Hamilton Journal News

Supreme Court likely to uphold Arizona voting restrictio­ns

- By Mark Sherman

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court appeared ready Tuesday to uphold voting restrictio­ns in Arizona in a key case that could make it harder to challenge a raft of other voting measures Republican­s have proposed following last year’s elections.

All six conservati­ve justices, appointed by Republican presidents, suggested they would throw out an appellate ruling that struck down the restrictio­ns as racially discrimina­tory under the landmark Voting Rights Act. The three liberal members of the court, appointed by Democrats, were more sympatheti­c to the challenger­s.

Less clear is what standard the court might set for how to prove discrimina­tion under the law, first enacted in 1965.

The outcome could make it harder, if not impossible, to use the Voting Rights Act to sue over legislatio­n that creates obstacles to voting in the name of election security. Such measures are currently making their way through dozens of Republican-controlled state legislatur­es.

Civil rights groups and Democrats argue that the proposed restrictio­ns would disproport­ionately affect minority voters, important Democratic constituen­cies.

Democrats in Congress, meanwhile, have proposed national legislatio­n that would remove such security-driven obstacles to voting.

Many of those proposals are being driven by former President Donald Trump’s repeated false claims of a stolen election, although state elections officials and judges in state and federal courts found no evidence of significan­t problems.

The Supreme Court case has strong partisan implicatio­ns, with Arizona and national Republican­s on one side, state and national

Democrats on the other.

The Arizona provisions under review were in place for last year’s voting. They are a 2016 law that limits who can return early ballots for another person and a separate policy of discarding ballots cast in the wrong precinct.

Both parties used ballot collection in Arizona to boost turnout during elections by going door to door and asking voters if they had completed their mail-in ballots. Voters who hadn’t were urged to do so, and the volunteers offered to take the ballots to election offices. Democrats used the process more effectivel­y.

Republican­s who control the legislatur­e made a crime of ballot collection, dubbed ballot harvesting by opponents, other than for family members and caregivers. Eighty percent of the state’s voters use mail-in ballots or vote early in person.

The federal appeals court in San Francisco found that

Black, Hispanic and Native American voters were most heavily affected by the new law.

Both Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Brett Kavanaugh pointed to the 2005 recommenda­tion of a commission chaired by former President Jimmy Carter and the late James Baker to eliminate ballot collection, among other ideas to reduce the chance for election fraud.

Kavanaugh said the recommenda­tion seemed to be the sort of “circumstan­ce that puts a thumb on the scale in favor of the legitimacy of the rule.”

Jessica Amunson, representi­ng Arizona Secretary of State Katie Hobbs in opposition to the restrictio­ns, said the court should not ignore the state’s experience with ballot collection.

“Arizona had a 25-year history of literally not a single instance of fraud with ballot collection,” Amunson said on behalf of Hobbs, a Democrat.

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