The Punxsutawney Spirit

Supreme Court to hear case on state authority over elections

- By Nicholas Riccardi

The U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday agreed to hear a case that could dramatical­ly change the way elections for Congress and the presidency are conducted by handing more power to state legislatur­es and blocking state courts from reviewing challenges to the procedures and results.

The justices will consider whether state courts, when finding violations of their state constituti­ons, can order changes to federal elections and the once-adecade redrawing of congressio­nal districts. The case probably will be argued in the fall.

“This case could profoundly alter the balance of power in states and prevent state courts and agencies from providing protection­s for people’s right to vote,” said Rick Hasen, a law professor at the University of California, Irvine. “There’s a wide range of ways the court could rule on this. Taken to its extreme, it would be a radical reworking of our system of running elections.”

In the most extreme example, lawyers said, if the Supreme Court were to rule that no entity besides state legislatur­es can set rules regarding federal elections, that could stop a governor from vetoing election bills or a state court from blocking rules that set up different voting hours in urban and rural precincts.

Jason Torchinsky, a Republican lawyer who wrote a legal brief urging the high court to take the case, said it is absurd to think the Supreme Court would ultimately allow that. He noted that as recently as 2015, the court agreed that legislatur­es do not have absolute power in elections, ruling that Arizona’s voterappro­ved redistrict­ing commission could legally take the authority away from lawmakers to draw district lines.

“I don’t think you can take the theory as far as ‘the legislatur­es alone can do whatever they want,’” Torchinsky said. “The problem is we have these rogue state courts.”

The case, an appeal from North Carolina Republican­s, challenges a state court ruling throwing out the congressio­nal districts drawn by the General Assembly that seemingly would have made GOP candidates likely victors in 10 of the state’s 14 congressio­nal districts.

The Supreme Court has never invoked what is known as the independen­t state legislatur­e doctrine, but four of the court’s conservati­ve justices have expressed interest in taking on the subject. One of them, Justice Clarence Thomas, was among three justices who advanced it in the Bush v. Gore case that settled the 2000 presidenti­al election.

It only takes four of the nine justices to agree to hear a case. A majority of five is needed for an eventual decision.

The issue has arisen repeatedly in cases from North Carolina and Pennsylvan­ia, where Democratic majorities on the states’ highest courts have invoked voting protection­s in their state constituti­ons to frustrate the plans of Republican­dominated legislatur­es.

The case comes as state courts have become increasing­ly involved in redistrict­ing, the consequenc­e of a 2019 decision in which the Supreme Court said federal courts could no longer handle claims of illegal partisan gerrymande­ring.

Initially, in cases in states such as North Carolina and Pennsylvan­ia, that hurt Republican­s and helped Democrats. But courts in Democratic-dominated states including Maryland and New York then threw out maps as Democratic gerrymande­rs, leaving Republican­s with a slight edge at the end of the once-a-decade congressio­nal redistrict­ing process.

The high court already has another significan­t redistrict­ing case on its to-do list for the fall, a reconsider­ation of how the Voting Rights Act requires majoritymi­nority districts to be drawn to ensure marginaliz­ed groups have a chance at electing their preferred representa­tives.

But the North Carolina case has implicatio­ns far beyond redistrict­ing. The independen­t state legislativ­e doctrine could also hold that state courts cannot stop legislatur­es from imposing any restrictio­ns they want on congressio­nal voting or even the selection of electors who choose the president of the United States.

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