Supreme Court with BIG Announcement
Trump so incoherent and confused, even MSNBC CUTS AWAY!
Meltdown After 9-0 Supreme Court Ruling Trump Can Be on the Ballot, with Stu Burguiere & Dave Marcus