SAUL LOEB/AFP via Getty Images
Since the Capitol siege, some lawmakers have said Donald Trump should be barred from future office.
The 14th Amendment could be the last option lawmakers have to accomplish this goal.
Legal scholars disagree about how, if at all, the bill could be applied in Trump s case, however.
In the wake of the Capitol siege, some US lawmakers have called for former President Donald Trump and some of their congressional colleagues to be removed from office or prevented from holding office again and they may try to invoke the 14th Amendment to do it.
The 14th Amendment was adopted in 1868 and is known mostly for granting citizenship rights and equal protection under the law to anyone born or naturalized in the US, including Black people and those formerly enslaved.
Here s how the 14th Amendment could be used to prevent Trump from running again | Business Insider México businessinsider.mx - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from businessinsider.mx Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Close icon
Two crossed lines that form an X . It indicates a way to close an interaction, or dismiss a notification. OkCupid; Hinge; Match Group; Tinder; Plenty of Fish; Samantha Lee/Insider
Match Group owns Tinder, OkCupid, and every other big online dating site in the US except Bumble.
Bumble s CEO, an ex-Tinder executive, sued Match Group s parent company for discrimination in 2014.
Here s how Match Group went from a failing dating site for Boomers to the country s largest online dating conglomerate.
Online dating can be messy. The companies that run online dating can be messier.
Match Group, which started as one lonely Stanford Business School graduate s attempt to build a less embarrassing way to find love online in the 90s, has turned into a titan that owns nearly every US dating site.
Online survey can help Lakewood residents build a better, more responsive community: A Place in the Sun
Updated Jan 26, 2021;
Posted Jan 26, 2021
The Lakewood Community Relations Advisory Commission is asking residents to help ensure that the city remains a great place to live and work by participating in an online survey. (Carol Kovach/special to cleveland.com)
Facebook Share
LAKEWOOD, Ohio The Lakewood Community Relations Advisory Committee is asking fellow Lakewoodites to help build a better, more responsive community.
LCRAC describes itself as a volunteer group that serves in an advisory capacity for educating, informing and making recommendations to city officials on matters related to community relations in an effort to advance respect for diversity, equality and bonds of mutuality. The group’s mission is to ensure that Lakewood remains a great place to live and work.