U.S. Supreme Court set to weigh Republican-backed voting restrictions
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[February 25, 2021]
By Andrew Chung
(Reuters) - Fresh off an election in which
former President Donald Trump made false claims of fraud, the U.S.
Supreme Court is poised to ponder the legality of a restriction on early
voting in Arizona that his fellow Republicans argued was needed to
combat fraud.
The Republican-backed law, spurred in part by a video purportedly
showing voter fraud that courts later deemed misleading, made it a crime
to provide another person's completed early ballot to election
officials, with the exception of family members or caregivers.
Community activists sometimes engage in ballot collection to facilitate
voting and increase voter turnout. Ballot collection is legal in most
states, with varying limitations. Republican critics call the practice
"ballot harvesting."
Supreme Court arguments over the 2016 ban and another Arizona voting
restriction - both ruled unlawful by a lower court - are scheduled for
next Tuesday, with a decision due by the end of June. A broad ruling by
high court, which has a 6-3 conservative majority, endorsing the
restrictions could further weaken the Voting Rights Act, a landmark 1965
federal law that barred racial discrimination in voting, by making it
harder to prove violations.
The video, taken from security camera footage, shows a man carrying a
box of ballots into a Maricopa County Elections Department office. It
was posted on a blog in 2014 by A.J. LaFaro, the Republican Party
chairman at the time in Maricopa County, which includes Phoenix.
LaFaro's post questioned whether the man was a U.S. citizen and called
him a "violent thug" who was "stuffing the ballot box as I watched in
amazement." A judge later called the blog post "racially charged" and
concluded that the footage showed no illegal activity. The man seen in
the video filed an unsuccessful defamation suit against LaFaro.
Republican-governed states including Arizona have imposed a variety of
voting restrictions in recent years. In the aftermath of Trump's
baseless claims of fraud, further curbs on voting are being pursued in
33 states following his Nov. 3 loss to Democrat Joe Biden in an election
that drew record turnout, according to New York University School of
Law's Brennan Center for Justice.
'THE MAIN TOOL'
At issue in the Supreme Court case is the Voting Rights Act's Section 2,
which bans any rule that results in voting discrimination "on account of
race or color." The court in 2013 gutted another section of the statute
that determined which states with a history of racial discrimination
needed federal approval to change voting laws.
Weakening Section 2 would eliminate "the main tool we have left now to
protect voters against racial discrimination," said Myrna Pérez,
director of the Brennan Center's Voting Rights and Elections Program.
"If there's one thing that the election and the insurrection showed it's
that not everyone buys into the idea of free, fair and accessible
elections," Pérez added, referring to a pro-Trump mob's Jan. 6 rampage
at the U.S. Capitol.
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Sign directs voters to a polling station on Election Day in Tucson,
Arizona, U.S. November 3, 2020. REUTERS/Cheney Orr/File Photo
The Supreme Court case also involves a longstanding Arizona policy
that discards ballots cast in-person at a precinct other than the
one to which a voter has been assigned. In some places, voters'
precincts are not the closest one to their home.
The case pits Arizona's Republican Attorney General Mark Brnovich
and the Arizona Republican Party against the Democratic National
Committee and the Arizona Democratic Party, which sued over the
restrictions. Arizona's Democratic Secretary of State Katie Hobbs
has backed the challenge.
The two sides differ sharply over whether genuine voter fraud must
be documented to justify ballot restrictions.
"The notion that voter fraud must be proved in order to enact
regulations of elections is not established in the law," said
Republican election lawyer Jason Torchinsky, who filed a brief
backing Brnovich. "There are tons of areas where legislatures
legislate without proving that some kind of fraud or crime has
occurred."
Jessica Ring Amunson, an attorney who represents Hobbs, said courts
should take false fraud claims into account when evaluating the
legality of voting restrictions.
Legislatures often justify such restrictions as necessary to tackle
fraud and increase voter confidence, but "simultaneously they're
spreading baseless claims of voter fraud when none exists, and that
is the very thing that is leading to people losing confidence in
elections," she added.
The San Francisco-based 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals last year
found Arizona's restrictions unlawful, though they remained in
effect for the Nov. 3 election. It ruled that the restrictions
disproportionately burdened Black, Hispanic and Native American
voters and violated the Voting Rights Act.
The 9th Circuit also found that "false, race-based claims of ballot
collection fraud" were used to convince Arizona legislators to enact
that restriction with discriminatory intent, violating the U.S.
Constitution's prohibition on denying voting rights based on race.
U.S. District Judge Douglas Rayes in 2018 faulted Arizona's
legislature for its "misinformed belief that ballot collection fraud
was occurring," but upheld the voting restrictions. The 9th Circuit
last year overturned that ruling.
(Reporting by Andrew Chung in New York; Editing by Will Dunham)
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