The U.S. Supreme Court had Gill v Whitford, 16-1161, for consideration at its June 8 conference. However, on June 12, when the Court released the list of actions it had taken on June 8, there was no news about Gill v Whitford. This means the Court hasn’t decided yet what to do. The next news from the Court will be on Monday, June 19. The case is from Wisconsin, where the lower court had thrown out the legislative districts as a partisan gerrymander. The state is trying to get the U.S. Supreme Court to stay the lower court decision.
La Republique En Marche, the political party formed in France last year by Emmanuel Macron, has emerged as the strongest party in the Parliamentary election of June 11. There will be another round on June 18. See this story.
Matthew Riccardi, the Constitution Party gubernatorial nominee in New Jersey this year, will have his party label “Constitution Party” on the November 2017 ballot. The New Jersey Elections Department had originally believed he was not entitled to it because of a missing form, but the problem has been straightened out.
According to this story, with most of the vote counted, 97% of Puerto Ricans who voted favor statehood. Polls closed at 3 p.m. Puerto Rico time.
UPDATE: see this story.
On June 9, the Third Circuit issued this opinion in Rodriquez v 32nd Legislature of the Virgin Islands, 17-1518. It says that no court can decide whether Kevin Rodriquez meets the qualifications to be in the legislature. Only the legislature itself can decide that. The federal law that functions as the Constitution of the U.S. Virgin Islands has a three-year residency requirement for members of the legislature. After Rodriquez was elected in November 2016, he was not seated, because it was discovered that he had sworn (during a bankruptcy proceeding) that he had been a resident of Tennessee for the past few years.
The Virgin Islands had then held a special election to fill his seat on April 8, 2017, which was won by an independent candidate, Janelle Sarauw. However because the dispute was unresolved, the Virgin Islands election authorities refused to certify the results. Lawsuits had been filed in both the Virgin Islands court system and the federal court system, but their only result has been to tell the legislature to make its own determination as to whether Rodriquez satisfies the residency requirement.