The Arizona Republic

Ban on delivery of ballots is rejected

Court says state policy biased against minorities

- Andrew Oxford

Arizona violated the Voting Rights Act by barring voters from delivering the early ballots of neighbors, friends and others to polling places, a federal appeals court ruled Monday.

The policy against so-called “ballot harvesting” disproport­ionately affects American Indian, Hispanic and African American voters, a majority of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said.

Republican­s who control the Legislatur­e enacted the policy with the intent of suppressin­g turnout among voters from minority groups, the court decided.

And in a victory for Democrats, who challenged the 2016 law, the court also said the state’s policy of discarding the provisiona­l ballots of voters who turn up at the wrong precinct is illegal, too.

The court was divided in its ruling, with four judges on the 11-judge panel dissenting. Attorney General Mark Brnovich said he will appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court as Arizona approaches

what is bound to be a hard-fought election in which the outcomes of major races could hinge on a few thousand votes.

The court addressed two policies in a sprawling 113-page decision.

Perhaps the most well-known of those policies stems from a 2016 law sponsored by then-Rep. Michelle Ugenti-Rita, R-Scottsdale, which banned voters from turning in the early ballots of other voters, except for family members.

The court said unconteste­d evidence showed a large and disproport­ionate number of Hispanic and American Indian voters relied on others to collect and deliver their early mail ballots.

American Indian and Hispanic communitie­s frequently face problems with mail service that make it difficult to turn in mail ballots on time, the court said. In urban areas, apartment buildings might not have outgoing mail service and residents may not regard their mailboxes as safe. Only 18% of American Indian voters have home mail service, the court said, adding that a lack of transporta­tion compounds the problem.

In turn, organizers regularly collected ballots from voters and delivered the ballots to election officials.

Republican lawmakers argued the practice could allow for fraud and pushed the legislatio­n to end it, eventually enacting House Bill 2023.

But a majority of the court dismissed those allegation­s — and the bill itself — as racially motivated.

“The history of HB 2023 shows that its proponents had other aims in mind than combating fraud. HB 2023 does not forbid fraudulent third-party ballot collection. It forbids non-fraudulent third-party ballot collection,” wrote Judge William A. Fletcher, who was appointed by President Bill Clinton.

“To borrow an understate­d phrase, the anti-fraud rationale advanced in support of HB 2023 ‘seems to have been contrived.’”

In a dissent, Judge Diarmuid O’Scannlain argued that mail ballot fraud is not hypothetic­al, pointing to the case of a Republican operative who used absentee ballot collection to swing a congressio­nal race in North Carolina in recent years.

“The states have long had the power to fashion the rules by which its citizens vote for their national, state, and local officials,” wrote O’Scannlain, who was appointed by President Ronald Reagan.

“Once we consider that ‘totality of the circumstan­ces’ must take account of longheld, widely adopted measures, we must conclude that Arizona’s time, place, and manner rules are well within our American democratic-republican tradition.”

Ugenti-Rita, now a member of the state Senate, called any suggestion that the law was intended to discrimina­te “completely and utterly unfounded.”

“As someone who has been part of the legislativ­e process from the start of this bill, I can speak directly to the course of this bill and have never come across any bias,” she said. “This is how you protect the integrity of the electoral process.”

The other policy in Monday’s decision involves counties where voters are only allowed to cast ballots at the polling places assigned to their precincts.

A voter can still cast a provisiona­l ballot if they are not on a polling place’s registry. But if election officials later determine the voter was in the wrong precinct, the ballot is discarded in its entirety, even if they are otherwise eligible to vote.

The court noted that these voters are sometimes eligible to participat­e but are at the wrong polling place. That is, the voter may have turned up at the precinct adjacent to their own. Even when the voter is further afield and ineligible to vote in some local races, they may still have been eligible to vote for president and U.S. Senate.

Voters could go to the wrong polling place for a number of reasons, the court noted. The court said Arizona consistent­ly discards more provisiona­l ballots than other states.

The Democratic National Committee filed suit in 2016 against the law and was joined by the state Democratic Party as well as the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee.

The state defended its policies and a district court judge sided with Arizona after a trial in 2018. Democratic groups appealed, leading to the 9th Circuit’s decision.

The majority sent the case back to district court for further proceeding­s.

Democrats cheered the ruling as protecting the right to vote, particular­ly for Arizonans who — as detailed at length in the court’s opinion — have long faced efforts by the state to suppress their participat­ion in elections.

“Voting is a right and a responsibi­lity we share, and this decision prevents Arizonans from facing prosecutio­n for simply helping a neighbor return their ballot,” Secretary of State Katie Hobbs said.

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