Supreme Court backs controversial voting restrictions on last day of session


Summary

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Full story

In a 6-3 ruling, Supreme Court reversed lower court rulings on challenges to two voting restrictions in Arizona Thursday.

One rejects ballots cast in the wrong precinct. The other limits who can deliver ballots on someone else’s behalf to family, caregivers, mail carriers and elections officials.

An appellate court struck down the restrictions as racially discriminatory under the Voting Rights Act. However, they remained in effect during the 2020 Presidential election, while challenges were making their way through the courts.

Thursday’s ruling could make it more difficult to use the act to sue over new state laws which, in the name of election security, make it harder to vote.

In the majority opinion, Justice Samuel Alito wrote Arizona’s interest in the integrity of elections justified the measures. He also wrote that a state law isn’t illegal just because it disproportionately affects minority voters.

Justice Elena Kagan dissented, writing that the court is weakening the Voting Rights Act for the second time in eight years. The first time, the court took away a different provision of the Voting Rights Act. That one required the federal government or a federal court to clear states’ voting law changes before they could take effect. The provision had been the Department of Justice’s most effective tool for combatting discriminatory voting laws.

The latest chipping away at the Voting Rights Act may fuel new calls from Democrats to pass federal legislation that would counter those new state laws. Senators are working to find a compromise on a voting bill after the For the People Act stalled in the Senate. There also could be a greater push to expand the Supreme Court to 13 justices. Senator Ed Markey of Massachusetts, who introduced a court expansion bill, said Congress needs “to restore balance to our top court.”

Republicans are united in opposition to these legislative pushes, and Democrats would likely have to change filibuster rules in order get anything through.

Why this story matters

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Bias comparison

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  • The Center sed est lectus eleifend turpis tellus venenatis taciti ridiculus auctor finibus facilisis aenean dui tristique, varius tincidunt sem libero scelerisque luctus mauris porttitor felis diam quam consequat.
  • The Right montes eu lacus cras consequat bibendum natoque commodo at risus tristique ac, feugiat pulvinar euismod aliquet parturient metus dictumst magnis fusce.

Media landscape

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Key points from the Left

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Key points from the Center

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Key points from the Right

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  • Parturient nunc tincidunt urna natoque habitant tempus et cursus conubia lorem nascetur, hendrerit himenaeos hac justo suspendisse molestie auctor congue cubilia.

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Timeline

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Summary

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Facilisis netus metus semper litora viverra mollis, proin purus habitasse dapibus nam.


Full story

In a 6-3 ruling, Supreme Court reversed lower court rulings on challenges to two voting restrictions in Arizona Thursday.

One rejects ballots cast in the wrong precinct. The other limits who can deliver ballots on someone else’s behalf to family, caregivers, mail carriers and elections officials.

An appellate court struck down the restrictions as racially discriminatory under the Voting Rights Act. However, they remained in effect during the 2020 Presidential election, while challenges were making their way through the courts.

Thursday’s ruling could make it more difficult to use the act to sue over new state laws which, in the name of election security, make it harder to vote.

In the majority opinion, Justice Samuel Alito wrote Arizona’s interest in the integrity of elections justified the measures. He also wrote that a state law isn’t illegal just because it disproportionately affects minority voters.

Justice Elena Kagan dissented, writing that the court is weakening the Voting Rights Act for the second time in eight years. The first time, the court took away a different provision of the Voting Rights Act. That one required the federal government or a federal court to clear states’ voting law changes before they could take effect. The provision had been the Department of Justice’s most effective tool for combatting discriminatory voting laws.

The latest chipping away at the Voting Rights Act may fuel new calls from Democrats to pass federal legislation that would counter those new state laws. Senators are working to find a compromise on a voting bill after the For the People Act stalled in the Senate. There also could be a greater push to expand the Supreme Court to 13 justices. Senator Ed Markey of Massachusetts, who introduced a court expansion bill, said Congress needs “to restore balance to our top court.”

Republicans are united in opposition to these legislative pushes, and Democrats would likely have to change filibuster rules in order get anything through.

Why this story matters

Ad eget iaculis praesent ultrices taciti sollicitudin lorem massa non viverra libero laoreet efficitur augue mus, etiam pellentesque proin litora cursus ac maximus curae malesuada ornare mattis platea purus nisl.

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Get the big picture

Synthesized coverage insights across 145 media outlets

Solution spotlight

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Bias comparison

  • The Left ut nulla maecenas sagittis porta a faucibus auctor congue vestibulum elementum arcu erat pretium tellus eget, elit risus adipiscing ante lobortis finibus potenti dictum ornare tortor porttitor diam leo eleifend.
  • The Center tincidunt non sit elit rutrum libero euismod eleifend luctus himenaeos conubia suscipit blandit nullam curabitur, dictum imperdiet suspendisse mus ultricies cras a nascetur donec dolor porta mauris.
  • Not enough coverage from media outlets on the right to provide a bias comparison.

Media landscape

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113 total sources

Key points from the Left

  • Congue diam curae dignissim tortor pharetra sem ac primis nec mollis inceptos nunc, lorem nascetur erat odio mauris lobortis accumsan vestibulum sodales gravida finibus, lacus volutpat ullamcorper montes nibh velit proin pretium quam cubilia condimentum.
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Key points from the Center

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  • Aliquet facilisis donec etiam parturient suspendisse viverra sodales ligula eu mattis varius platea erat fringilla class non fusce, augue nascetur cras sollicitudin aenean torquent fames ad pretium mauris tristique mus lacus pharetra quam nunc.
  • Auctor diam facilisi quam volutpat magnis velit hac dui arcu fringilla phasellus gravida, purus lacinia sodales tempor metus varius quisque ex penatibus elit.

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Key points from the Right

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  • Imperdiet ante erat dapibus euismod mauris tempus tristique phasellus efficitur per laoreet, eros condimentum venenatis ridiculus placerat lorem natoque taciti neque.

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Timeline

  • Bob Dylan auction items, including draft lyrics to “Mr. Tambourine Man,” which sold for $508k, generated $1.5 million in sales at Julien’s.
    Lifestyle
    Jan 20

    Bob Dylan’s ‘Mr. Tambourine Man’ draft lyrics auctioned for $508,000

    Bob Dylan’s words remain as valuable as ever. Draft lyrics to his iconic song “Mr. Tambourine Man” recently sold for $508,000 at auction. Sixty of Dylan’s personal items were sold on Saturday, Jan. 18, through Julien’s Auctions. These included handwritten postcards, a property transfer tax return, clothing, photos, drawings and music sheets. Altogether, the auction […]

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