Subject: news of the day 10/14/04 |
From: Rick Hasen |
Date: 10/14/2004, 8:21 AM |
To: election-law |
See here.
Following up on Mark
Scarberry's comments, Bryan Wildenthal agrees:
I (unlike Mark) personally have no doubt that a state's voters
could (with
proper timing) act as the "Legislature" to change how a state's
electors are
chosen. I.e., I disagree with the Article II theory set forth in Bush v
Gore
by Rehnquist, Scalia, and Thomas, which (as I recall from the Dec. 2000
discussions on ConLawProf, and as I gather from Mark's present posting)
Mark
supports (or at least leans toward).
I also tend to think a state's voters could, in theory (at least
as far as
the US Constitution and federal law are concerned) make a change in the
state's method of elector selection contemporaneously and simultaneously
with the voters' choice of presidential slate -- i.e., both decisions
could
be resolved together on Nov. 2 without being improperly retroactive or
"un-chusing" the state's electors. For example, this might work if the
Colorado initiative, by its own terms, became effective immediately on
Nov.
2, if it wins a majority.
But I agree, based on what Mark has presented, that the Colorado
initiative
simply will not do that. By the time it would take effect, apparently on
Nov. 3, the electors will already have been chosen (on Nov. 2, as
federal
law requires) under the pre-existing method set by Colorado law. That
cannot
be undone later, neither a day later, nor (as the Florida Legislature
brazenly and improperly came close to doing in Dec. 2000 by purporting
to
appoint electors itself) several weeks later, nor ever. (I think I
recall
Mark and others arguing that Florida voters may have failed to make a
choice
in Nov. 2000, thus allowing what I view as the Florida Leg's attempt at
a
post hoc hijack, but I guess we don't need to rehash all that again.)
Anyway, I kind of like the fact that Mark (who I assume supports
President
Bush) and I (a declared Kerry partisan) agree that (apparently) Colorado
cannot change from the winner-take-all system in time to affect this
election. Because we now stand ex ante the election, we have no way of
knowing whether this stance will be crucially favorable to the political
fortunes of either Bush or Kerry (possibly neither). I personally am
glad
winner-take-all should (apparently) apply this year regardless of the
vote
on the Colorado referendum, because I hold out hope that Kerry will win
a
majority in Colorado, and thus all 9 electoral votes. I am willing to
take
the risk that Bush might win them all.
How about other con law profs similarly taking a stand ex ante,
before
knowing which position will benefit the academic's preferred political
choice?
Bryan Wildenthal
Thomas Jefferson School of Law
Dan also makes a point I've been making for a while: whatever legal challenges to an election that can be brought before an election should be brought. And if they are not brought before the election, the legal challenge should be barred by the doctrine of "laches" after the election. Otherwise, people have an "option:" if the election goes the way I like, I don't raise the legal issue; if it goes the other way, I do.
Apparently a suit was just filed in federal court (see here,
but I don't have any details). My theory on why no suit has been filed
before is as follows: Republicans are more likely than Democrats to be
hurt by the Amendment, because Bush is more likely than Kerry to win in
Colorado. A pre-election suit is most likely to be taken in state court
rather than federal court (because of Article III case or controversy
requirements in federal court), but the state Supreme Court recently
sided with Democrats, rather than Republicans, on the important
question of the permissibility of Colorado's re-redistricting.
Republicans would prefer to litigate in federal court, especially
because the Tenth Circuit is viewed as more conservative than the
Colorado Supreme Court. If the Tenth Circuit, for example, held that
Amendment 36 violates Article II of the U.S. Constititution, the
Supreme Court would likely not get involved. But if the Colorado
Supreme Court held there was no Article II violation, the Supreme Court
would be put in the position of potentially deciding the outcome of two
presidential elections in a row.
Terry Neal offers this
very interesting column at Washingtonpost.com.
The Washington Post offers this
report on alleged destruction of voter registration cards in Nevada
first blogged about yesterday.
See here.
-- 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