With less than a month to go before voting begins, Donald Trump‘s Republican rivals are once again rallying to his defense, this time after Colorado’s Supreme Court ruled to remove him from the state’s presidential primary ballot under the U.S. Constitution’s insurrection clause.

Just as they had following Trump’s successive indictments as he racked up 91 criminal charges, the GOP front-runner’s opponents cast the landmark decision — the first time in history the 14th Amendment has been used to disqualify a presidential candidate and one the former president has vowed to appeal — as inappropriate, a “stunt” and an “attack on democracy.”

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis charged the court’s ruling was a plot to ensure Trump wins the nomination because Democrats view him as the weakest Republican candidate.

  • @njm1314@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    For the life of me I just can’t understand who’s donating to these people. Like who are their supporters? They literally aren’t trying to win. Their entire thing is cow-towing to a different candidate. What’s the point of them even being there? Like I get most of them are it to make money I get that. But why are people paying them?

    • @speff@disc.0x-ia.moe
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      11 months ago

      Corpo donors probably don’t care about them winning the presidency. They’re doing it to get their foot in the door when the primary candidates inevitably end up in office positions.

      Donations from the general public? I have no fuckin idea what the reasoning there could be

    • @Zink@programming.dev
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      411 months ago

      I figure it’s a race for second in the hope that the first place guy will get disqualified and/or imprisoned. So they try to look like the obvious replacement for the guy the base can’t have.

      Or, if Trump is able to run, they want to be on his good side just in case.