In Arizona, the commission on appellate court appointments is also the screening body for applicants to the state’s independent redistricting commission. And with tomorrow’s deadline on applications to the commission, KJZZ has a story on some of the upstream impact… Continue reading
Christina Wolbrecht and J. Kevin Corder with
a new book on the 100th anniversary of the 19th
Amendment. The abstract:
How have American women voted in the first 100 years since the ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment? How have popular… Continue reading
The law, enacted over the Governor’s veto, usually requires
a qualifying photo ID to vote. As
compared to the previous ID law passed in the wake of Shelby County and invalidated in 2016, it expands the list of
acceptable IDs… Continue reading
It starts with a tie between the Federalist Papers and the danger of fake news (which started a riot which earned John Jay a rock to the head), and includes a brief paean to the independence of the judiciary from… Continue reading
The Daily
Wire ties the census, redistricting, and (perhaps) a bit of wish
fulfillment. They’re not wrong about legislative
leadership use of redistricting to enforce party discipline, though.
It’ll be interesting to see the extent to which New York’s new … Continue reading
Josh
Blackman, at the Volokh Conspiracy, offers a timely reminder of the 2009
ACS essay compilation — “The Constitution in 2020” – with a progressive vision
of future constitutional law. The
compilation included, among others, a piece
by Pam … Continue reading
Here
come the allegations of unlawful coordination.
And with it, your reminder that,
as Dan Tokaji and Renata Strause explained
years ago, in assessing the legality of campaign coordination, there’s
often a “gap between the line the law draws… Continue reading