Alabama Loses Procedural Ruling in Lawsuit over Voting Rights Act and Statewide Judicial Elections

Alabama elects all its State Supreme Court Justices, all its State Court of Criminal Appeals Judges, and all its State Court of Civil Appeals Judges, in partisan statewide elections. In 2016 the Alabama NAACP filed a lawsuit under the federal Voting Rights Act, charging that statewide partisan elections invariably mean that African-Americans never get elected to those courts, and that the state must set up judicial districts.

Only whites have ever been elected to the state Appeals courts, and only twice in history has a black been elected to the State Supreme Court, and both were more than a quarter century ago. On February 3, 2020, the Eleventh Circuit ruled that the state’s procedural objections to the lawsuit are invalid. This clears the way for U.S. District Court Judge Keith Watkins to soon issue a ruling on whether the state’s failure to use judicial districts violates the Voting Rights Act.

The state argued that lawsuits under the Voting Rights Act cannot be filed by private individuals and groups, and can only be filed by the U.S. Justice Department. The U.S. Justice Department these days almost never files lawsuits against states, charging a violation of the Voting Rights Act, so if Alabama had prevailed, the Voting Rights Act would virtually cease to have any usefulness. The Eleventh Circuit decision is 2-1. The majority opinion is signed by Judge Charles R. Wilson, a Clinton appointee; and C. Roger Vinson, a Reagan appointee. The dissent is by Judge Elizabeth Branch, a Trump appointee.

If Alabama no longer has statewide partisan judicial elections, it will be more difficult for a minor party to poll enough votes to remain on the ballot, because the more statewide partisan elections there are, the greater the chances that a minor party will poll the necessary 20% for a statewide office. The last time a minor party met that standard, in 2000, was when a Libertarian polled 20.26% of the vote for State Supreme Court Justice.

Georgia Bill to Alter Special Elections for U.S. Senate Stalls

On January 30, the Georgia House Rules Committee sent HB 757 back to the Governmental Affairs Committee for revision. This is the bill that changes special elections for U.S. Senate that are simultaneous with a regularly-scheduled election. Current law says all special elections are non-partisan (although party labels are on the ballot). Parties don’t have nominees.

HB 757 would change that for certain U.S. Senate special elections, so that parties would have nominees and a partisan primary in advance of the general election. The Rules Committee sent it back because it was not happy with details of the bill. The bill may be amended to include special legislative elections also, or it might die. The bill was thought to be motivated by a desire to injure U.S. Senator Kelly Loeffler, who was appointed last year and who must run in a special election this year. She is a moderate Republican and conservatives in the legislature favor someone else.

Republican National Committee Files Amicus Brief in Support of Delaware Law on Who Can Become a State Court Judge

The Republican National Committee has filed this amicus curiae brief in Carney v Adams, 19-309. This is the case over the Delaware Constitution, which says in Article IV, section 3, “Three of the five Justices of the Supreme Court in office at the same time, shall be of one major political party, and two of such Justices shall be of the other major party.”

The Republican brief seems to feel uncomfortable about excluding independents from being considered for a judicial post, because it says the state constitutional could be interpreted to allow an independent appointment. The brief also says the state interest in the restriction is that it “fosters diversity”, an Orwellian statement.

U.S. Senate Bill to Abolish Presidential Election Public Funding

U.S. Senator Joni Ernst (R-Iowa) has introduced S3225 to abolish public funding for presidential candidates. There are two kinds of public funding for presidential candidates, primary season matching funds, and general election funding.

Minor party and independent candidates have become the main beneficiaries of this program for the last twenty years. Pat Buchanan could never have got on the ballot in 49 states in November 2000 as the Reform Party nominee, without the $16 million funding from the general election fund.

Ralph Nader in 2000, and Jill Stein in both 2012 and 2016, benefited from the primary season matching funds to help them with ballot access. Gary Johnson for the Libertarians also received primary season matching funds in 2012. The Natural Law Party nominee, John Hagelin, received them in 1996 and 2000. Lenora Fulani received them in 1988 and 1992, and she could never have got on the ballot in all 50 states in 1988 without the money.