Ned Foley Blogging Next Two Weeks
Thanks to Nick for covering what has turned out to be a very busy week in the ELB world! Ned Foley is primary ELB blogger for the next two weeks starting Monday. So send your tips and comments to… Continue reading
“Lee Drutman responds to Steven Hill: ‘Yes, Fusion does offer a new horizon for US Politics'”
Lee Drutman defends fusion voting as a policy that modern reformers should push for:
As a political scientist who studies electoral systems and the role of political parties in our democracy, I want to explain here why I see fusion… Continue reading
A Dissent From the View that the Court’s VRA Decision in the Alabama Case Was a Stunning Surprise
It’s understandable that much of the reaction to the Milligan decision on the VRA is to be stunned that the Roberts Court would endorse the VRA claim and require Alabama to create a second ability-to-elect congressional district for black voters… Continue reading
I Spoke with NPR’s Michel Martin for Morning Edition About the Supreme Court’s Voting Rights Act Decision in Allen v. Milligan
You can listen here.
You can also read my NY Times guest essay, John Roberts Throws a Curveball.
“New York Court Hears Arguments to Redraw the State’s Congressional Maps in 2024”
Politico on litigation that might lead to the redrawing of New York’s congressional map, with major implications for the composition of both New York’s delegation and the House as a whole:
A legal challenge that could eventually give New York… Continue reading
“Counties Irate over Legislature’s Plan to Change Election Law”
NY State of Politics on the proposed New York bill to move some local elections on-cycle. Of course, county elected officials who won their positions in off-cycle elections oppose the change. By the same token, the beneficiaries of gerrymandering always… Continue reading
“Republicans Are No Longer Calling This Election Program a ‘Godsend’”
Jesse Wegman for the NYT on the red state exodus from ERIC — a shift impossible to square with any supposed interest in maintaining voter rolls and preventing fraud.
Republican officials have for a long time rightly insisted on the… Continue reading
“Polarization in State Supreme Courts, 1980-2020”
Brett Parker has posted this paper finding a moderate increase in ideological polarization on state supreme courts:
Research has documented elite polarization in a variety of areas, including Congress, the executive branch, and the federal judiciary. To my knowledge, however,… Continue reading
“A Democracy Crisis in the Making”
This joint report from Protect Democracy, States United Democracy Center, and Law Forward tracks bills across the country that increase the risk of election subversion:
As we demonstrate in this edition of the Report, the danger of a democracy crisis… Continue reading
“[T]he Whole Point of the Enterprise” (Katz)
This is a guest post from Ellen Katz:
Much of Allen’s significance may lie in the small section of the Chief Justice ’s opinion that Justice Kavanaugh refused to join, and the final point Justice Kavanaugh offered in his… Continue reading
“The Supreme Court’s Voting Rights Decision Is Even Better Than It Looks”
Rick Pildes wrote this piece for Slate on how plaintiffs may harness new redistricting technology to bring more successful Section 2 claims after Milligan:
This new technology makes it possible to find VRA districts that might have been hard to… Continue reading
“John Roberts Throws a Curveball”
I have written this piece for the NY Times. It begins:
The Supreme Court’s voting rights ruling on Thursday in Allen v. Milligan is as shocking as it is welcome. The Voting Rights Act has lived to see another day,… Continue reading
Early Thoughts on Milligan
Here are some early thoughts on today’s historic and unexpected decision in Milligan:
1. The Roberts Court Did This? Before today, the Roberts Court had only chipped away at racial vote dilution claims under Section 2. In LULAC, the Court… Continue reading