Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

Assets Under ControlAssets Under Control

Editor's Pick

Election Policy Roundup

Walter Olson

Number fourteen in our series of occasional roundups on election law and policy:

No, President Trump still can’t use an executive order or unilateral presidential power to ban mail-in voting or revamp voting-machine or voter ID practice, as we keep pointing out, no matter how often he acts as if he can. He might get some of these changes by convincing Congress to pass an actual law, but the relevant constitutional leeway is much wider for House and Senate elections than for other offices. [David Post, my statement for Cato, pickup at Washington Post, USA Today; Matt Germer/​R Street, NPR (quotes mail voting advocate as saying compliance with such a change by next year “would be nearly impossible” and questioning whether the aim “is to ‘destabilize’ next year’s elections”.)]
For reasons outlined here, it’s also unlikely to be lawful for the administration to “withhold tens of millions of dollars in election security funding if states don’t comply with its voting policy goals.” [NPR
“The conservative network Newsmax will pay $67 million to settle a lawsuit accusing it of defaming a voting equipment company by spreading lies about President Donald Trump’s 2020 election loss.” The law firm of Susman Godfrey, which represented Dominion Voting Systems in this action and in an earlier settlement with Fox News, was hit with one of Trump’s law firm penalty orders purporting, among other things, to forbid any of its staff from entering federal buildings. [Nicholas Riccardi, AP]
“Some jurisdictions criminalize ineligible voting on a strict liability basis, imposing punishment even when the ineligible voter is unaware of her ineligibility.” Courts and lawmakers should impose a constitutional mens rea requirement. [Benjamin Plener Cover via ELB]
“Musk must face lawsuit brought by voters he convinced to sign petition in $1 million-a-day election giveaway, judge says.” [Eugene Volokh, earlier
The more things change: 2000 years ago, “the Romans struggled over how to define the law between legitimate campaign finance activity and bribery. They also worried that defining bribery too expansively would lead to the weaponization of campaign finance laws.” [Richard Pildes, Election Law Blog

You May Also Like

Editor's Pick

Dan Greenberg “Reputational harm is real harm,” Elena Kagan said during her Supreme Court confirmation hearing. “And the legal system should not pretend that...

Editor's Pick

David Inserra Americans generally don’t have to worry about online platforms removing speech because one person complains. We get into Facebook arguments, engage in...

Editor's Pick

Jeffrey Miron Exchanging money with friends or family should be simple and costless. While this currently occurs for many domestic transfers (think Venmo or...

Editor's Pick

Colin Grabow Earlier this month, The Hill published an op-ed I wrote about the dangers of the protectionist BOOTS Act, a recently introduced bill...

Generated by Feedzy