|
Post by onelasttime on Mar 29, 2023 18:20:35 GMT
Marc Elias’s law firm represents a chunk of groups/individuals that file law suits to overturn the voter suppression laws the Republicans majority state legislators are busy passing.
He tweeted that currently his firm is litigating 47 voting and election cases in 18 states.
He is good about providing details of what suppression laws are being discussed and those that have become law.
Because I like to share information and I think voting rights are important this thread will be about the laws the Republicans are busy passing to make it harder for people to vote in that particular state.
First up…
Curing is giving voters who send in mail in ballots a chance to correct minor errors on their ballots.
|
|
|
Post by onelasttime on Mar 29, 2023 18:24:51 GMT
It seems to me if these states are leaving this ERIC they are not interested in detecting fraud unless they themselves manufacture it.
|
|
|
Post by onelasttime on Mar 29, 2023 18:27:45 GMT
|
|
|
Post by onelasttime on Mar 29, 2023 18:29:33 GMT
|
|
|
Post by onelasttime on Mar 29, 2023 18:37:49 GMT
Way back when the Republicans decided it was a good idea to pass voter suppression laws I saw a panel of Republicans talking about what they were doing. And this one Republican consultant was very honest when he said they would not be touching absentee voting because they determined the majority who voted by absentee ballot were Republicans.
So absentee ballots have pretty much become mail-in ballots and a lot of Democrats vote by mail in ballots so look what’s going on…
|
|
|
Post by onelasttime on Mar 29, 2023 18:42:27 GMT
Boy ain’t that the truth…
|
|
|
Post by onelasttime on Mar 29, 2023 18:56:04 GMT
Marc Elias has a newsletter called Democracy Docket. This one caught my eye since I’m not a fan of the current Conservative majority in the Supreme Court. Especially Thomas and Alito.
From the newsletter
“Saving Our Courts Means Questioning All U.S. Supreme Court Norms”
By Rakim Brooks
“Conservatives have rigged our courts into crisis. They’ve seized control of the U.S. Supreme Court and built a pipeline through the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, particularly in Texas, to ensure they can receive whatever political result they want — the rest of the country be damned. Solving this means looking at specific reforms, but it also means being willing to question all of the Supreme Court’s current practices and forcing alignment with our democratic values.
The most recent cause for concern is the student loan debt cancelation case. Last week, I stood in front of the Court asking myself (and the crowd) a simple question: Why are we even here? As the justices’ questions during oral argument suggested, the challengers to President Joe Biden’s plan don’t even have standing, meaning — win or lose — they will be unaffected by the eventual ruling.
Without standing, this case is not fit for judicial resolution, which the U.S. Constitution limits to actual injury. Broad policy questions like debt cancelation belong in the court of public opinion and the legislative and executive branches. And there, the people have already decided: Student debt cancelation is the way forward to realizing the American dream. Still, conservative interests have driven the case to the Court at light speed and will likely be rewarded by the conservative majority.
This judicial overreach is enough to cause any concerned citizen a few sleepless nights. But what alarms me most about the Court is that, at the exact moment that it departs from precedent to pursue its unpopular agenda, the Court is becoming less and less transparent.
As the Alliance for Justice previously reported, the justices are increasingly relying on the shadow docket to institute seismic changes. Using the shadow docket — which handles the emergency requests to the Court that are decided without full briefing or argument and result in orders that are frequently unsigned and unexplained — allows them to avoid their standard procedures, including the usual process of taking the time to hear from both sides in thorough briefing. Then they issue an opinion without any explanation at all for decisions that nevertheless impact millions of people. It’s bad enough that their written opinions are not accessible to most citizens, but then they insulate themselves from critique by saying as little as possible about their reasoning.
Unfortunately, the shadow docket is just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to how the Supreme Court is slithering away from democracy.
There’s virtually no transparent process in how the justices arrive at their final opinions. When Congress passes a law, the public can observe every single amendment that was made back to the original filing of the bill. But like spies engaged in espionage, the justices keep nearly everything about their deliberations and work totally secret. As CNN recently reported, they print documents on printers that produce no logs of what was printed, and they use “burn bags” to destroy all deliberation materials.
