In other words, you don't have an answer to thw question, so you have avoided it. You have stated that the defendant is President
de jure but have failed to address the issue of how that can be so if he is ineligible for the office for lack of meeting the article II, Section 1, Clause 5 requirement. If one is filling the office in violation of the Constitution he cannot then, by definition, be doing so
de jure or the term would be meaningless unless the Constitution is not legally binding.
As to the anonymous lawyers to whom you have spoken: Is there a basis for their opinions or are they just guesses based on such factors as "unthinkablity" rather than legal precedent?
In other words, you don’t have an answer to thw question, so you have avoided it. You have stated that the defendant is President de jure but have failed to address the issue of how that can be so if he is ineligible for the office for lack of meeting the article II, Section 1, Clause 5 requirement. If one is filling the office in violation of the Constitution he cannot then, by definition, be doing so de jure or the term would be meaningless unless the Constitution is not legally binding.
As to the anonymous lawyers to whom you have spoken: Is there a basis for their opinions or are they just guesses based on such factors as “unthinkablity” rather than legal precedent?
Nowhere in the Constitution does the judicial branch have the power to remove a sitting president. There are two constitutional remedies given to Congress: impeachment and trial by the Senate after obtaining office and via objections to the certification of the Electoral College vote for a oresidential candidate who was ineligible. At the joint session of Congress held to certify Obama’s Electoral College votes any one Senator and any one Representative could have submitted to Vice President Cheney in his role as President of the Senate written objections to Obama’s Electoral votes. No one Senator and no one Representative submitted an objection and Obama’s Electoral votes were certified unanimously. Therefore Obama is the de jure president having been sworn into office on Inauguration Day.
At this point impeachment and removal and defeat at the polls are the remedies.