Sun-Sentinel: “In the end, Florida didn’t actually matter at all. And that’s a good thing. Because even though President Obama got more than enough electoral votes to win reelection Tuesday, Florida is still officially up for grabs.”
Jack Chin has posted this draft on SSRN. Here is the abstract:
In NAMUDNO v. Holder, the Supreme Court suggested that Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 was unconstitutional. The Court explained that Section 5, requiring preclearance… Continue reading
Emily Bazelon writes at Slate.
Interestingly, the Court has relisted the Shelby County case involving the constitutionality of the Voting Rights Act for this week’s conference, meaning a decision on whether or not to hear the case could come the… Continue reading
At least one Justice has requested the record in the Shelby County Voting Rights Act case, meaning any decision on whether or not to hear the case—raising the question whether the section 5 preclearance provisions is constitutional—won’t come until after… Continue reading
AP reports on the expected cert. decision in Shelby County, which is expected tomorrow morning at 9:30 am despite the storm.
I’ve been strongly predicting a cert. grant.
Gerry Hebert: “It has been widely predicted that the US Supreme Court will grant certiorari in Shelby County, Alabama’s challenge to the constitutionality of Section 5 of the VRA. The case is set for conference tomorrow and we could… Continue reading
Daniel McCool has edited this new book with an ideologically broad collection of authors:
Preface
Section I: The Political and Legal Context of the Voting Rights Act
1. Meaningful Votes \Daniel McCool
2. The Constitutional Foundations of the “Pre-Clearance” Process:… Continue reading
You can read the brief (Paul Clement, counsel of record) here. It makes statutory arguments the Court is likely to consider about the meaning of the Voting Rights Act’s section 5 preclearance provision and it raises the issue of… Continue reading
NYT: “What began as a gap between the digital revolution and the way South Carolina’s candidates had long filed for office has blown up into a legal battle that many say reflects a state whose politics have been raucous since… Continue reading