Subject: news of the day 3/22/04 |
From: Rick Hasen |
Date: 3/22/2004, 8:54 AM |
To: election-law |
BNA's Money and Politics Report offers this
article
(paid subscription required), with the following description: "Federal
Election Commission Chairman Bradley Smith said March 19 that
Democratic-leaning groups criticizing President Bush are 'operating in
accordance' with the nation's new campaign finance law despite
Republican charges that the groups' activities are illegal."
A.P. offers this
report. Thanks to Shannon Mader for the pointer. You can access the
case itself here.
Sneaking Suspicions offers this
commentary.
Adam Cohen offers this Editorial Observer column on Chief Justice Rehnquist's new book. Like others (see Eric Foner's review in The Nation), Cohen sees the book more about Bush v. Gore than about the Hayes-Tilden contest of 1876.
Cohen argues in the piece for a broad reading of Bush v. Gore's
equal protection right, one broad enough to provide a remedy for
partisan gerrymandering in the pending Supreme Court Vieth case:
The court is about to decide a redistricting case that will have a major impact on American democracy. Pennsylvania voters are challenging the state's new Congressional lines, drawn to give its minority party two-thirds of the Congressional delegation. This sort of "partisan gerrymandering" is making contested Congressional races all but obsolete. If the court gives ordinary voters the same kind of vigorous protection it gave Mr. Bush, it will strike down Pennsylvania's undemocratic lines.
The court will no doubt hear other cases of electoral unfairness that could benefit from this approach. Poor and minority voters are still more likely to vote on machines that throw away a disproportionate number of valid votes. Local officials are still too free, as Katherine Harris proved in Florida in 2000, to purge eligible voters from the rolls.
The Boston Globe offers this
report.
Wired offers this
report,
which begins: "After recounting more than 13,000 absentee paper
ballots, Northern California's Napa County reported Thursday that an
electronic voting machine used in the March 2 primary election missed
more than 6,000 votes."
-- Rick Hasen Professor of Law and William M. Rains Fellow Loyola Law School 919 South Albany Street Los Angeles, CA 90015-1211 (213)736-1466 (213)380-3769 - fax rick.hasen@lls.edu http://www.lls.edu/academics/faculty/hasen.html http://electionlawblog.org