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Missouri Restrictions on Registration & Absentee Voting Outreach Efforts May Violate State Free Speech Protection

Election Law Society · March 15, 2023 ·

By Gray Whitsett

This summer, Missouri state legislators approved wide-ranging legislation that imposes new requirements on registering to vote and casting a ballot, alters presidential primaries, and expands absentee voting ahead of Election Day. The new law, popularly referred to as HB 1878, was passed in the wake of the 2020 election to address unsubstantiated claims of election fraud. As with many overhauls to state election codes, HB 1878 has been the subject of significant criticism, namely for provisions that heighten voter ID requirements and limit civic engagement organizations from encouraging and assisting with voter registration. Each of these components is being challenged in state court.

The complaint against restrictions on voter registration activity presents an interesting challenge under the Missouri Constitution.

In League of Women Voters of Missouri v. Missouri, the plaintiffs, which include the Missouri NAACP, have challenged four HB 1878 requirements affecting nonpartisan advocacy groups that engage in voter registration activity. The four provisions:

  1. Prohibit individuals from being paid or compensated “for soliciting voter registration applications”;
  2. Require individuals, regardless of compensation, to register with the state as “voter registration solicitors” if they solicit more than 10 registration applications;
  3. Require such registration solicitors to be registered Missouri voters; and
  4. Prohibit individuals and organizations from soliciting voters to complete absentee ballot applications.

The plaintiffs allege these provisions violate protections of free speech, free association, and due process of law guaranteed under the state constitution. Primarily, they claim that by targeting dissemination of information about and advocacy for voter registration, the state regulated speech based on its content, and because this constitutes political speech, the state infringed on “core protected expression.” This infringement is exacerbated by the unclear definitions of “compensation” and “solicitation” used in the statute, which they allege fail to provide fair notice to the public of what conduct would violate the law.

They further claim the law’s ambiguity creates severe administrative burdens and jeopardizes their “organizational mission[s].” Both organizations conduct significant voter registration activity throughout the state by employing a small number of salaried administrative staff and recruiting a large volunteer force. These volunteers are typically reimbursed for gas mileage and supplies, treated to food and snacks, and given organizationally branded materials like T-shirts, pencils, and clipboards to keep. In their suit, the League of Women Voters and the NAACP purport that the statute’s language of “compensation” may encompass these reimbursements and gifts, exposing all their volunteers to liability or depriving the organizations of basic volunteer recruitment incentives.

Perhaps more consequentially, the vagueness of “solicitation” leaves the organizations’ voter registration and absentee voting outreach programs in uncertainty. The plaintiffs contend it is unclear what constitutes a solicitation to register to vote or to vote absentee. While some interactions involve directly asking voters to register or vote absentee, the majority of outreach involves conventional voter registration drives where the public approaches a table or booth, asks a few basic questions, and completes a registration application. During the course of this interaction, volunteers often end up informing voters that they may be eligible to vote absentee based on what the voter says to them. The plaintiffs fear that solicitation, broadly defined, could ensnare all of these exchanges, which would require all volunteers to have to register with the state as “voter registration solicitors” and further expose volunteers to criminal liability.

The plaintiffs argue the requirement that solicitors be registered Missouri voters creates additional administrative burdens. Generally, it would require voter outreach groups to conduct a screening process for volunteers and prevent former felons, noncitizens, and anyone under 18 from being able to participate. It also would impede volunteers who may travel across state lines to support registration efforts, which may impact border cities like St. Louis and Kansas City. The plaintiffs claim these limits go to the heart of their organizations’ missions of involving the whole community in their advocacy and create logistical challenges that seem tailored to hampering their organizations’ functioning.

