The Arizona Court of Appeals has ruled that the state’s early voting system is constitutional. abc15
In an 11-page ruling Tuesday, the three-judge panel rejected the Arizona Republican Party’s argument that mail-in voting violates the secrecy clause in the state Constitution.More than 80% of Arizona voters use the early voting system that was created by lawmakers in 1991.
The appeals court’s ruling said Arizona’s early voting system provides secrecy “by requiring voters to ensure that they fill out their ballot in secret and seal the ballot in an envelope that does not disclose the voters’ choices.” It was unclear Wednesday if the state Republican Party will now take the case to the Arizona Supreme Court.
The GOP party filed a similar lawsuit in February 2022 seeking to eliminate early voting before that year’s elections, arguing that “in-person voting at the polls on a fixed date is the only constitutionally permissible manner of voting.” The state Supreme Court declined to hear that suit, saying it didn’t have original jurisdiction in the case.
Ireland Latest News, Ireland Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Arizona Court of Appeals rejects state GOP party effort to end early votingThe state Court of Appeals found no merit in the Republican Party's claim that early voting is unconstitutional and upheld the popular practice.
Read more »
Arizona Court of Appeals upholds state mail-in voting lawsThe Arizona Court of Appeals says the state's mail-in voting law is not unconstitutional and did not violate a secrecy clause.
Read more »
Court rejects GOP attempt to end early voting in ArizonaAll Arizona voters will still be able to cast ballots by mail despite Republican Party efforts to kill the popular practice, the Court of Appeals rules.
Read more »
Biden administration argues for transportation mask mandate in appeals courtThe Biden administration argued on Tuesday that it had the authority to require airline passengers and other travelers to wear masks on mass transit, nine months after a federal judge in Florida vacated the federal mask mandate.
Read more »
N.J. school district’s funding is unconstitutionally low, lawyers tell appeals courtThe eight-year-old case hinges on whether the district’s overwhelmingly poor, largely Hispanic students are receiving the “thorough and efficient” education the state constitution guarantees them, and if not, whether the state’s school funding formula is unconstitutional.
Read more »
NCAA turns to US appeals court over pay for athletesThe NCAA to ask an appeals court to block a lawsuit that seeks to have athletes treated as employees. The athletes are suing colleges, accusing them of violating fair labor practices by failing to pay athletes for the time they put into their sports.
Read more »