U.S. Supreme Court Won’t Hear Colorado Secret Voting Case; Makes No Decision on Eric O’Keefe Case

On April 27, the U.S. Supreme Court refused to hear Citizen Center v Colorado Secretary of State, 14-998, which could have resolved whether the U.S. Constitution protects secrecy in voting.

Also on April 27, the U.S. Supreme Court did not decide whether or not to hear O’Keefe v Chisholm, 14-872. This case concerns whether Wisconsin law enforcement officials acted unconstitutionally when they made night raids at the homes of various political activists, allegedly looking for evidence that those activists had coordinated political campaign plans with elected politicians. Here is a story that explains the events that led to the lawsuit. The lead plaintiff, Eric O’Keefe, is a former national director of the Libertarian Party. This case will be considered again at a future conference of the Court.


Comments

U.S. Supreme Court Won’t Hear Colorado Secret Voting Case; Makes No Decision on Eric O’Keefe Case — 2 Comments

  1. Secret voting obviously came along in the mid 1800s to avoid having the robot party hacks cause folks to get purged if they did NOT vote the party line.

    Will Civil WAR II start in CA, TX, WI, etc. ???

    NO shortage of timebomb stuff going on and on —
    the STATIST control freaks want TOTAL control – NO dissents.

  2. I second Demo Rep’s comment about secret voting. It is a must if people are to be free to vote for the candidate they think is best, if they so desire, instead of voting based on fear and herd mentality, which is unfortunately rather common these days.

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