Bob assesses the Roberts Court’s take on federalism in the elections arena. It begins:
Barely had the Court issued its opinion in the Shelby County, Alabama v. Holder, invalidating Section 4 of the Voting Rights Act and for all practical… Continue reading
DOMA has been struck down as unconstitutional. Prop 8 case from California dismissed on standing grounds (initiative proponents have no cognizable injury distinct from the general population). I haven’t yet read thoroughly, but SCOTUSblog reports that neither finds a constitutional… Continue reading
Those of you who went to bed early on the east coast to get a bit of rest for SCOTUS missed a wild evening in Texas. Redistricting is apparently not the only topic that prompts unusual legislative procedure in Austin.
After prior districts were struck down, Kentucky is set to take up its state legislative redistricting in a special session. (paywall)
Not at issue, yesterday or today? Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act. Kentucky wasn’t a covered jurisdiction. It’s… Continue reading
Frank Wilkinson weighs in on the dispute between Sen. McConnell and Norm Ornstein on when, if ever, McConnell’s position on disclosure changed. A lot of this dispute may be about the scope of who discloses what: not all disclosure is… Continue reading
In Massachusetts. Fifth in seven years. Anyone know where that frequency sits on the record books?
Please consider this the awkward transition to non-Shelby-County news for the day.
Looks like Shelby County has inspired at least a few new domain names to collect activist energies.
Among them:
RestoreVotingRights.org (calling on Congress to act)
FreeToVote.org (calling for a constitutional amendment)
Yes, I’ve got some thoughts too. Some of them are in this conversation with Ashby Jones at the Wall St. Journal (just enough to tantalize before the paywall).
I’ve also got a post up at the SCOTUSblog symposium: Shadowboxing and … Continue reading