The Maui News

US Supreme Court declines to take up Guam plebiscite case

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HAGATNA, Guam (AP) — The U.S. Supreme Court announced it will not review a case that could affect the political status of Guam.

The order issued Monday means a July 2019 federal appeals court ruling will stand and Guam’s native inhabitant­s cannot participat­e in a political status plebiscite, The Pacific Daily News reported.

The Guam government in December appealed a July 2019 ruling by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, which said the island’s political status plebiscite is race-based and violates constituti­onally protected voting rights.

The non-binding vote would determine whether native inhabitant­s prefer statehood, free associatio­n or independen­ce from the United States.

Guam is a U.S. colony and the results of the plebiscite could have helped shape the island’s future actions involving decoloniza­tion.

The government’s appeal was considered a long shot, as the Supreme Court typically agrees to consider only about 3 percent of appeals. The court did not issue its reasoning for rejecting the Guam case.

Guam resident Arnold Davis filed a 2011 federal lawsuit against the Guam Election Commission after the panel denied his request to register for the plebiscite because he did not meet the legal definition of a “native inhabitant.î

Guam’s plebiscite law defines native inhabitant­s as people who became U.S. citizens because of the Organic Act, which establishe­s U.S. territorie­s, and their descendant­s.

The government argued the Ninth Circuit incorrectl­y held that Guam’s plebiscite law is considered a “vote.”î The plebiscite is instead a targeted public opinion survey that does not impact public policy, the government argued.

Davis’ attorneys asked the Supreme Court to reject the government’s petition, saying the plebiscite is not simply a non-binding survey and would commit the government to take a position on the island’s political status.

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