Thirty U.S. states have lawsuits to rule out Trump's candidacy
According to the New York Times, about 30 states in the United States have excluded Trump from participating in next year's lawsuits, although many of them have been dismissed by their states, but as of December 29, there are still 18 states in the lawsuit.
By ruling out Trump from next year's ruling, following the first shot fired in Colorado, Maine fired a second shot, and there will certainly continue to be gunshots in the eighteen states that are in the ongoing lawsuit.
Lentz, a Republican pollster, said that one state is accidental, two states are trending, and three states are influential. The more states in the U.S. pass lawsuits, the more pressure the U.S. Supreme Court will have.
Waldman, president of the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University School of Law, said the future Supreme Court decision would be an "epic constitutional showdown." In other words, even if Trump is not elected, he will go down in history because of this epic ruling.
Although Trump's road back to the White House is long and long, Trump is getting stronger and stronger, and the polls are getting stronger, surpassing Florida Governor DeSantis, the second-highest candidate in the Republican Party, by 51 percentage points.
The Republican caucus in the United States, also known as the caucus, is scheduled to be held on January 15, 2024, and the first party primaries for Republicans and Democrats will also kick off in New Hampshire on January 23. American voters have asked the Supreme Court to make a quick ruling to settle the lawsuits in the US states and let the United States proceed normally, and the US Supreme Court's ruling has also attracted the attention of the world.