Monthly Archives: July 2014
Video Now Available of 4th Annual @UCILaw #SCOTUS Term in Review Event
“Shaun McCutcheon wades into Mississippi race”- Unimpressively
According to Politico, McCutcheon is alleging that thousands of people voted in Democratic primary in #MSSEN then voted in Republican runoff a few weeks later.
But we have seen no proof of that at all yet. Where’s the proof in… Continue reading
“Political Analysts Say McDaniel Needs Hard Evidence To Win Election Challenge”
“Roberts’s Incremental Approach Frustrates Supreme Court Allies”
“Washington’s Unconstitutional Limits on Donations to Recall Campaigns Avoids Review”
The Institute for Justice has issued this press release.
A Problem with Paul Caron’s Law Blog Rankings
Every quarter, tax law prof (and owner of the Law Professor Blogs Network) Paul Caron publishes a list of the top blogs published by law professors. Here’s the most recent one. Election Law Blog usually ranks in the 20s… Continue reading
FEC Deadlocks on Cases Involving Americans for Job Security, American Action Network
Bloomberg BNA Money and Politics Report breaking news: “The Federal Election Commission, in apparent deadlocked votes, has dismissed enforcement cases against two major conservative nonprofit groups that spent millions of dollars on political ads in the 2010 and 2012 elections.… Continue reading
Judge in True the Vote #MSSEN Case Recuses Because of Friendship with Senator Cochran
“Feds taking ‘prime role’ in Texas voting maps case”
“Kansas to Proceed with Two-Track Registration This Fall”
“Democracy Alliance President: Campaign Finance Reform a Means to Push Liberal Policy Goals”
“The CEO and the Hydraulics of Campaign Finance Deregulation”
Sarah Haan has written this essay for the Northwestern University Law Review Online. Here is the abstract:
In The CEO and the Hydraulics of Campaign Finance Deregulation, Professor Sarah Haan assesses what the Supreme Court’s evolving campaign finance jurisprudence could… Continue reading