PHOENIX — Arizona is going to get to keep its laws against “ballot harvesting” and counting only votes cast within the proper precinct.
In a 6-3 ruling, the U.S. Supreme Court concluded the provisions of the 2016 law do not violate the Voting Rights Act.
The majority concluded that there was no statistical evidence presented showing that Arizona’s limits on who can return early ballots for another person and the state’s refusal to count ballots cast in the wrong precinct are not racially discriminatory. At best, the court concluded, the record showed that prior to the 2016 law, minorities were more likely than others to return their early ballots with the assistance of someone else.
There was also evidence that minorities were more likely to cast their ballots in the wrong precinct.
But Justice Samuel Alito, writing for the majority, said the data from the 2016 election showed that a little more than 1% of Hispanic voters, 1% of African-American voters, and 1% of Native American voters who voted on Election Day cast an out-of-precinct ballot. For non-minority voters, he said the rate was around 0.5%.
“A procedure that appears to work for 98% or more of voters to whom it applies — minority and non-minority alike — is unlikely to render a system unequally open,” Alito said. And that, he said is the test under Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act.
“The mere fact that there is some disparity in impact does not necessarily mean that a system is not equally open or that it does not give everyone an equal opportunity to vote,” he wrote. “And small disparities should not be artificially magnified.”
Alito acknowledged that, in enacting the ban on ballot harvesting, state lawmakers had no actual evidence of fraud. But that is irrelevant, he said.
“Third-party ballot collection can lead to pressure and intimidation,” Alito continued.
“It should go without saying that a state may take action to prevent election fraud without waiting for it to occur and be detected within its own borders,” he continued. “Section 2’s command that the political processes remain equally open surely does not demand that a state’s political system sustain some level of damage before the legislature can take corrective action.”
Thursday’s ruling does more than just uphold the two Arizona laws. It also appears to give additional leeway to states to enact laws that proponents say are designed to prevent fraud even when there are claims the purpose behind them is to suppress minority voting.
But Alito was careful to say that Thursday’s ruling does not establish a test that the court will use in the future to determine whether other laws, in Arizona or elsewhere, violate the Voting Rights Act.
“As this is our first foray into the area, we think it sufficient for present purposes to identify certain guideposts that lead us to our decision in these cases,” he wrote.
But Justice Elena Kagan, in a dissent for herself and two of her colleagues, said the majority ruling undermines the Voting Rights Act and the rights it provides.
“What is tragic here is the court has (yet again) rewritten — in order to weaken — a statute that stands as a monument to America’s greatness and protects against its basest impulses,” she wrote. “What is tragic is the court has damaged a statute designed to bring about ‘the end of discrimination in voting.’”
She also said the ruling comes “at a perilous moment for the nation’s commitment to equal citizenship.”
Kagan noted that many states are moving to make it harder to register to vote and easier to purge voters from the rolls. And she specifically cited a new Georgia law that makes it illegal for political organizations to give out food and water to those waiting in line to vote.
“Chances are that some have the kind of impact the (Voting Rights) Act was designed to prevent — that they make the political process less open to minority voters than to others,” she wrote.
But Alito said he and his colleagues find nothing in the Arizona statutes that interferes with the ability of minorities to have equal opportunity to vote which is what he said the federal law requires.
It starts with the 2016 law that makes it a crime in Arizona to handle someone else’s ballot.
The practice had been used for years by some groups who would go door-to-door to see if people who had received early ballots in the mail had remembered to mail them back. With a hard-and-fast deadline of 7 p.m. on Election Day for receipt, these groups would offer to deliver them so as not to miss the deadline.
The 2016 law subjects violators to a year in state prison. There are exceptions for family members, those in the same household and caregivers.
Challengers, including the Democratic Committee, filed suit alleging a “disparate impact” on minority voters and that the ballot-collection law was “enacted with discriminatory intent.”
U.S. District Judge Douglas Rayes said there there was evidence that “some individuals legislators and proponents were motivated in part by partisan interests.” That was based on testimony that Democrats and their allies had been more successful in these ballot-gathering efforts than Republicans.
But Rayes distinguished between partisan and racial motives — with the latter protected by the Voting Rights Act — though conceding that “racially polarized voting can sometimes blur the lines.”
That was overturned by a majority of the the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals. But Alito said the appellate majority “misunderstood and misapplied Section 2 and that it exceeded its authority in rejecting the district court’s factual finding on the issue of the intent of Arizona lawmakers.”
He said the federal law is violated when the political processes “are not equally open” to participation by minorities “in that its members have less opportunity than other members of the electorate to participate in the political process and to elect representatives of their choice.”
