U.S. Supreme Court rejects House Republicans' challenge to pandemic-era
voting rules
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[January 25, 2022]
By Jan Wolfe
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The U.S. Supreme
Court on Monday declined to hear a challenge by Republican lawmakers to
pandemic-related proxy voting rules set by Speaker Nancy Pelosi in the
Democratic-led House of Representatives that were tailored to limit
exposure to COVID-19.
The voting rules, implemented in May 2020, allow members of the 435-seat
House to serve as proxies for colleagues in quarantine or otherwise
unable to cast floor votes in the chamber. House Republican leader Kevin
McCarthy and other lawmakers had asked the Supreme Court to reverse a
lower court decision that allowed the remote voting rules to remain in
effect.
The resolution passed by the House enabled lawmakers to act as a proxy
for up to 10 colleagues at any one time, requiring that they disclose
which members they intended to represent. The proxy voting system was
embraced early in the pandemic and was intended to be temporary, but has
been extended several times. The most recent extension is in effect
until Feb. 13.
Republican lawmakers have called the measure a violation of the U.S.
Constitution, arguing that only lawmakers actually present within the
halls of Congress can cast votes. Republicans also called the resolution
a way for Democrats to maintain their slim majority in the House
regardless of whether all their members are present on Capitol Hill.
Despite Republican opposition to the measure, both parties have taken
advantage of the proxy voting system to work remotely - much like
millions of other U.S. office-workers.
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The sun sets at the U.S. Supreme Court building in Washington, U.S.,
November 29, 2021. REUTERS/Leah Millis/File Photo
Last May, seven House Democrats cast
votes by proxy when they joined President Joe Biden on a visit to a
Ford Motor Co plant in Michigan. The following month, nine House
Republicans voted by proxy while visiting the U.S.-Mexican border
with former President Donald Trump.
A federal appeals court dealt a setback to McCarthy's legal
challenge last July. Affirming a lower court ruling, the U.S. Court
of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit said it was
foreclosed from reviewing the proxy voting rules.
The D.C. Circuit's three-judge panel cited the Constitution's
"speech or debate" clause that offers broad protection to members of
Congress against lawsuits for actions they undertake as legislators.
The House has embraced other rules aimed at protecting the safety of
lawmakers during the pandemic including a requirement for wearing
face masks and a prohibition on congregating in an area called the
Speakers Lobby outside the House chamber. In addition, many House
and Senate hearings are held virtually. Tourists are not allowed in
the Capitol.
The legal challenge brought by McCarthy and his colleagues is an
example of the sharp partisan tensions in the House and the
Republican animus toward Pelosi. Republicans are seeking to regain a
majority in the chamber in November's congressional elections.
(Reporting by Jan Wolfe; Editing by Will Dunham)
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