Baby & Bathwater: Standing in Election Cases After 2020
In: Dickinson Law Review 2021
25 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: Dickinson Law Review 2021
SSRN
The current consensus among commentators is that the flood of cases challenging the 2020 presidential election results was almost completely meritless. This consensus is correct as to the ultimate result, but not as to the courts' treatment of standing. In their (understandable) zeal to reject sometimes frivolous attempts to overturn a legitimate election and undermine public confidence in our electoral system, many courts were too quick to rule that plaintiffs lacked standing. These rulings resulted in unjustified sweeping rulings that voters were not injured even if their legal votes were diluted by states accepting illegal votes; that campaigns did not share interests with the voters who supported them; and that only state legislatures, and not Electoral College nominees, had standing to sue under the Electors Clause (a relatively untested area). Moreover, many courts confused standing doctrine with the merits. All this threatens to create dangerous precedent which would improperly prevent full consideration of the merits of future meritorious voting rights and election suits. Getting standing right is particularly important in election cases. Election challenges like these will recur regularly. Because elections ensure democratic health, and because the political process is often not incentivized to fix electoral problems, judicial intervention is particularly necessary. In addition, election cases raise unique standing challenges, because the asserted harms are often diffused. And they present timing problems: sue too far in advance, and courts will reject the alleged harms as speculative; sue later, and courts may decline relief under the Supreme Court's "Purcell doctrine" cautioning against disrupting electoral rules on the eve of an election. This Article synthesizes the lessons to be derived from the 2020 election cases regarding election case standing, critiques where the courts' analysis seems incorrect, and proposes general standing rules for voters, candidates, campaigns, Electors, and elected ...
BASE
[extract] Appropriately enough, symposia on "government transparency" often focus on access to government records, and at the national level. But access to meetings and communications among legislative members, especially local government legislators, has received less attention than it merits.In the United States, all substantive communications (formal or informal) concerning public business among a quorum of any local legislative body must be made in public during a publicly noticed meeting. Unlike other countries (e.g., New Zealand), this "sunshine" requirement applies even if no actual decisions are made. Curiously, while most U.S. states (A) apply this requirement only to meetings or communications among a quorum of a body (as in Canada), and/or (B) give the legislative body discretion to decide to meet in secret to discuss certain sensitive matters (as in Scandinavian and Eastern European countries), a sizable minority of U.S. states (A) apply this requirement to any substantive communication among 2 or 3 members, far short of a quorum, and (B) have few to no exemptions for discussions of sensitive topics.
BASE
In: Mississippi Law Journal, Band 85, Heft 5
SSRN
In: University of Memphis Legal Studies Research Paper No. 159
SSRN
Working paper
In: University of Memphis Legal Studies Research Paper No. 147
SSRN
Working paper
In: University of Memphis Legal Studies Research Paper No. 141
SSRN
Working paper
In: University of Memphis Legal Studies Research Paper No. 116
SSRN
Working paper
SSRN
Working paper
In: Tulane Law Review, Band 79, Heft 2
SSRN
In: Stanford Law & Policy Review, Band 14.1, S. 203
SSRN
In: George Mason Law Review, Band 10, Heft 2, S. 215
SSRN
In: North Carolina Law Review, Band 77, S. 1867
SSRN
In: Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review (CR-CL), Band 33, Heft 33
SSRN
In: AMERICA VOTES! A GUIDE TO MODERN ELECTION LAW AND VOTING RIGHTS, Benjamin E. Griffith, ed., American Bar Association, 2012
SSRN