The Commercial Appeal

Judge won’t intervene to stop Tenn. absentee voting laws for primary

- Jonathan Mattise

NASHVILLE – A federal judge on Tuesday said he will not block three Tennessee laws dealing with absentee voting for the Aug. 6 primary election amid the coronaviru­s pandemic, saying the groups that sought the action should have requested it earlier.

U.S. District Judge Eli Richardson in Nashville issued the order on the laws that bar first-time voters from voting absentee unless they show an ID at the local election office, make the unsolicite­d distributi­on of requests for applicatio­ns for absentee ballots a misdemeano­r for people who are not election workers and spell out a signature verification process for those voters. The groups sought a requiremen­t that voters get the chance to fix signature matching issues with their ballots.

Richardson wrote that he will still consider whether to block the laws for the November election.

The ruling follows a decision last month by a state judge to expand absentee voting to most Tennessee voters during the pandemic. The state is appealing that ruling in the Tennessee Supreme Court, where a decision likely needs to happen sooner than later.

In the federal case, the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law and the Campaign Legal Center filed an original lawsuit challengin­g some of the laws on May 1, but sought to have the three blocked for the August primary on June 12.

The first day to request an absentee ballot for the August primary was May 8 and the last day is July 30, though some officials are urging voters to act earlier in case of delays mailing them back. Local election offices must receive completed absentee ballots via mail no later than the close of polls on Election Day.

The judge pointed out that Gov. Bill Lee issued a state of emergency over COVID-19 on March 12.

“As parties allegedly facing severe violations of their constituti­onal rights as a result of the implicated election laws, especially considerin­g the existing COVID-19 pandemic, Plaintiffs should have been on the proverbial red alert by the time the Governor’s order was issued on March 12,” Richardson wrote.

Julia Bruck, spokespers­on for Republican

Secretary of State Tre Hargett, said the decision “provides some certainty” for the August election. The attorney general’s office likewise commended the judge.

“Judge Richardson noted that courts should not disrupt imminent elections without a powerful reason for doing so,” said Samantha Fisher, spokespers­on for Attorney General Herbert Slatery. “Mid-course changes in election procedures so close to an election are not the way to go.”

The ruling that expanded absentee voting during the pandemic didn’t directly address the first-time voter requiremen­t. When the American Civil Liberties Union and others argued Tennessee officials should be held in contempt for enforcing the requiremen­t, the judge declined to do so, saying the groups never asked her about that specific law so she didn’t mention it.

The plaintiffs in the state case said the number of voters affected is “substantia­l,” with more than 144,000 new registrati­ons in the last half of 2019.

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