[EL] time at the polling booth
Pamela S Karlan
pkarlan at stanford.edu
Wed Jul 8 08:13:22 PDT 2020
The Arkansas law to the same effect — I don’t think it’s still in effect — was explicitly adopted to disenfranchise low-literacy black voters. It combined the secret ballot with a time limit on time in the booth.
[cid:3DF11426-E3D0-4559-A581-D9C46F7C0760-L0-001]
Pamela S. Karlan
Kenneth and Harle Montgomery Professor of Public Interest Law
Co-Director, Stanford Supreme Court Litigation Clinic
Stanford Law School
559 Nathan Abbott Way
Stanford, CA 94305
karlan at stanford.edu
650.725.4851
On Jul 8, 2020, at 6:07 AM, Douglas, Joshua A. <joshuadouglas at uky.edu> wrote:
Rick,
This is not entirely responsive, but at least one state--Tennessee--actually mandates how long a voter may spend casting a ballot. Here is a description from my article State Judges and the Right to Vote:
a Tennessee appellate court broadly interpreted a Tennessee
statute regulating how much time a voter may spend in the voting booth so as
to effectuate an individual’s constitutional right to vote.176 The statute at issue
limited a voter to five minutes in the voting booth if other voters were waiting
and otherwise to a maximum of ten minutes.177 The evidence showed that,
because of a lengthy ballot and some precincts using new machines, there
were long lines on Election Day.178 Almost half of all voters took longer than
five minutes to vote, while five percent took longer than ten minutes.179 The court rejected the losing candidate’s argument that this evidence demonstrated that illegal votes tainted the election, noting that the voters’ failure to comply with the time limit was not a “serious” violation of the statute.180 Quoting theTennessee Supreme Court, the court explained, “[T]echnical non-conformity with election statutes will not necessarily void an election, as ‘such strictness would lead to defeat rather than uphold, popular election, and can not be maintained.’”181
The underlying case is Stuart v. Anderson Cty. Election Comm’n, 300 S.W.3d 683, 690 (Tenn. Ct. App.2009).
Josh
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From: Law-election <law-election-bounces at department-lists.uci.edu> on behalf of Pildes, Rick <rick.pildes at nyu.edu>
Sent: Wednesday, July 8, 2020 8:00 AM
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Subject: [EL] time at the polling booth
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Does anyone know of data about how much time voters typically spend casting their ballots in the actual polling booth? I’m sure this varies depending on how many races/issues are on the ballot, particularly in states that have a number of ballot initiatives to vote on in certain years. I’m aware of the good piece by Dan Smith and Michael Herron in Electoral Studies, but that’s based on one polling place in a low turnout election in NH.
I assume most voters spend less than five minutes, but I’d appreciate any information that might be out there, whether empirical studies or even good anecdotal reporting.
Thanks.
Best,
Rick
Richard H. Pildes
Sudler Family Professor of Constitutional Law
NYU School of Law
40 Washington Square So.
NYC, NY 10014
212 998-6377
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