“Federal court refuses to speed review of election law”

Florida Republican presidential primary will operate under two sets of rules.

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Posted in election administration, Voting Rights Act | Comments Off

“More Corporations Shed Light On Political Spending”

NPR reports.  The report concludes:

But conservative critics of disclosure don’t like it either. At the symposium, campaign finance lawyer Stefan Passantino invoked the old saying that sunlight is the best disinfectant. And he added this: “Sometimes sunlight is a disinfectant, and sometimes sunlight causes cancer.”

The conservative argument against disclosure rests on a Supreme Court case from the 1950s, in which Alabama officials wanted to shut down the NAACP by exposing its members and organizers.

Passantino admitted it’s not a great analogy, suggesting that corporations that supply politicians with seven-figure checks are like civil rights workers who were beaten or killed in the old Jim Crow South.

Indeed.

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Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off

“Democrats Get No Extra Time to Gather Names for Redistricting Issue Petition”

News from Ohio.

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Posted in redistricting, referendum | Comments Off

“Corporate Disclosure of Political Spending Now Norm as Companies Restrict Campaign Outlays, New CPA-Zicklin Index Reveals”

The Center for Political Accountability has issued this press release.

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Posted in campaign finance | Comments Off

“Judge denies restraining order in campaign-finance case”

News from Arizona.

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California Republicans Complain to Obama DOJ That CA Redistricting Violates Section 5 of VRA

Retrogression?

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Posted in citizen commissions, redistricting, Voting Rights Act | Comments Off

“McManus: The third-party wild card; There is likely to be a wild card in the 2012 election with the group Americans Elect planning to hold a national primary election on the Internet.”

Doyle McManus has written this LA Times oped.

My election law students and I were discussing Americans Elect today, and some of the students told me that the answers of the voters (or purported voters) who signed up on the AE website seemed to be a bit left of center.  That’s not what I would have expected.

I wanted to explore those answers further, but they don’t seem available unless one signs up with the group or logs in on the website.

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Posted in third parties | Comments Off

“John Edwards charges won’t be dropped by judge”

Politico reports (includes comments on the case from Jan Baran).

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Posted in campaign finance, John Edwards | Comments Off

Add Georgia to the List of States Arguing that Sec. 5 of the VRA is Unconstitutional

AP reports.

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Posted in Voting Rights Act | Comments Off

“‘Bundlers’ for Obama Have Active Ties to Lobbying”

NYT reports.

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“Interest Groups Flex Clout in Judicial Elections”

AP writes on the new report by by Justice at Stake, Brennan Center for Justice and the National Institute on Money in State Politics.  More here.

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“Lobbyists playing key role in 2012 fundraising”

WaPo reports.

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Posted in campaign finance, lobbying | Comments Off

“Campaign Legal Center & Democracy 21 File Brief in Real Truth About Obama’s Continuing Bid to Overturn Donor Disclosure Requirements”

See this press release.

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“FVAP report shows continued trends in military voting”

That’s the lead story in this week’s Electionline Weekly.

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Posted in election administration | Comments Off

John Edwards to Trial? Maybe not.

John Edwards, putting the best face on a big loss, says he wants his day in court.  According to a Raleigh News & Observerarticle, the trial judge, while rejecting the motion to dismiss, “noted that some of the defense team’s arguments had merit that would be better decided at trial.”

For reasons noted in this Slate piece, I think Edwards ultimately has a good chance of prevailing on his argument.  (Rick Pildes–in an award winning post (to be featured in The Green Bag)– believes Edwards’ defense case is even stronger.)

My question for criminal procedure folks is the availability/wisdom of seeking some kind of interlocutory review of the legal question before trial in the 4th Circuit.  I know nothing on the criminal side of things, so I would welcome some education on this question.

Edwards doesn’t really want to go to trial, because jurors have reasons to hate him unrelated to his crime.  Can he avoid it through an interlocutory appeal?

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Posted in campaign finance, John Edwards | Comments Off

“Defending America’s Courts: The Fight to Maintain a Fair and Impartial Judiciary”

This event will be held Nov. 1 in NY.

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Posted in judicial elections | Comments Off

“California high court rejects challenges to redistricting”

The end of this LA Times article notes: “Some minority rights groups, particularly Latinos, complained that the maps did not properly reflect their growth and threatened to sue in federal court. So far, none has.”

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Posted in citizen commissions, redistricting, Voting Rights Act | Comments Off

“Colorado Secret Ballot Battle: Can You Collect Too Much Data?”

Doug Chapin blogs.

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Posted in election administration | Comments Off

Kansas Gov’t Ethic Commission Fines Fraudulent Fraud Squad Member Kobach

SOS Kobach hit with fines for campaign finance reporting violations and lack of candor with Kansas ethics commission.

Kobach has been an outspoken supporter of voter identification laws to prevent a virtually non-existent type of voter fraud.

