Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Justices appear split over Ohio’s voter rolls purge

- By David G. Savage david.savage@latimes.com

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court sounded closely split Wednesday in a potentiall­y far-reaching election-law dispute over whether Ohio and other states may remove voters from the rolls who have not voted in two elections and have failed to respond to a notice in the mail.

Civil rights lawyers said such “purges” have wrongly removed tens of thousands of legal voters from the rolls, even though the states had no evidence they had moved or died. They argued the practice violates the federal Motor Voter Act, which made it easier for Americans to register to vote and barred states from removing them “by reason of the person’s failure to vote.”

The 1993 law was designed to end what was called the “use it or lose it” policy for voting. Previously, many states had regularly removed voters from the rolls if they failed to cast a ballot over several election cycles.

But civil rights advocates said those policies are making a comeback in an era when Republican­s regularly sound the alarm over alleged voter fraud. Outdated, inaccurate voter rolls could, in theory, lead to casting ballots on behalf of dead people or former residents.

Ohio has been particular­ly aggressive about removing inactive voters from the rolls, according to the League of Women Voters. A federal appeals court ruled its removal policy violated federal law.

But the justices agreed to hear the state’s appeal, and its leading conservati­ves said Wednesday they saw the state’s policy as reasonable. Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Anthony Kennedy and Samuel Alito noted the federal law also said states may “make a reasonable effort to remove the names of ineligible voters.”

Kennedy said states are “purging them (because) they want to protect the voter roll from people who have moved, and they’re voting in the wrong district. We’re talking about the best tools to implement that purpose.”

An attorney for the civil rights plaintiffs said that sending a notice in the mail is clearly not the best tool. About 70 percent of recipients do not respond, he said, but the state sees this as evidence they have moved. Instead, they could check the state’s DMV offices, which requires drivers to update the registrati­on within a month of moving.

He agreed that a letter returned undelivere­d would suggest the voter had moved. But a notice from the election board “that doesn’t get returned tells them nothing,” said attorney Paul Smith.

The chief justice disagreed. “It doesn’t tell them nothing. It tells them that they did not respond to a notice that says you’re going to lose the registrati­on if you don’t vote through two elections.”

The Trump administra­tion’s Solicitor Gen. Noel Francisco argued in support of Ohio and said Congress gave “states the flexibilit­y they need” to cope with what he called “overinflat­ed” or “bloated voter rolls.”

But he ran into sharply skeptical questions from two of the court’s liberals. Justices Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan said the federal law made clear that voters may not be removed from the rolls based on the fact they did not vote in one or more elections. Sotomayor said Americans have a “right not to vote.”

Last year, the Justice Department under President Donald Trump switched its position in the Ohio case. Since the 1990s, the government had said the 1993 law did not permit states to remove voters from the rolls because they failed to cast a ballot in one or more elections.

Sotomayor asked for an explanatio­n. It “seems quite unusual that your office would change its position so dramatical­ly,” she told Francisco.

He said the law passed by Congress “reflects a balance” so that voters could easily register but states also could manage the rolls.

Lawyers for the ACLU and other civil rights groups said the state rules disproport­ionately affect minority and low-income voters.

 ?? JACQUELYN MARTIN/AP ?? Rep. Tim Ryan, D-Ohio, left, speaks Wednesday to a rally of people who oppose Ohio’s voter roll purges.
JACQUELYN MARTIN/AP Rep. Tim Ryan, D-Ohio, left, speaks Wednesday to a rally of people who oppose Ohio’s voter roll purges.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States