Colorado Secretary of State Jena Griswold, a Democrat and the state's chief election officer, is charged with certifying state ballots. She's named as a defendant in the lawsuit, along with Trump.
Williams said he anticipates the lawsuit will fail - the plaintiffs lack standing and it's premature, since Trump hasn't qualified for the ballot yet, Williams said - but wants a plan in place in case.
"At a minimum, we will not allow our delegate allotment and allocation process to be influenced by those who want to use the courts to defeat a candidate they oppose. That's undemocratic," he told Colorado Politics.
Mario Nicolais, one of the lawyers who filed the lawsuit, told Colorado Politics that he's unsure whether the party can put in place what could amount to an end-run around an eventual court ruling but added that he doubts it will matter.
"Furthermore, I think other candidates may have a problem with it," the Lakewood-based veteran election law attorney said in a text message. "As for our lawsuit, it doesn't make any difference. We don't believe he (will be) eligible to be on any ballot ever again."
The lawsuit asks the court to rule Trump ineligible to be listed "as a candidate on the 2024 Republican presidential primary election ballot and any future election ballot."
Added Nicolais: "I think if they try to put Trump on regardless, it will be a mess. But I do like that they seem to understand our lawsuit is strong enough that they are worried."
Williams took a direct swipe at Nicolais in an email sent to state Republicans, describing him as being among "a group of desperate 'Never-Trump' activists, led by Mario Nicolais, a failed GOP primary candidate who was rejected by voters for being too liberal."
Nicolais lost a bid for the GOP nomination for a legislative seat in 2014. He changed his registration to unaffiliated the day before Trump was inaugurated in 2017, later telling Colorado Politics that he thought Trump was "dangerous to our country and to our entire system of government."
Other plaintiffs in the lawsuit include former Republican Senate Majority Leader Norma Anderson, a Lakewood Republican; Denver Post columnist Krista Kafer; former U.S. Rep. Claudine Cmarada, who represented Rhode Island in Congress when her last name was Schneider and lives in Colorado; and, Michelle Priola, the wife of state Sen. Kevin Priola, the Henderson Democrat who switched parties a year ago after winning election to his seat twice as a Republican. Anderson's daughter-in-law, Pam Anderson, was the 2022 Republican nominee for Colorado secretary of state but lost the election to Griswold.
Republican U.S. Rep. Lauren Boebert on Thursday slammed the lawsuit on X , the social media platform formerly known as Twitter.
"Democrats in Colorado now want to try and keep Trump off the 2024 ballot," the longtime Trump ally said. "Imagine calling yourselves the party of 'saving democracy' while actively seeking to block a candidate from the ballot for no particular reason other than you know he'll win."
While Trump carried Colorado's presidential primary by an overwhelming margin in 2020, when the incumbent faced only nominal opposition, the Republican lost the state's general election to Democrat Hillary Clinton in 2016 by about 5 percentage points and lost the 2020 election in the state to President Joe Biden by more than 13 percentage points.
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