Colorado GOP petitions SCOTUS to reverse disqualification ruling claiming party is 'irreparably harmed'

A week and one day after the Colorado Supreme Court ruled ex-President Donald Trump disqualified from appearing on the 2024 Republican primary ballot under Section 3 of the 14th Amendment, the state's GOP asked the US Supreme Court Wednesday to overturn the decision, 9 News reports.
The party's request comes the same day Michigan's Supreme Court — unlike Colorado's high court — decided against disqualifying Trump from the state's ballot.
"The Republican Party has been irreparably harmed by the decision below," the Colorado Republicans wrote in its petition. "The state has interfered in the primary election by unreasonably restricting the Party’s ability to select its candidates. As a natural and inevitable result, the state has interfered with the Party’s ability to place on the general election ballot the candidate of its choice. And it has done so based on a subjective claim of insurrection the state lacks any constitutional authority to make."
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According to 9 News' report, the petition requests that SCOTUS consider three questions:
- Does the 14th Amendment apply to the president?
- Is Section 3 of the 14th Amendment self-executing, meaning does it take effect without an action by Congress?
- Is it a violation of the First Amendment to deny a political party its ability to choose the candidate of its choice?