Regardless of the impacts of HB 1878, the plaintiffs’ case is striking because they are bringing claims under the state constitution’s voting rights guarantee, which the Missouri Supreme Court has previously said is “more expansive and concrete” than federal protections. Broadly speaking, the litigants’ hope that the combined rights of free speech and voting contained in the state constitution will render the law unconstitutional. While this approach will be necessarily limited to Missouri, it may reflect the broader call for voting rights groups to adopt a state-based approach to securing protections under the various voting provisions in state constitutions.

As the federal judiciary continues its relative disinterest in strengthening voting rights nationally, spectators are likely to see increased litigation at the state level. League of Women Voters may become one of the first of many such state battles, and a victory for the plaintiffs in a state dominated by election-skeptics may demonstrate how this strategy can bear fruit.

An Impossible Choice: Large Scale Voter Suppression v. Risking Criminal Prosecution

Election Law Society · October 31, 2022 ·

By Katie Kitchen

While literacy tests are no longer formally part of the U.S. election process, numerous laws, including a decades old law in Missouri, still result in similar forms of voter suppression. This law, Mo. Rev. Stat. § 115.44.3, has been in effect since 1977 and states, “No person, other than election judges and members of such voters’ immediate families, shall assist more than one voter at one election.” While this single sentence may seem like a small detail in terms of election procedure, in practice, some argue the law infringes on the rights of limited English proficient individuals and people with disabilities to vote.

One such person is Susana Elizarraraz’s mom. Elizarraraz’s mom is deaf, limited English proficient, and relies on Elizarraraz’s assistance to cast her ballot in each election. When Elizarraraz had to go out of town for work during an April 2022 election, her mother was unable to vote, as there was no one available to assist her due to the limitations of Missouri’s Single-Voter Assistance Restriction. 

A group of Plaintiffs are currently challenging Mo. Rev. Stat. § 115.44.3 in Missouri Protection & Advocacy Services v. Ashcroft. The Plaintiffs in this matter are Missouri Protection and Advocacy Services (Mo P&A), VozKC, and three individuals who have been directly impacted by Missouri’s Single-Voter Assistance Restriction. One of those individuals is Susana Elizarraraz. Mo P&A is a non-profit public interest law firm focused on protecting the rights of individuals with disabilities. VozKC is a volunteer organization that advocates for Latino communities and works with limited English proficient populations.

In the Complaint, filed June 22, 2022, the Plaintiffs assert that Mo. Rev. Stat. § 115.44.3 violates § 208 of the Voting Rights Act (VRA) and the Supremacy Clause of the United States. Section 208 of the VRA states, “Any voter who requires assistance to vote by reason of blindness, disability, or inability to read or write may be given assistance by a person of the voter’s choice.” Therefore, the Plaintiffs argue that the limitation included in Mo. Rev. Stat. § 115.44.3 hinders the ability of voters who require assistance to choose the individual who assists them, which can lead to an inability to exercise the right to vote entirely. Additionally, because Mo. Rev. Stat. § 115.44.3 is a state law that may infringe upon the VRA (a federal law), the Plaintiffs assert that it violates the Supremacy Clause, which generally states that federal law is the “supreme law of the land”. 

The Plaintiffs make many compelling arguments regarding why challenging an election law from 1977 is prudent today. One reason is that the Latino population grew by nearly 50% across the St. Louis region since 2010, but Missouri does not offer election materials in languages other than English. Additionally, approximately 18.6% of Missouri’s eligible voting population are individuals with disabilities who are projected to be eligible to vote in Missouri in 2020. Thus, voter assistance for populations of limited English proficient voters and voters with disabilities in Missouri has become even more critical as the population changes. The non-profit communities are unable to have one volunteer for every individual who may need assistance, which is what would be required to abide by Mo. Rev. Stat. § 115.44.3. The Plaintiffs describe this situation as a choice between large groups of people being unable to exercise their right to vote versus having individuals risk criminal prosecution by violating the Missouri’s Single-Voter Assistance Restriction. What may seem like a small procedural matter can impact the ability of entire groups of minority populations to exercise their right to vote, which has concerning ramifications for democracy as a whole.

