Cronkite News
WASHINGTON – A divided federal appeals court Monday overturned Arizona’s ban on ballot-harvesting and its policy of rejecting ballots accidentally cast in the wrong precinct, calling both reflections of the state’s “long and unhappy history of official discrimination” in elections.
The 239-page ruling by the full 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals laid out in exacting detail the state’s history of election policies aimed at suppressing votes by black, Hispanic and Native American voters. [Cronkite News: Restrictive election laws, lack of polls hamper Native American voters, leaders say]
But in a pair of dissents, four judges on the court said the majority’s ruling was unsupported by facts and that plaintiffs in the case “simply failed to show that either policy” presented a discriminatory burden on minority voters.
Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich said Monday he will appeal the ruling to the Supreme Court.
“It’s surprising the 9th Circuit took the unusual step of overruling its own decision from 2018,” Brnovich, a Republican, said in a statement from his office. “I have a duty to defend the law. Our office will appeal to the Supreme Court and continue to protect the integrity of our elections.”
It also attacked the state’s policy for handling “out-of-precinct” ballots, or those cast in the wrong precinct. Minority voters are as much as two times as likely to cast an out-of-precinct ballot than white voters, the suit said. But under state law, such a voter can cast a provisional ballot. If it is later determined that the voter was in the wrong precinct, the entire ballot is thrown out, even if some of the races – for federal or statewide office, for example – do not depend on precinct. The case moved quickly through the courts in 2016, with the circuit court ruling a week before the presidential election that the ballot-harvesting ban should be put on hold. But the U.S. Supreme Court lifted that injunction just three days before Election Day, allowing the laws to take effect. The case went back to federal district court, which upheld both laws in 2018. That decision was affirmed by a divided three-judge panel of the 9th Circuit. [Cronkite News: Appeals court rejects Democrats’ challenge to Arizona’s voting laws] But the full 9th Circuit Monday overturned both laws, saying they failed both the “results test” and the “intent test” of the Voting Rights Act, in that they had a discriminatory impact on minority voters and were passed with discriminatory intent. The majority ruling by Judge William Fletcher detailed a history of discrimination going back to territorial days. “For over a century, Arizona has repeatedly targeted its American Indian, Hispanic and African American citizens, limiting or eliminating their ability to vote and to participate in the political process,” Fletcher wrote. That included literacy tests and voter intimidation in the past, but also modern challenges, including constant shifts in polling places. The opinion cited one judge who said the “paths to polling places in the Phoenix area (are) much like the changing stairways at Hogwarts, constantly moving and sending everyone to the wrong place.” Those changes are more likely to affect lower-income residents, Fletcher wrote. He also said that the ballot harvesting law was passed on “false and race-based allegations” of voter fraud that do not exist. Even if some lawmakers who voted for the ballot-harvesting ban had a sincere belief the law was needed, Fletcher wrote, it just means “well-meaning legislators were used as ‘cat’s paws'” by those with discriminatory intent.Today, I speak in support of Navajo voting rights before the U.S. House Subcommittee on Elections. Language barriers, rural addressing, and transportation are only a few issues that impact Navajo voters. Thank you to @mlfudge for hosting today’s hearing. #NativeVotingRights pic.twitter.com/NDx06su4Wx
— Navajo Nation President Jonathan Nez (@NNPrezNez) October 1, 2019
Note: This story originally appeared on Cronkite News and is published via a Creative Commons license. Cronkite News is produced by the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication at Arizona State University.
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