Current:Home > ContactAppeals panel won’t revive lawsuit against Tennessee ban on giving out mail voting form -Stellar Wealth Sphere
Appeals panel won’t revive lawsuit against Tennessee ban on giving out mail voting form
View
Date:2025-04-17 03:31:38
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — A panel of federal appeals judges has decided not to revive a challenge of a Tennessee law that makes it a felony for anyone other than election officials to distribute absentee ballot applications.
In a 2-1 decision Thursday, the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals agreed with a lower court’s determination that the ban doesn’t restrict First Amendment speech.
The lawsuit was one of several filed during the COVID-19 pandemic against Tennessee’s vote-by-mail restrictions. A district judge declined to block the ban on distributing the absentee voting form ahead of the November 2020 election, then dismissed the lawsuit in December 2021.
The plaintiffs include Tennessee’s NAACP conference, The Equity Alliance, which focuses on Black voter registration, and others. They have claimed the law violates First Amendment rights and “serves no purpose,” particularly during the COVID-19 pandemic and especially for those without reliable computer, printer or internet access. They want to distribute the official applications to people eligible to vote absentee.
In this week’s opinion, 6th Circuit Judge Eric Murphy wrote for the majority that the plaintiffs may have articulated good policy arguments about why Tennessee should reconsider the law now that the absentee form is posted online, but that it’s up to lawmakers to decide whether to do that. Additionally, without the law, Murphy wrote, “mass mailings” of absentee applications could cause “mass confusion” because of eligibility restrictions to vote by mail in Tennessee.
Murphy wrote that “our job is not to decide whether the ban represents good or bad policy. That is the job of the Tennessee legislature. We may intervene to stop the enforcement of this democratically passed law only if it violates some federal standard, here the First Amendment.”
Tennessee Secretary of State Tre Hargett seconded the panel’s reasoning.
“I agree with the majority opinion and trial court’s analysis that the General Assembly has the authority to make public policy decisions, and the role of the court is to intervene only if a democratically passed law violates a federal standard,” Hargett said in an emailed statement Friday.
In her dissent, Judge Helene White wrote that the majority misapplied legal standards to uphold “a Tennessee law that threatens to imprison persons who distribute publicly available absentee-ballot applications.”
“Thus, in Tennessee, a grandson risks years behind bars for encouraging his grandparents over age 60 to vote by mail and handing them publicly available forms,” White wrote. “The same is true for a soldier sharing forms with other Tennesseans stationed overseas, or a neighbor delivering forms to those who cannot vote in person due to illness or disability.”
Beyond Tennessee’s ban on distributing the official absentee application, people other than election workers can create and give out unofficial forms to collect the info needed to vote by mail, but it’s only legal to that if voters first ask for them. If the unofficial forms are sent out unsolicited, it’s punishable by misdemeanor penalties. Those unofficial forms count as absentee applications as long as the correct information is collected.
veryGood! (4921)
Related
- At site of suspected mass killings, Syrians recall horrors, hope for answers
- Get a First Look at Love Is Blind Season 5 and Find Out When It Premieres
- Covid-19 and Climate Change Will Remain Inextricably Linked, Thanks to the Parallels (and the Denial)
- Unsolved Mysteries: How Kayla Unbehaun's Abduction Case Ended With Her Mother's Arrest
- Person accused of accosting Rep. Nancy Mace at Capitol pleads not guilty to assault charge
- In a Dry State, Farmers Use Oil Wastewater to Irrigate Their Fields, but is it Safe?
- See the Royal Family at King Charles III's Trooping the Colour Celebration
- Untangling Exactly What Happened to Pregnant Olympian Tori Bowie
- US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
- See Behind-the-Scenes Photo of Kourtney Kardashian Working on Pregnancy Announcement for Blink-182 Show
Ranking
- How to watch new prequel series 'Dexter: Original Sin': Premiere date, cast, streaming
- Britney Spears' memoir The Woman in Me gets release date
- Historic floodwaters begin to recede as Vermont dam stabilizes after nearing capacity
- Warming Trends: Stories of a Warming Sea, Spotless Dragonflies and Bad News for Shark Week
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- 4 ways around a debt ceiling crisis — and why they might not work
- Squid Game Season 2 Gets Ready for the Games to Begin With New Stars and Details
- As prices soar, border officials are seeing a spike in egg smuggling from Mexico
Recommendation
Moving abroad can be expensive: These 5 countries will 'pay' you to move there
Kourtney Kardashian Is Pregnant, Expecting First Baby With Husband Travis Barker
Inside Clean Energy: An Energy Snapshot in 5 Charts
Drier Springs Bring Hotter Summers in the Withering Southwest
Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
Ray Lewis’ Son Ray Lewis III’s Cause of Death Revealed
Al Pacino and More Famous Men Who Had Children Later in Life
4 ways around a debt ceiling crisis — and why they might not work