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Canvassing, Contests, and Recounts, oh my! Rejected Absentee Votes in Virginia’s Attorney General’s Race

Election Law Society · February 14, 2014 ·

By Ann Zachariah

 

The victor in Virginia’s attorney general race was up in the air well into December.  Localities had until November 12 to turn in the results of the contest between Sen. Mark Obenshain and Sen. Mark Herring.  One of the delays in declaring a winner arose from a problem in Fairfax County, where a discrepancy in absentee votes was uncovered.  In the 8th District in Fairfax County, only 50 percent of absentee ballots that were requested were cast compared to 88 percent in the 10th District and 86 percent in the 11th District. [Read more…] about Canvassing, Contests, and Recounts, oh my! Rejected Absentee Votes in Virginia’s Attorney General’s Race

Fusion Voting in the Empire State

Election Law Society · February 12, 2014 ·

By Brad Smith

Fusion voting, or collateral endorsement, is the process through which a candidate for public office can be listed as the candidate for more than one party. This process was very common in thenineteenth century, although today it is an uncommon practice, and New York Is the only state where fusion voting has a noticeable impact. In recent months, however, New York politicians have debated the usefulness and wisdom of the practice. [Read more…] about Fusion Voting in the Empire State

Vote By Mail: More about Stability than Turnouts

Election Law Society · February 10, 2014 ·

By Michael Althouse

When people discuss Oregon’s vote by mail system, it is usually credited as a reason for a high voter turnout.  Although Oregon has generally  had higher voter turnouts than the rest of the nation since the passage of mandatory vote by mail, correlation does not necessarily equal causation.  Recent studies have called into question whether vote by mail is responsible for the increased voter turnouts.  If it turns out that vote by mail does little or nothing to increase voter turnout, what is the future of vote by mail?  Are there any other benefits to having the good ol’ United States Post Office drop off your ballot? [Read more…] about Vote By Mail: More about Stability than Turnouts

Citizens United and the Arkansas Supreme Court Race

Election Law Society · February 3, 2014 ·

by Euticha Hawkins

Like twenty-two other states, Arkansas selects its supreme court justices via popular election.  The role of money in high court elections has always been an uncomfortable topic, but the specter of Citizens United threatens to transform this state of discomfort into one of true alarm.  Although Arkansas had no express limits on corporate election expenditures before Citizens United, the decision can only embolden corporations seeking to inject more money in Arkansas’s political process.   [Read more…] about Citizens United and the Arkansas Supreme Court Race

Mental Disability and the Vote

Election Law Society · January 31, 2014 ·

by Andy Howard

People in our culture are accustomed to analogizing poor voting decisions with mental disabilities.  Who among us hasn’t called people “crazy” when they vote in ways with which we disagree?  This sorry attitude, though, is a reflection of our culture’s stigma against people with mental disabilities.  People with cognitive disabilities are frequently seen as a class that does not enjoy the same freedoms as others, including that of suffrage.  Do we, as a society, really feel that people with disabilities don’t have an interest in the public policies propounded by our government?   [Read more…] about Mental Disability and the Vote

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