Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Republican Judge Breaks Down How Trump And GOP Plan To Steal The 2024 Election

Republican Judge Breaks Down How Trump And GOP Plan To Steal The 2024 Election
Tayfun Coskun/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images; United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit

A Republican former federal judge has penned an eye-opening op-ed in which he lays out the GOP's and former Republican President Donald Trump's plan to steal the 2024 presidential election.

Judge J. Michael Luttig, a staunch conservative appointed to the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit by Republican President George H.W. Bush, says the scheme all comes down to Trump's claims of fraud and the events of January 6.


Luttig explains 2020 was a failed "dry run" for what the GOP and Trump plan to do in 2024—overturn the election if Trump or his pick for President do not win.

And this time, they've got nearly all the pieces in place to succeed.

Luttig opened his op-ed with an observation all too many of us have nervously contemplated ourselves.

"Nearly a year and a half later, surprisingly few understand what January 6 was all about.

The true heart of the matter, Luttig says, is a little-known doctrine called the "independent state legislature," a part of the Elections and Electors Clauses of the Constitution, which grant state legislatures exclusive power over federal presidential elections.

Not even a state supreme court can have say over these issues according to this doctrine. But the federal Supreme Court could, were a case pertaining to these issues to end up before the court.

As Luttig explains, this was Trump and the GOP's plan for 2020—to claim pandemic-related changes to voting procedures violated the independent state legislature doctrine and have the resulting court cases land in the Supreme Court, where newly confirmed Justice Amy Coney Barrett would deliver favorable verdicts.

The gambit failed, however, in part because Coney Barrett was not yet sworn in, leading to 4-4 deadlock votes.

Such cases will meet entirely different circumstances in 2024, of course, because Coney Barrett is now officially on the bench. But even if the Court failed to deliver again, Trump's 2020 plan b is likely to succeed in 2024 as well.

Trump's team next moved to persuade certain states to empower alternate slates of electors to vote for Trump in the Electoral College instead of Democratic President Joe Biden, but they failed because state-level officials refused to cooperate.

But as Luttig explains, Republicans have since succeeded in electing a slew of Trump-aligned candidates in several key state positions directly impacting the operations of the 2024 election.

And with the 2022 midterms approaching, they are likely to gain Trump-aligned Republicans at the federal level as well, making more likely the success of Trump's third 2020 gambit—compelling Congress and then-Vice President Mike Pence to only count Trump-aligned votes at the January 6, 2021 certification of the Electoral College vote.

This failed because an insufficient number of Congress members were willing to follow the scheme and because Pence refused to comply, leading to the storming of the Capitol later that day.

Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris will preside over the certification in January of 2025, of course, but the Congress is likely to be far more Trump-friendly than 2021's.

So what can we do to safeguard the 2024 election?

Luttig explained our hope now rests in the present Congress acting before it's too late.

"Congress [must amend] the Electoral Count Act to constrain Congress' own power to reject state electoral votes and decide the presidency."

Luttig says this must be in tandem with federal legislation expressly limiting the Vice President's powers over elections to safeguard elections beyond 2024 as well.

On Twitter, many were sobered and alarmed by Luttig's explanation of the grave danger our democracy faces in 2024.







As we head toward the midterms and 2024, here's hoping our country takes Luttig's advice that "forewarned is to be forearmed."

More from News/2024-election

Blue Ivy Carter
Rodin Eckenroth/Getty Images for Disney

Blue Ivy Just Brought The House Down With Her Dance Moves At Beyoncé's First 'Cowboy Carter Tour' Show

Blue Ivy Carter is back—and she owned the stage at the Cowboy Carter Tour kickoff in Los Angeles on April 28. The tour will have over 30 events and it will run through mid-summer.

Now 13, Beyoncé’s eldest daughter stole the spotlight during “Déjà Vu,” strutting solo down the SoFi Stadium catwalk with superstar confidence and nailing the choreography in front of thousands.

Keep Reading Show less
Storm Reid
Lexus Gallegos/Getty Images for H&M

'Euphoria' Star Claps Back On TikTok After Troll Criticizes Her For Going To College

Actor Storm Reid had the perfect response to a troll who tried to drag her for, of all things, going to college.

Reid, who is best known for her work on HBO's Euphoria and The Last Of Us, is about to finish her studies at the prestigious University of Southern California's School of Dramatic Arts, graduating on May 16.

Keep Reading Show less
Elon Musk
Jim Watson/AFP via Getty Images

Elon Musk Dragged After Showing Off His Juvenile Fake Police Badge Declaring Himself 'The Dogefather'

Billionaire Elon Musk was widely ridiculed after sharing a photo of his fake law enforcement badge—complete with the badge number "69420"—that declares him "The Dogefather," flexing his authority as the leader of the advisory Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), which is at the center of the ongoing slash-and-burn approach to gutting federal spending.

Musk appeared positively thrilled when he shared the photo—perhaps the most cringey thing he's done, at least thus far, since attaining unprecedented political power.

Keep Reading Show less
Jacob Elordi; Margot Robbie
Don Arnold/WireImage/Getty Images; MICHAEL TRAN/AFP/Getty Images

'Wuthering Heights' Film Casting Director Irks Fans After Justifying Casting Decisions By Claiming 'It's Just A Book'

It was recently announced that Wuthering Heights, the 1847 novel by Emily Brontë, is being adapted for the screen at Warner Bros. Pictures. The leading director is Emerald Fennell, and the casting director is Kharmel Cochrane, who was involved in the award-winning Nosferatu and Saltburn.

For those who got through high school and college without having to read the novel, it's a dark, psychological thriller with Gothic horror undertones—and also a love story. That's the power of Emily Brontë, who published just one novel in her lifetime.

Keep Reading Show less
Terrence Howard; Marvin Gaye
Chris Haston/WBTV via Getty Images; Kypros/Getty Images

Terrence Howard Shares Homophobic Reason He Turned Down Marvin Gaye Biopic Role—And Yikes

Actor Terrence Howard may have an Oscar nomination for his no holds barred approach to roles, but it turns out there is a limit to what he'll do onscreen, and kissing a man is beyond that limit.

Howard told Bill Maher that he turned down the role of a lifetime, playing legendary musician Marvin Gaye in a biopic by director Lee Daniels, once he learned of Gaye's sexuality.

Keep Reading Show less