Accountability at Last
The legal system did what it was designed to do — slowly, imperfectly, but unmistakably. Over 1,200 people were charged. Seditious conspiracy convictions were handed down against Oath Keepers and Proud Boys leaders. The federal indictment of a former president for attempting to overturn an election was unprecedented but constitutionally necessary. That Trump won the 2024 election does not vindicate January 6 — it demonstrates the urgency of institutional guardrails. The courts, the prosecutors, and the jury system functioned. The question is whether the democratic norms these proceedings were meant to defend can survive the political environment they revealed.
Context
The Supreme Court's unanimous decision in Trump v. Anderson — ruling that states cannot unilaterally disqualify federal candidates — was seen by legal scholars as the Court avoiding a constitutional crisis by finding a narrow procedural off-ramp. The decision did not address whether Trump engaged in insurrection, only that enforcement of Section 3 required congressional action.
Sources: Trump v. Anderson, 601 U.S. ___ (2024); DOJ January 6 prosecution statistics; Federal sentencing records; Jack Smith indictment
Editorial Provenance
Written by editorial board · Reviewed by 2 Populist contributors
12 revisions · Updated 4 days ago