Democrats will apparently stop at nothing to keep Donald Trump from becoming president again. Glenn and Stu review a report from The Atlantic that describes how some Democrats are even weighing the option of refusing to certify a Trump win — ironically, on January 6th, 2025. After years of calling Republicans insurrectionists for suggesting the same thing back in 2021, Democrats are now suggesting what, by their own definition, would be an insurrection against the will of the people. Glenn and Stu review the argument, which is tied to whether the Supreme Court will allow Colorado to remove Trump from the ballot.
Transcript
Below is a rush transcript that may contain errors
GLENN: Headline. How Democrats could disqualify Trump if the Supreme Court does it.
Without clear guidance from the court, House Democrats suggest that they may not certify a Trump win on January 6th.
PAT: Oh, yeah. I saw that. Isn't that an insurrection. Isn't that what we've decided. That's an insurrection.
GLENN: On January -- you've got to be kidding me.
PAT: Yeah.
GLENN: Near the end of the Supreme Court oral arguments about whether Colorado could exclude former President Trump from its ballot, as an insurrectionist. The attorney representing votes from the state, offered a warning to the justice.
One, evoking the January 6th riot, that it had set the case in motion.
By this point in the hearing, they made it clear they did not like the idea of allowing a single state to kick Trump out, over the presidential race.
So they didn't appear comfortable with the court doing so either.
Sensing that Trump would likely stay on the ballot, the attorney, Jason Murray. Said if the Supreme Court didn't resolve the question of Trump's eligibility. It would come back with a vengeance, after the election.
When Congress meets once again to count and certify the votes of the electoral college.
It will come back with a vengeance on January 6th.
PAT: That's incredible.
GLENN: Are you kidding me?
And this with Fani. Fani. But -- but Willis.
She is -- she is coming in -- if -- if there's no law in Georgia.
There's no law in -- in New York.
No law in DC.
And they decide, on January 6th. To come back with a vengeance. You know there will be demonstrations.
All over. And then they overturn the election. What the hell has been happening the last four years?
STU: And that's obviously a major concern. And that's why I think, for me, the Fani Willis story is interesting.
I like more than anything else, picked apart their hilarious stories. Which are hilarious to me.
At the end of the day, the political implications are interesting.
If you look at the polls, you have a certain section of people who were voting for Trump.
Who say, if he was convicted of a felony, he -- they will not vote for him
Now, do you believe that?
I am skeptical of that claim. I am skeptical of somebody saying, they're voting for Trump now.
If he gets convicted of a felony, my belief is, they will find a way to talk themselves out of the felony really mattering and will vote for Trump anyway.
PAT: Unless they're Democrats. Now, Democrats could easily be saying that.
STU: Right.
PAT: Of course, they're saying that.
STU: Independents.
People in the middle. People who don't follow this stuff every day.
If there's a high-profile case, like this Fani Willis situation.
Where one of the big accusations against Trump blows up spectacularly. I think it will give a lot of people, okay.
They got him on this. Maybe they get him on the documents case, later on.
But in people's minds. It will be cemented. That a lot of this was just crazy political attacks. And that's what Trump politically needs to convince people of.
GLENN: Yes.
STU: He needs to be able to get people over that line, this actually was unfair. Certainly, this has worked with Republican primary voters.
But, remember, he can't win this election with just Republican primary voters. He has to win it with people in the middle, and those people who are vulnerable to the mainstream media's narratives here.
If you have one of these big accusations blow up like this, it may just give him a pass on all of them.
GLENN: Well, I think that -- I mean, I'm only taking this from the left and the Democrats.
So maybe it's not true, but I've heard since Bill Clinton, that when you persecute somebody like this and you're unfair, and you use the court system to go after him.
What happens? With the black population, Pat. According to their story line.
PAT: That they're sensitive to it.
GLENN: And they will -- they will rally around that person. Okay?
PAT: Uh-huh.
GLENN: So Trump has been saying, you know. This -- this might actually hurt them in the end with African-Americans.
MSNBC had a whole segment with somebody who was like, this is an outrage. What a racist thing to say.
The chyron at the bottom of the screen said, Trump claims indictment appeal to black voters.
Trump claims that?
Well, I don't know.
I've learned that from the DNC.
PAT: Back in the '90s. Absolutely.
GLENN: And the only reason you were going after Barack Obama was because you were black.
Our first black president was only black because he was involved in a scandal, and everybody went after him.
So now you know what it is like to be a black man.
I don't know which one it is. Which one is it?
I'm hoping that scandals don't appeal to blacks. I'm hoping the truth appeals to blacks.
But I've been taught. We've all been taught, dutifully, by the mainstream media and by the DNC. That, no, no, no. You don't understand.
PAT: Yeah.
GLENN: So if you happen to be black and listening. You have something to say. And I would love to know.
Which is it?
Because that changes the dynamic, if that's true.
STU: Hmm. It's just amazing that they keep trying to put people in these categories. And deal with them like this.
GLENN: I know.
STU: Deal with them as individuals.
GLENN: I wouldn't have brought that up, if it wasn't for MSNBC.
I'm looking at this chyron, like, wait. But that's what you've been saying forever.
STU: Right. That is 100 percent what they've been saying. It's how they treat the world.
They treat world with this weird prism of race, all the time. Everything is seen through that.
It's the most important thing about each and every one of us.
And look, it's a built-in defense for people like Fani Willis. When she goes to the black church. She says, the reason they persecute me, is because I'm black.
Even though, she knew she had lied, she went to church and lied even more.
And also used her own, quote, unquote, people.
As a defense mechanism, to the lies, she knew she was already making, to a court.
GLENN: It's really amazing. How you can lie and lie and lie to people.
And the media will be lied to.
And they'll report on those lies.
Then expose those lies.
They'll be exposed as lies.
And everybody just keeps listening to the liars.
PAT: They'll be complicit. And it doesn't matter. It doesn't matter.