Against that, Alito said the record shows that Arizona generally “makes it quite easy for residents to vote.”
For example, all Arizonans can vote by mail up to 27 days before an election with an early ballot, with no special excuse needed. There also is a law that allows any voter to ask to be sent an early ballot automatically in future elections.
State law also allows anyone to cast a ballot in person at an early voting location in each county.
On the issue precinct voting, challengers said there is no reason not to count the votes that would be legal if cast in the right place, like for president or statewide office. But Alito said that “would complicate the process of tabulation and could lead to disputes and delay.”
Anyway, he said, Arizona makes accurate precinct information available to all voters, including a sample ballot sent to each household which identifies the polling location. And he said there is a website to provide voter-specific polling place information.
Alito said that voting necessarily requires some effort and compliance with some rules.
“Mere inconvenience cannot be enough to demonstrate a violation of Section 2,” he wrote. And Alito said requiring people to mail in or drop off their own early ballots at a polling place is simply one of the “usual burdens of voting” that is not illegal.
Photos: 2020 General Election in Pima County and Arizona
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UpdatedJudge throws out lawsuit, finds no fraud or misconduct in Arizona election
UpdatedPHOENIX — A judge tossed out a bid by the head of the Arizona Republican Party to void the election results that awarded the state’s 11 electoral votes to Democrat Joe Biden.
The two days of testimony produced in the case brought by GOP Chairwoman Kelli Ward produced no evidence of fraud or misconduct in how the vote was conducted in Maricopa County, said Maricopa County Superior Court Judge Randall Warner in his Friday ruling.
Warner acknowledged that there were some human errors made when ballots that could not be read by machines due to marks or other problems were duplicated by hand.
But he said that a random sample of those duplicated ballots showed an accuracy rate of 99.45%.
Warner said there was no evidence that the error rate, even if extrapolated to all the 27,869 duplicated ballots, would change the fact that Biden beat President Trump.
The judge also threw out charges that there were illegal votes based on claims that the signatures on the envelopes containing early ballots were not properly compared with those already on file.
He pointed out that a forensic document examiner hired by Ward’s attorney reviewed 100 of those envelopes.
And at best, Warner said, that examiner found six signatures to be “inconclusive,” meaning she could not testify that they were a match to the signature on file.
But the judge said this witness found no signs of forgery.
Finally, Warner said, there was no evidence that the vote count was erroneous. So he issued an order confirming the Arizona election, which Biden won with a 10,457-vote edge over Trump.
Federal court case remains to be heard
Friday’s ruling, however, is not the last word.
Ward, in anticipation of the case going against her, already had announced she plans to seek review by the Arizona Supreme Court.
And a separate lawsuit is playing out in federal court, which includes some of the same claims made here along with allegations of fraud and conspiracy.
That case, set for a hearing Tuesday, also seeks to void the results of the presidential contest.
It includes allegations that the Dominion Software voting equipment used by Maricopa County is unreliable and was programmed to register more votes for Biden than he actually got.
Legislative leaders call for audit but not to change election results
Along the same lines, Senate President Karen Fann and House Speaker Rusty Bowers on Friday called for an independent audit of the software and equipment used by Maricopa County in the just-completed election.
“There have been questions,” Fann said.
But she told Capitol Media Services it is not their intent to use whatever is found to overturn the results of the Nov. 3 election.
In fact, she said nothing in the Republican legislative leaders’ request for the inquiry alleges there are any “irregularities” in the way the election was conducted.
“At the very least, the confidence in our electoral system has been shaken because of a lot of claims and allegations,” Fann said. “So our No. 1 goal is to restore the confidence of our voters.”
Bowers specifically rejected calls by the Trump legal team that the Legislature come into session to void the election results, which were formally certified on Monday.
“The rule of law forbids us to do that,” he said.
In fact, Bowers pointed out, it was the Republican-controlled Legislature that enacted a law three years ago specifically requiring the state’s electors “to cast their votes for the candidates who received the most votes in the official statewide canvass.”
He said that was done because Hillary Clinton had won the popular vote nationwide in 2016 and some lawmakers feared that electors would refuse to cast the state’s 11 electoral votes for Trump, who won Arizona’s race that year.
“As a conservative Republican, I don’t like the results of the presidential election,” Bowers said in a prepared statement. “But I cannot and will not entertain a suggestion that we violate current law to change the outcome of a certified election.”
Photos of the 2020 General Election voting, election night and ballot processing in Pima County, Maricopa County and throughout Arizona.