This story was originally published by the WND News Center.
Joe Biden and his Democrat Party associates long have complained that President Donald Trump is a threat to democracy and that voters need to support Democrats in order to save it.
But that's not the case, according to an expert, and member of the board of governors of Gatestone Institute.
There, Lawrence Kadish wrote it's now up to the justices of the U.S. Supreme Court to save democracy. And it's because of the Democrats' lawfare against Trump.
The justices already have agreed to review a partisan decision by four Democrats on the Colorado state Supreme Court to throw Trump off the 2024 ballot. They decided, without burdening themselves with the ideas of due process, that Trump was guilty of insurrection because of what others did on January 6, 2021.
In fact, Democrats in Congress accused Trump of insurrection, and he was acquitted.
Kadish explains, "Historians have an enormous advantage over the rest of us: they have the unique luxury of looking back through time and, with the power of hindsight, pinpointing the exact moment a new era began. Yet there are events that are so momentous, so crucial, and so obvious, that sometimes even those living in the moment can recognize their historic significance.
"We are living through that moment."
Kadish explains, "Historians have an enormous advantage over the rest of us: they have the unique luxury of looking back through time and, with the power of hindsight, pinpointing the exact moment a new era began. Yet there are events that are so momentous, so crucial, and so obvious, that sometimes even those living in the moment can recognize their historic significance.
"We are living through that moment."
He explained the turmoil that has hit the nation because of Democrats' agenda to have bureaucrats remove Trump from the 2024 ballot.
"These actions attack the very fabric of our representative form of government. The idea that without so much as due process, unelected persons in an individual state can remove a potential presidential candidate is the stuff of nightmares for a democracy," he explained.
That means, he said, "The future of our nation is now to be in the hands of the U.S. Supreme Court."
He said the justices have recognized the urgent need for their decision, as "this is an existential threat to our nation."
He wrote, "Historians and legal scholars will study their decision for generations to come because there can be no denying that their verdict will be a historic turning point in the life of America. They will either reaffirm the principles upon which our nation was founded or they will participate in the decline and fall of what Thomas Jefferson called 'the world's best hope.'"
He said, "One can debate the complexity of what confronts the high court but Donald Trump's lawyers understand what is at stake. They are asking the justices to quickly address the issue and return the right to vote for their candidate of choice to the voters."