U.S. District Court Rules that Wisconsin Does Not Violate the U.S. Constitution by Abolishing Straight-Ticket Device

On July 29, a U.S. District Court in Wisconsin issued an opinion in One Wisconsin Institute v Thomsen, w.d. 15-cv-324. The opinion upholds the action of the legislature in 2011 in abolishing the straight-ticket device. There are many other issues in this case, and Wisconsin lost on most of the other points. Here is a copy of the decision. The Wisconsin court was aware that a U.S. District Court decision in Michigan last week had come to a contrary conclusion about straight-ticket devices.

For a discussion of the other issues in the case, here is a link to Rick Hasen’s blog post about the decision.


Comments

U.S. District Court Rules that Wisconsin Does Not Violate the U.S. Constitution by Abolishing Straight-Ticket Device — 1 Comment

  1. ALLEGIANCE chain —
    4 July 1776 USA citizens (or a bit earlier in some States ??? – Mass – 19 Apr 1775 – Day ONE of the American Revolutionary WAR)
    1776-1789 State naturalized persons
    4 Mar 1789 onward – USA naturalized citizens (laws and treaties)
    1868 – 14th Amdt, Sec. 1 citizens (i.e. blacks in USA – free and ex-slaves)

    The above and their children via fathers.

    How many folks in the USA do NOT have ANY paper trail regarding the above ???

    The paper trail stuff may become LIFE or DEATH due to the obvious coming W-A-R with Islam jihad folks.

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