Add to this the dine-and-dash approach they have when delivering their most consequential decisions. We tend to get the big blockbuster decisions near the end of the Supreme Court’s term in June, after which the justices literally disappear from sight. They go on “vacation” for months until the Court returns to session in the fall. Just as citizens are beginning to reconcile the monumental impact of the Court’s actions, the justices are free from engaging with the public whatsoever. Imagine all of the pregnant people forced to carry to term against their wishes after Dobbs and ask yourself: Did Justice Samuel Alito and the other justices really have nothing to answer for out of respect for their fellow citizens?
I know the old refrain: The Court follows the law, not the will of the people. But no democratic institution nor public official, however insulated from the democratic process, deserves to be this opaque and unaccountable for its actions.
The Court still serves the people. It shouldn’t be unreasonable to insist that the justices be in conversation with us about our sacred text and laws in a way that is audible to most Americans. Accountability and transparency have a proper relation to one another in a democracy: less accountability, more transparency.
Here are some reforms that I think are worth considering.
Just as we have a Presidential Record Act, which changed the legal ownership of the official records of the President from private to public, Congress should consider a Supreme Court Records Act to preserve the deliberations and work of the Court for public record.
Similarly, Congress announces its hearings and the subject matter prior to when they occur and the Court should follow suit by announcing opinion days weeks in advance and specifying which opinions will drop on which days to allow the public to prepare.
And yes, it is time for cameras in the Court and for the justices to adhere to something like the Plain Writing Act, which requires federal agencies to explain their reasoning in a way that is intelligible to all of us. I would even force them to read — on camera — abbreviated versions of their opinions to the public on those pre-announced decision days, something they’re still only offering to people who can physically be in the room with them.
My guiding principle is simple: The public deserves to understand the operations and decisions of its Court. Measures like establishing a code of ethics for the justices, imposing term limits or expanding the Court are all important to consider in this moment. But we also must reform the Court so that its “traditions” actually make sense for a democratic society — and so that it can stop undermining democracy in the dead of night. We must immediately demand that Congress act to ensure transparency. “
|
|
|
Post by lucyg on Mar 29, 2023 23:29:06 GMT
The Supreme Court is having its “let them eat cake” moment, and it needs to STOP.
|
|
|
Post by onelasttime on Mar 30, 2023 15:58:51 GMT
Marc Elias has been talking about this for sometime.
From the article …..
”The rehearing may impact a pending U.S. Supreme Court case on the independent state legislature theory.”
Legal scholars largely focused on a different angle: what the implications of the rehearing could mean for the landmark U.S. Supreme Court case Moore v. Harper. In Moore, the Republican legislators appealed the state Supreme Court’s February 2022 decision striking down the congressional map and replacing it with a court-imposed map to the U.S. Supreme Court. Their appeal invoked the fringe independent state legislature (ISL) theory to argue that state legislatures have special authority to draw congressional maps, free from interference from other parts of the state government such as state courts. Moore gives the Court the opportunity to review this theory — and potentially wreak havoc over federal elections.
|
|
|
Post by Merge on Mar 30, 2023 16:01:39 GMT
The latest one in the Texas lege, specifically targeting Harris County (Houston), would allow the governor to dismiss election officials appointed by our elected Democratic county leaders and replace them with people of his own choosing.
|
|
|
Post by onelasttime on Mar 31, 2023 20:31:21 GMT
|
|
|
Post by onelasttime on Apr 4, 2023 17:31:53 GMT
And in other news…
|
|
|
Post by Gem Girl on Apr 4, 2023 19:16:38 GMT
Thank you, onelasttime I was trying to recall his name and the name of his firm yesterday. Making note.
|
|
|
Post by onelasttime on Apr 5, 2023 20:15:10 GMT
|
|
|
Post by onelasttime on Apr 14, 2023 18:51:10 GMT
When trump tried to get state Republicans to stop the certification of the of the election he showed them what the needed to do to succeed the next time.
|
|
|
Post by onelasttime on May 23, 2023 20:31:29 GMT
Like I said before, trump showed them what they need to do to “steal” an election if they don’t like the results.
|
|
|
Post by onelasttime on May 23, 2023 21:18:07 GMT
|
|
|
Post by onelasttime on Jun 2, 2023 16:18:39 GMT
Keep in mind this is an “outside” group interfering in a state’s affairs.
|
|
|
Post by onelasttime on Jun 8, 2023 15:58:08 GMT
I know there is another thread about today’s decision by the Supreme Court on voting in Alabama.