I will delve into the Answers filed by the Defendants as well as the Statement of Interest filed by the Department of Justice in future posts. From a brief glance, issues such as whether there is a private remedy to enforce § 208 of the VRA are likely to be raised. Additionally, it is worth noting that there is similar litigation in Arkansas challenging a law that prohibits individuals from assisting more than six voters in casting a ballot each election. As the cases progress, it will be interesting to see whether courts will invalidate all limitations to § 208, or if they will determine an acceptable threshold of how many voters it is reasonable for one person to assist within the boundaries of the VRA. This distinction may be a determining factor in the equitable ability of individuals with disabilities and/or limited English proficiency to exercise their right to vote.

Historic Change Again on the Horizon in Mississippi-Part II

cpkelliher · January 6, 2021 ·

By: Tamikia Carr Vasquez

In November, Mississippi voters will have the opportunity to vote on removing a Jim Crow era provision from the state’s constitution. Currently, to win certain statewide offices, a candidate must win the majority of the popular vote and win a majority of Mississippi’s 122 House districts. The Mississippi Center for Justice is at the forefront of leading the effort to abolish this procedure. In 2019, the Center worked on a federal lawsuit against the state. I recently spoke with Vangela M. Wade, President and CEO of the Center. This is the second and final part of our conversation. In Part I, we discussed the background of the current electoral process.

TCV: So this brings me to my next question: I’m in an election law class this semester and we’ve been talking about Baker v. Carr, one person one vote, and Harper v. Virginia State Board of Elections which eliminated poll taxes in state elections, and we talked about Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act. With all of that precedent, how is it that in 2020 this state constitutional provision remains constitutional?
[Read more…] about Historic Change Again on the Horizon in Mississippi-Part II

Missouri Election Round-Up

Election Law Society · December 28, 2012 ·

Issue 1 – “Lax” Campaign Finance Laws – How did the candidates do? Where does the state go from here?

To better understand the effects of Missouri’s “lax” campaign finance laws, the first part of this blog will explore how the political contributions affected this election cycle as well as describe where the state goes from here in this realm.  In an attempt to affect the outcome of the election, large political donors targeted Missouri because the State has “no limits on [political] contributions and [is] the only state without limits on what lobbyists can donate.”  Rex Sinquefield, a retired St. Louis businessman, has spent over $5 million this election cycle on Missouri state elections, which has caught the attention of major news outlets across the country.  Sinquefield’s spending supported groups and candidates that he hopes will get rid of the State’s income tax.  Sinquefield spent a total of $785,000 on the losing Republican candidates for secretary of state and lieutenant governor, but spent $285,000 on the winning Democrat candidate for the attorney general race.  [Read more…] about Missouri Election Round-Up

The Battleground 2012: Uncapped in Missouri: Missouri’s “Lax” Campaign Finance Laws Generate Concerns of Fraud and Corruption

Election Law Society · November 5, 2012 ·

As the November Congressional and Presidential elections are just around the corner, Missouri, a key swing state, has come under the microscope for the state’s campaign finance laws, or lack thereof.  In 2010, Missouri passed Senate Bill 844 to establish campaign finance restrictions on donations in state and congressional races.  The law required that an officeholder/candidate report contributions over $500 within 48 hours of receipt and restricted campaign finance committees from contributing money to another committee.  However, the Missouri Supreme Court overturned the law in February of this year, holding the statute violated a section of the state’s constitution “prohibiting legislators from amending a bill to change its original purpose.”  Senate Bill 844 was initially proposed to address administrative contracting issues in statewide elections, but several amendments were added to address looming campaign finance concerns.  This decision has left Missouri campaign donations relatively unchecked and the State’s campaign ethics laws “the most lax in the country.” [Read more…] about The Battleground 2012: Uncapped in Missouri: Missouri’s “Lax” Campaign Finance Laws Generate Concerns of Fraud and Corruption

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