The 14th amendment was ratified on July 9, 1868, to grant citizenship and equal protection of the law to anyone “born or naturalized in the United States,” including formerly enslaved Black ...
To date, besides Florida in 1868 ... state does not allow its citizens to vote for presidential electors. The 14th Amendment ...
Section 3 of the 14th Amendment bars current and former federal, state and military officials who have "engaged in insurrection or rebellion" against the country from holding office again.
"So, even if trump (sic) wins, he cannot become president. Is that incorrect?” Neither the 14th Amendment nor any other part of the Constitution bans felons from taking office, an expert told ...
The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment is exactly like a similar provision in the Fifth Amendment, which only restricts the federal government. It states that no person shall be ...
President Joe Biden, along with many commentators, has speculated that a president can bypass Congress by using the 14th Amendment to the Constitution. But we have no precedent for how that would ...
Of the Civil War Amendments, the Fourteenth Amendment had the most far-reaching effect on the meaning of the Constitution. It conferred both national and state citizenship upon birth, thereby ...
The Washington Examiner's Byron York suggested Democrats might use the Fourteenth Amendment, which prohibits one who engaged ...
My previous letter showed the Roe v. Wade case set the abortion privilege on bedrock in that the 14th Amendment determines "all persons born" were citizens of Congress recognized in law ...
Professor Jonathan Adler recently posted about a Washington Post opinion article by Robert George and Josh Craddock, which argued that Congress should legislate to enforce the equal protection ...