Northeast India’s Only English and Hindi Satellite News Channel

Donald Trump convicted: Can he still run for president?

First Published: 31st May, 2024 8:11 IST

While Trump's eligibility to run for president remains intact, questions regarding his voting rights post-conviction linger.

Following a New York jury’s verdict, former President Donald Trump stands convicted on all 34 felony charges of falsifying business records, raising pertinent questions about his future political endeavours and voting rights, CNN reported.
As the verdict reverberates across political circles, one of the most pressing inquiries emerges: Can a convicted felon run for president? The answer, unequivocally, is yes.

The US Constitution outlines three prerequisites for presidential candidates: natural-born citizenship, a minimum age of 35, and at least 14 years of US residency – criteria that Trump satisfies. Although the 14th Amendment imposes restrictions on individuals engaged in insurrection, a special law invocation by Congress remains necessary, an unlikely scenario in the current political landscape, according to the CNN report.
Judge Juan Merchan has slated Trump’s sentencing for July 11, strategically coinciding with the Republican National Convention’s commencement in Milwaukee, just four days later. Speculation looms over the possibility of a prison sentence for Trump, despite the likelihood of a non-incarceration outcome for most Class E felony convictions in New York, according to CNN senior legal analyst Elie Honig.
Notably, Trump’s status as a former president entitles him to lifetime Secret Service protection, ensuring security regardless of his legal predicament.
However, the prospect of a presidential campaign from a prison cell is not unprecedented.
Eugene Debs, the socialist leader, mounted a presidential bid from a federal prison in Atlanta during his 10-year sentence for sedition in 1920.
While Trump’s eligibility to run for president remains intact, questions regarding his voting rights post-conviction linger.
State regulations dictate felons’ voting privileges, with Vermont and Maine permitting voting from prison.
Trump’s residency in Florida introduces additional complexities, as the state’s referendum to re-enfranchise convicted felons in 2018 was accompanied by stipulations mandating the payment of fines and fees associated with sentences.
Neil Volz, deputy director of the Florida Rights Restoration Coalition, predicts minimal obstacles for Trump’s voting rights restoration, given Florida’s deference to felony conviction jurisdiction.
Despite the state’s ongoing efforts to streamline eligibility confirmation for formerly incarcerated individuals, confusion persists regarding fee requirements, hindering many from exercising their right to vote, CNN reported. (ANI)

COMMENTS

WE RECOMMEND

Banner
Boeing’s Starliner on its way back to Earth without NASA astronauts Sunita Willams, Barry Wilmore

Boeing on Saturday morning said that the deorbit poll of the empty Starliner spacecraft has been completed

07th September 2024
Banner
Boeing’s Starliner to return to Earth from ISS without Sunita Williams

The unscrewed spacecraft is targeting a landing at the White Sands Space Harbor in New Mexico on Saturday (local time).

06th September 2024
Banner
Joe Biden’s son, Hunter pleads guilty to all nine charges in federal tax case

The guilty plea came in a convoluted all-day hearing on the same day that his trial was supposed to begin with jury selection in Los Angeles.

06th September 2024
Banner
India, Singapore call for “freedom of navigation in and overflight above South China Sea”, adherence to UNCLOS

The joint statement was issued during Prime Minister Narendra Modi's visit to Singapore.

06th September 2024
Banner
US: Four killed, nine wounded in Georgia high school shooting

At least four people, including two students, have been killed and nine others were injured when a fellow student opened fire in a high school in the US state of Georgia on Wednesday, CNN reported. The suspected gunman is in custody and was identified as 14-year-old Colt Cray, a student of Apalachee High School in Winder, Georgia, about […]

05th September 2024