Virginia Law on Access to List of Voters who Voted is Declared Unconstitutional

On February 11, a Virginia state court judge ruled that if the state gives the list of which voters voted to political parties, candidates, and PAC’s, then the state cannot withhold the list from other groups. The case is The Know Campaign v Rodrigues, cl-09-005389-00. The same circuit judge who issued the recent opinion had also granted injunctive relief back on October 1, 2010, so the decision was not surprising.

The lawsuit had been brought in 2009 by the Know Campaign, which says it wants to stimulate more people to vote. The Know Campaign wanted to send letters to voters, urging them to vote, and making these voters aware that whether they vote or not is a public record. The Know Campaign had done this in several other states, and wanted to do it in Virginia, but elections officials had refused to let the group have the records. The Know Campaign then brought the lawsuit. The state does not plan to appeal.

The 2010 session of the legislature had considered SB 624, to change the law to let non-profit groups obtain the list, but the bill did not pass. Thanks to Rick Hasen’s ElectionLawBlog for the news.


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