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KCRW's Left, Right & Center

Democracy is on the ballot (and the docket) in 2024

KCRW's Left, Right & Center

KCRW

352865, News

4.2 • 4.8K Ratings

🗓️ 12 January 2024

⏱️ 51 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Donald Trump is appealing the Colorado Supreme Court’s ruling that his role in the January 6 Capitol riots classifies as engaging in insurrection and thus disqualifies him from appearing on the state’s Republican primary ballot. The Colorado judges’ ruling relies on language in the 14th Amendment, which bars any public official engaging in insurrection from seeking public office. The U.S. Supreme Court will hear arguments next month. Will the nine justices rule against Trump, and what impact could that have on the legal legacy of January 6, 2021?

The Capitol riot also played a significant role in President Joe Biden’s speech as he launched his 2024 campaign last week. The president centered his appeal to voters with a message of American democracy hanging in the balance with the upcoming election. One new report claims that the political tension in the United States could be the year’s biggest geopolitical risk. Can Biden convince the nation that he’s the best option to keep its democracy intact, or will he sound like a broken record?

Social and emotional developmental gaps between boys and girls have become commonly accepted in society. However, recent data shows that boys are falling behind in educational performance as well. One option some parents in affluent communities have turned to is “redshirting” their boys, which means delaying their start of kindergarten by a year so they could have time to catch up developmentally. How effective is this strategy, and is it feasible on a large scale? Weighing in is Ioakim Boutakidis, a professor of Child and Adolescent Studies at California State University, Fullerton, and a member of the American Psychological Association’s Task Force on Boys in School.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Welcome to Left, Right, and Center, the show where we take on all the political issues,

0:07.1

even the complicated ones that might divide your own family.

0:10.9

I'm Elise Hugh, host of the TED Talks Daily Podcast and a host at large at

0:14.6

NPR, filling in this week for David Green. The first contest of the 2024 presidential

0:19.8

election in Iowa is upon us.

0:22.8

To put it mildly, there's not a lot of suspense.

0:26.1

Donald Trump has been trouncing the rest of the field in the polls,

0:29.9

but whether he's eligible to run for president

0:32.3

is now a question that the Supreme Court is taking up,

0:35.3

while primary voters are heading to the polls.

0:38.0

It stems from a decision in Colorado.

0:40.4

Colorado's Supreme Court ruled Trump's role in the January 6th

0:44.0

insurrection and efforts to overturn the 2020 election results

0:48.0

disqualify him from the ballot.

0:50.3

Trump's name has not yet been removed from the GOP primary ballots there as the Colorado justices held their ruling until early January in anticipation of a Scottish decision.

1:00.0

The Trump legal team has pushed back against the characterization of January 6th as an insurrection,

1:05.4

and it argues that the section of the 14th Amendment essential to the Colorado case

1:10.4

doesn't actually apply to the president's position. It's not just Colorado too.

1:15.0

There are a few other states that have also moved to kick Trump off the ballot.

1:19.2

So let's bring in our left right and center panel. Today we have Mo Alethi on the left. He's executive. Let's

1:23.7

left right and center panel. Today we have Mo Alethi on the left. He's executive

1:25.2

director at Georgetown University's Institute of Politics and Public Service.

...

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