Monthly Archives: July 2019
LULAC v. PILF settle two different lawsuits
Well, one lawsuit, really, over publishing identifying
information of individuals incorrectly accused of committing voter fraud.
But you’d never know it was the same suit from reading the
press releases. Plaintiffs here,
defendants here.
(Disclosure: I helped
one… Continue reading
“Mississippi: Election lawsuit is not about voting rights”
The
AP has a story about a lawsuit challenging the requirement for winning
statewide office that candidates win both a majority of the popular vote and
a plurality of the vote in the majority of Mississippi state house districts.
“Make the Guarantee Clause Great Again”
A clever title for a clever
piece about partisan gerrymandering, and the doctrine holding the Guarantee
Clause nonjusticiable. I’m inclined to
agree on the substance.
Common Cause wants you to know what presidential candidates think about democracy
They’ve got a 17-question
survey polling the candidates on particular campaign and electoral
reforms. Sanders, Warren, Buttigieg,
Booker, Williamson, and Bullock have turned in their take-home exams already.
Voters file petition to get Pennsylvania to reconsider voting technology
The fight in Pennsylvania continues.
Redistricting using a citizenship count
Ari Berman adds his voice to discussion of the potential ahead.
Estimating the undocumented without the census
Demographers weigh in on alternatives to a direct count.
(Note: this is an update of a piece published in 2016. Apparently, the issue is still of some interest.)
“It’s time voting be constitutionally limited to U.S. citizens”
A would-be movement to amend state constitutions to provide that only U.S. citizens may lawfully vote in state elections.
Of course, all state constitutions have currently been interpreted to provide that only U.S. citizens may lawfully vote in state elections.
“The Feds Have Helped Some Gerrymandering to Thrive”
A letter
in the WSJ claims that Eric Holder helped to lead the charge in Bethune-Hill, after
approving Virginia districts in 2011.
Consider me skeptical.
The letter appears to conflate preclearance approval (which focused on two
particular legal standards;… Continue reading
“It May Not Seem That Way, but Politicians Often Do What Voters Want”
New data analysis in The
Upshot.
“In Queens district attorney race, voters want affidavit ballots counted”
Provisional or affidavit ballots are counted even when there’s
not a recount. But there’s a whole lot
more attention on them when the
recount comes to town.
Looking to the high schools
The Civics Center has been particularly active in encouraging eligible high school students to register and vote. A post today discusses the path forward after legislation failed in Maryland, following on a post a few weeks ago discussing a pending… Continue reading
“Leahy casts his 16,000th vote, joining an exclusive Senate club”
After a vote on a tax treaty with Japan, Vermont’s only
Democratic Senator ever is now one
of four Senators in history to reach the 16,000-vote plateau.