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Posted in campaign finance, election administration, fraudulent fraud squad | Comments Off

“‘SC submits voter ID law response”

AP: “The response made up mostly of material generated by the state Election Commission includes an estimate that nearly 239,000 of the state’s 2.7 million active and inactive voters don’t have state-issued driver’s licenses or ID cards with photos.”

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Posted in voter id, Voting Rights Act | Comments Off

Breaking News: John Edwards Loses His Motions to Get Case Dismissed

See here.  I’ll be very interested to see the judge’s reasoning.

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“Implicit Bias in Legal Interpretation”

Ward Farnsworth Dustin Guzior and Anup Malani have posted this draft on SSRN.  Here is the abstract:

What role do policy preferences play when a judge or any other reader decides what a statute or  other legal text means? Most judges think of themselves as doing law, not politics. Yet the observable decisions that judges make often follow patterns that are hard to explain by anything other than policy preferences. Indeed, if one presses the implications of the data too hard, it is likely to be heard as an accusation of bad faith – a claim that the judge or other decision-maker isn’t really earnest in trying to separate preference from judgment. This does not advance the discussion, and distracts from the possibility of more interesting explanations. A promising antidote, we believe, lies in empirical study not just of large numbers of judicial decisions collected over time, as previous scholars have done, but of the immediate experience of legal interpretation.

We compile, and here present, rich evidence of what happens when lawyers in training are asked in controlled surveys to distinguish between their policy preferences on the one hand and their own interpretive judgments or predictions about courts judgments on the other. Our findings offer two lessons. First and foremost, they suggest that separating policy preferences from judgments about the meaning of statutes is very difficult. The same is true of preferences and predictions about what courts will do: respondents tend to predict that courts will do what the respondents themselves prefer. The fundamental entanglement of preferences and interpretation raises important questions about the ability of anyone – including judges – to neutrally carry out interpretive strategies meant to generate answers in close cases. Second, however, the results also show that certain ways of framing the interpretive question can reduce the influence of preference on interpretation – though perhaps not its effect on predictions. Instead of simply asking respondents how they would interpret the text of a statute or how the drafters would likely want it applied, it is better to ask respondents how ordinary readers would interpret the statute. This framing of the interpretative question can debias an individual’s interpretation of a statute.

In short, interpretative theories that elevate text alone or give the intent of drafters are both susceptible to contamination by private preferences. To immunize interpretation from these preferences, a theory that asks how ordinary readers would read a statute may be the best prescription.

This looks like a very interesting paper!

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Posted in legislation and legislatures, statutory interpretation | Comments Off

“Artur Davis, New Voter ID Convert, Donates To Republicans”

TPM reports.

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Former FEC Chief Michael Toner: No Limits, Real-Time Disclosure

The Politico interview.  At least I can agree with half of what he has to say!

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“Arizona Governor Starts Impeachment Process Against Redistricting Panel”

Whoa.

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Posted in citizen commissions, redistricting | Comments Off

Capital Notes Report on Redistricting Decision, Including Reaction from Chuck Bell

Here.

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Posted in citizen commissions, redistricting, Voting Rights Act | Comments Off

“The Influence Industry: Judicial elections, corporate policies give glimpse into 2012″

WaPo:

Two studies scheduled for release Thursday offer contrasting predictions for the 2012 elections: Outside groups are likely to spend more money than ever, but many top corporations may not be among them. The first analysis, by a trio of advocacy organizations, found that almost a third of the money spent on state judicial elections in 2010 came from outside interest groups — a dramatic departure from historic norms. The authors argue that the pattern is a harbinger of the spending to come across the board next year. The second study, by the Center for Political Accountability, found that a majority of companies in the S&P 100 have adopted policies requiring that they disclose any direct corporate spending on politics. In addition, the survey found, many are limiting or banning such spending.

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Posted in campaign finance, judicial elections | Comments Off

“Statement of Democracy 21 President Fred Wertheimer on Illegality of Leadership ‘Super PAC’ Proposed by Senator Mike Lee”

He’s not happy.

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Posted in campaign finance | Comments Off

Debo P. Adegbile, NAACP Lawyer in NAMUDNO, Rumored to Be Nominated to D.C. Circuit [corrected headline]

Via Mike Sacks comes this interesting news.  If Adegbile does get a hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee, I expect Senator Sessions and others to spend a lot of time discussing the constitutionality of section 5 of the Voting Rights Act.

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Posted in election law biz | Comments Off

“Redrawn Districts Could Shake Up Congress”

NPR’s “Talk of the Nation” explores.

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Posted in redistricting | Comments Off

“Campaign Legal Center & Democracy 21 File Brief in Appeal of Decision Overturning Century-Old Law Banning Corporate Contributions to Candidates & Parties”

This press release links to this 4th Circuit amicus brief in Danielczyk.  (The brief cites some of my blog posts on this case.)

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Posted in campaign finance | Comments Off

Breaking News: California Supreme Court Denies Writ Petitions in Redistricting Cases

My good friends at Horvitz and Levy have the details, and the procedures of what may happen next in the courts.

