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Common Cause, SCSJ Detail Legal Strategy to Protect Democracy in Upcoming SCOTUS Case
Common Cause’s legal team describes the dangers Moore kiện Harper case could pose to elections and the freedom to vote.
WASHINGTON, DC. — Common Cause and the Southern Coalition for Social Justice held a media briefing Thursday, Oct. 27, outlining the legal arguments and strategy behind our fight to defend our democracy in Moore kiện Harper. The U.S. Supreme Court case, stemming from the legal fight for fair maps in North Carolina, is scheduled for oral arguments on Dec. 7, 2022.
This U.S. Supreme Court case involves a dangerous legal argument seeking to eliminate the checks and balances served by the state judiciary and, at its worst, could hand state lawmakers nearly unchecked power to manipulate elections.
MỘT ngắn gọn was filed jointly by Common Cause, Người thợ cắt, and League of Conservation Voters respondents last week, describing how North Carolina lawmakers’ desperate and dangerous arguments in More không phù hợp với văn bản, cấu trúc và lịch sử của Hiến pháp Hoa Kỳ và mâu thuẫn với tiền lệ đã tồn tại trong nhiều thế kỷ.
Giám đốc Phân chia lại khu vực bầu cử quốc gia của Common Cause Kathay Phong nói về những hậu quả tiềm tàng đối với cử tri trên cả nước nếu các đảng phái chính trị có thể thao túng bản đồ bỏ phiếu và các quy tắc bầu cử.
“Checks and balances are fundamental to our government and assumes that each part of the government plays an important role in making sure that we do not have runaway power for any one branch of government,” Feng said. “But the checks and balances function of our state courts could be wiped out in one decision. So what’s the solution? The first and most obvious one is a win before the Supreme Court.”
Lập luận pháp lý ở trung tâm của More là một điều nguy hiểm và đi ngược lại hơn 200 năm tiền lệ pháp lý, ông nói Allison Riggs, cố vấn pháp lý trong vụ án và co-executive director of Southern Coalition for Social Justice. She discussed the joint brief as well the filings of 47 amicus briefs from a wide range of bipartisan leaders and legal scholars
“The Framers knew when they were drafting the Elections Clause that state legislatures only exist because state constitutions created them and that the power to create state constitutions lies with the people,” Riggs said. “When forming this country and a government that would resist authoritarianism, [they] created healthy checks and balances that ultimately, would be politically responsive to the people itself. Judicial review, the ability of courts to check legislative bodies for compliance with constitutions, is a very important part of that.”
Finally, J. Michael Luttig, the retired conservative federal appellate judge who recently joined Common Cause’s legal team in this major voting rights case, discussed the legal, historical, and practical arguments underlying our opposition in Moore kiện Harper.
“This is the single most important case on American democracy, and for American democracy, in the nation’s history,” Luttig said.
To interview our panelists, please contact Sarah Ovaska (sovaska@commoncause.org) hoặc Melissa Boughton (melissa@scsj.org).
A recording of Thursday’s media briefing is available đây.