The Columbus Dispatch

American voters don’t need a dress code

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Should voters have to abide by a dress code? The idea seems absurd. Yet when Andrew Cilek showed up to cast his ballot in Hennepin County, Minnesota, in 2010, he was asked to remove or cover up a tea party shirt and a button reading “Please ID Me” (a message promoting a controvers­ial step by poll workers — demanding identifica­tion from would-be voters — as a way to guard against election fraud).

Cilek eventually was allowed to vote without removing the offending shirt and button. But last week his lawyer asked the Supreme Court to strike down the state law that brought his apparel under the scrutiny of election officials. It prohibits the wearing of a “political badge, political button, or other political insignia” at a polling place on election day.

The court should do so because the law is a violation of the First Amendment; the only issue is how broad the ruling should be.

Last Wednesday’s oral argument validated the main contention raised by Cilek and the Minnesota Voters Alliance: that the law is unconstitu­tionally overbroad because it suppresses speech far beyond advocacy for a party or candidate. Even worse, the state seems to have arbitrary standards for deciding which political messages fall on the permissibl­e side of the line.

In a revealing exchange with Justice Samuel Alito, Daniel Rogan, the lawyer defending the law, suggested that a shirt bearing the slogan “Parkland Strong” (a reference to the site of the recent Florida school shooting) would be permissibl­e, but not a shirt showing the logo of the National Rifle Associatio­n. Likewise, Rogan said, a shirt displaying the text of the First Amendment would be acceptable, but one displaying the text of the Second Amendment “could be viewed as political.”

Justice Neil Gorsuch worried that the state’s approach “would forbid people from wearing certain portions of the Bill of Rights into a polling place but not other portions of the Bill of Rights.” That worries us too. What constitute­s an unacceptab­ly political message on a piece of clothing is inherently a subjective judgment that government officials ought not to be making.

Minnesota goes further than many other states in regulating expression at polling places.

A better line to draw would prohibit active electionee­ring at a polling place while allowing the silent advocacy of a shirt bearing a political message or a political button.

That approach not only would show a greater respect for free speech; it also would recognize that voters are increasing­ly casting ballots by mail or dropping them off at early-voting centers, making the concerns about political messaging at polling places less meaningful. If an organized group of voters used messages on clothing or buttons to try to intimidate other voters who continue to vote at public polling places — a scenario raised by the state of Minnesota — that could be addressed by election officials.

Ideally the court will rule broadly in this case. But at a minimum it must strike down Minnesota’s law. Workers at polling places shouldn’t be critiquing either the fashion choices or the opinions of voters.

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