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Posted in citizen commissions, redistricting | Comments Off

“ACLU: Voter ID ads potentially misleading”

AP reports from South Carolina.

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Posted in election administration, voter id | Comments Off

“Feds: Rick Perry-Signed Texas Redistricting Plan Reduces Voting Power Of 479,704 Hispanics”

TPM reports and links to the latest DOJ filing in the preclearance case.

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Posted in redistricting, Voting Rights Act | Comments Off

“Big Democratic Donors Stiff Super PACs”

Politico reports.

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Posted in campaign finance | Comments Off

“John Edwards Case Shadowed by Politics”

Politico reports.

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Posted in campaign finance | Comments Off

Politico Interviews Brad Smith

in its Money & Politics video series.

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Posted in campaign finance | Comments Off

“Mike Lee wants to be first politician with his own super PAC”

The Salt Lake Tribunereports (via Political Wire).

As I explained yesterday in Slate, this is a trojan horse for the return of soft money.

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“Emanuel Cleaver, Artur Davis Spar Over Voter ID Laws”

Roll Call reports.

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Posted in voter id | Comments Off

“Edwards Fights Campaign Finance Case”

NYT reports.

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Posted in John Edwards | Comments Off

“Are Your State’s Ballots Difficult to Understand?”

A Pew election data dispatch.

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Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off

“Super-Soft Money: How Justice Kennedy paved the way for ‘SuperPACS’ and the return of soft money’

I have written this Jurisprudence essay for Slate. It begins:

Soft money is coming back to national politics, and in a big way. And we can blame it all on a single sentence in Justice Anthony Kennedy’s opinion in 2010’s controversial Citizens United decision—a sentence that was unnecessary to resolve the case.

In this election cycle, “superPACs” will likely replace political parties as a conduit for large, often secret contributions, allowing an end run around the $2,400 individual contribution limit and the bar on corporate and labor contributions to federal candidates.

Another snippet:

Now comes the most audacious argument in this series so far. If all PACs are Super-PACs, then the rules for these PACs should also apply to “leadership PACs.” Leadership PACs are political committees that sitting members of Congress (and others) set up to allow them to make contributions to other candidates and spend money to support their election. It is a way for a member of Congress to build influence.

Sen. Mike Lee’s Leadership PAC, the Constitutional Conservatives Fund PAC, has just asked the Federal Election Commission for permission to collect unlimited contributions from corporations, labor unions, and wealthy individuals for independent spending to elect other candidates. The SuperPAC’s lawyers argue that there’s no danger of corrupting these other candidates, because its spending to help them get elected will be independent of those candidates.

Even if we suspend disbelief and agree on this point, the request ignores the greater danger: that the leader of the leadership PAC will become, or appear, corrupt. Corporations or labor unions (acting through other organizations to shield their identity from public view) could give unlimited sums to an elected official’s leadership PAC, which could then be used for the official to yield influence with others.

There’s nothing to stop someone like Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell from effectively becoming the fundraising arm of the Republican Party, funneling all the money through his leadership PAC. The McCain-Feingold law barred political parties from collecting such unlimited “soft money” contributions, and the Supreme Court in 2003 upheld that limit on the grounds that such unlimited fundraising by politicians could corrupt politicians or create the appearance of corruption.

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Posted in campaign finance | Comments Off

“State voter ID measure expected to see some changes in Senate”

News from Pa.

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Posted in election administration, voter id | Comments Off

Give the People What They Want

Dean Logan will try in L.A. (h/t The Kinks)

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Posted in election administration | Comments Off

“Ex-McCain lawyer: Barack Obama ‘mugged’ John McCain in 2008″

A Politico interview with Trevor Potter.

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“Since the 1990s, black Democrats and Republicans have been in an “unholy alliance” when it comes to redistricting.”

An alliance unraveling?

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Posted in redistricting, Voting Rights Act | Comments Off

“Ed Lee Ballot Scandal Spawns Difficult Legal Questions”

SF Weekly: “The only law definitively broken by the pro-Ed Lee volunteers caught on film filling out and collecting ballots in Chinatown was the law of common decency. The introduction of a stencil-like device that allows people to expediently vote only for Lee and his chosen items introduces a literal aspect to the notion of ‘machine politics.’ This course and unseemly behavior hearkens to tales of Tammany Hall — but at least the chislers of old were discreet enough to conduct their business behind closed doors.”

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Posted in campaigns, chicanery | Comments Off

“Holcomb: Time for Indiana Democrats to Clean House; Releases Fact Sheet on Their Pattern of Election Fraud

The latest salvo.

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Posted in The Voting Wars | Comments Off

“Republicans Embrace Twitter Hard for ’12″

Tweeting, pizza, and partisanship in the NYT.

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Posted in campaigns, social media and social protests | Comments Off

“Who Are the Vote Fraudsters Artur Davis Warned Us About?”

Read Weigel.

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Posted in voter id | Comments Off