This thread was started to keep track of all the voting litigation that is currently making its way through the courts. A large chunk of the litigation is being handled all or in part by Marc Elias’s law firm. One of the lawyers that present oral arguments in today’s decision works at that firm.
Because his firm is involved in many of these cases making their way through the courts he gives, I think, a good overview of how the Republicans are trying to screw the American People when it comes to voting.
So I’m updating this thread with the latest decision that is probably already been posted in the other thread.
|
|
|
Post by onelasttime on Jun 8, 2023 16:01:01 GMT
Marc Elias also has a big ego. But that’s ok his firm keeps winning lawsuits protecting our right to vote.
|
|
|
Post by onelasttime on Jun 8, 2023 16:43:03 GMT
|
|
|
Post by onelasttime on Jun 8, 2023 17:09:48 GMT
|
|
|
Post by onelasttime on Jun 8, 2023 18:20:15 GMT
|
|
|
Post by onelasttime on Jun 12, 2023 15:46:59 GMT
It never ceases to amaze me how far the Republicans will go to stop the voters from voting on issues.
|
|
|
Post by onelasttime on Jun 27, 2023 21:16:06 GMT
Today the Supreme Court issued a decision on Moore v Harper that has Marc Elias somewhat excited. It seems there some obscure law on States Rights that if the decision had gone the other way States would have the right to I guess ignore Federal Laws when it comes to voting.
Elias explains it in the tweets below.
When it comes to Federal Laws v States laws/rights I firmly believe there are certain things, like gun laws and voting rights that should be Federal. This way they apply equally to all Americans instead of the mess like what is happening with abortion. And Elias felt if the ruling on Moore v Harper had gone the other way voting rights would have been just the first Federal Law/rights that red states would go after.
|
|
|
Post by onelasttime on Jun 27, 2023 21:54:00 GMT
This is the second case Abha Khanna has argued before the Supreme Court recently and in both cases received a “win”. Or is it ruled in favor of her clients? She may have argued more but I only know of these two. Not bad.
|
|
|
Post by onelasttime on Jul 13, 2023 17:01:52 GMT
Meanwhile in other news. Isn’t interesting the new “thing” with the Republicans is to do things like this in areas that traditionally don’t vote for Republicans.
|
|
|
Post by onelasttime on Jul 13, 2023 17:07:39 GMT
You know as an American one should be appalled by the actions the Republican Majority in state legislatures are taking to discriminate against people who they feel will not vote for them.
That isn’t the American Way but yet voters keep electing these guys. So what does that say about these voters?
|
|
|
Post by onelasttime on Jul 13, 2023 19:22:19 GMT
Of course they did….
|
|
|
Post by onelasttime on Jul 20, 2023 20:17:56 GMT
An article about two voter bills in Congress..
“Two Major Elections Bills, Two Different Visions for Voters”
From the article…
”In early July, House Republicans introduced the American Confidence in Elections (ACE) Act, a sweeping voter suppression bill with recommendations for nationwide policy changes. Importantly, it would harness Congress’ control over Washington, D.C. to overhaul the city’s elections, exemplifying how Republicans want states to revise their own election systems.
Touted as the most “the most conservative election integrity bill to be seriously considered in the House in over 20 years”, the ACE Act is also the first national elections bill to root itself in the election conspiracy theories fostered by former President Donald Trump and the MAGA Republican Party over the last eight years.
In a near total contrast, the Freedom to Vote Act, first introduced by House Democrats in 2021, seeks to bolster access to the ballot box for every eligible voter across the country in pursuit of fulfilling our country’s still-aspirational democratic ideals. This week, Senate and House Democrats reintroduced the Freedom to Vote Act in response to the ACE Act’s introduction.
To better understand the dangers posed by the ACE Act, we highlight three of its most harmful provisions, outline the conspiracies or falsehoods behind the measures and compare them to the provisions in the Freedom to Vote Act; however, the two bills do not hold as many corresponding provisions that one might initially expect from competing elections bills. “
|
|