On January 31, a Quinnipiac presidential general election poll was released. See here. It shows that President Biden leads former President Donald Trump, whether minor party and independent candidates are included or not.
On January 24, the faction of the Michigan Libertarian Party that is not recognized by the Libertarian National Committee filed this brief in Libertarian National Committee v Saliba, 23-1856.
On January 31, the Colorado voters who challenged Donald Trump’s ballot position asked the U.S. Supreme Court not to allot any oral argument time to the attorney for Law Professor Seth Barrett Tillman, a scholar who has studied the meaning of “officer” and “office” in the Constitution. Here is the brief of the Colorado objectors. It points out that Tillman was granted an opportunity to have his attorney argue in the Colorado Supreme Court, but then he waived that opportunity.
On January 30, the Colorado voters who had objected to Donald Trump’s ballot position filed this brief with the U.S. Supreme Court. The Colorado voters oppose the request of the Colorado Secretary of State to have her own participation in the oral argument set for February 8.
As things stand now, Trump’s attorneys have 30 minutes, and the objectors have 30 minutes. The Secretary of State wants her attorneys to be able to speak for 15 minutes.
On January 30, the Illinois State Board of Elections voted unanimously to keep former President Donald Trump on the ballot. The Board has four Democrats and four Republicans. The Board said it does not feel it has the authority to reject a candidate from a primary ballot if the objection is based on an interpretation of the Fourteenth Amendment, Section Three. The objectors say they will now file a lawsuit in state court to keep Trump off.