“American Tradition Partnership: Feds take secretive conservative group’s documents”

Missoulian: “HELENA — State officials said Thursday that a federal grand jury has subpoenaed disputed documents involving a secretive conservative group that critics argue has been illegally coordinating with candidates. The disclosure was made by state officials responding to a Livingston judge’s order requesting the American Tradition Partnership documents. The documents were featured in an October documentary by ‘Frontline’ and a story by ProPublica suggesting the tax-exempt social welfare group coordinated with Republican candidates.”

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“Adelson gave $40 million to super PACs in final weeks of election; Top 25 donors supplied more than a third of super PAC cash”

The Center for Public Integrity reports.

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“Not guilty’ verdict in Rensselaer County voter fraud case”

The Saratogian: TROY — Rensselaer County Board of Elections Democratic Commissioner Edward McDonough was found not guilty on 61 counts brought against him in the ballot fraud case linked to the 2009 Working Families Party primary.

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“While Politicians Run, Conservative Judges Stand for Voting Rights”

Doug Kendall and Emily Phelps blog.

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“Southern discomfort: Pigeon Forge liquor referendum headed to court “

News from TN: “Some of the things that happened in Pigeon Forge’s Nov. 6 liquor referendum are enough to drive a teetotaler to drink. Or even lead an imbiber to hop on the sobriety wagon. Only bona fide city residents, or owners of property inside the city limits, were supposed to vote in that referendum. Liquor by the drink was narrowly approved by exactly 100 votes, 1,232 to 1,132. Yet there were 303 more votes cast in the election than there were qualified Pigeon Forge residents or property owners who signed in at the polls to vote. Most of those are now known to have been cast at the Pigeon Forge City Hall polling place, said Dennis Francis, attorney for the Sevier County Election Commission.”

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“New Hampshire and Justice Department Reach First State Bailout Agreement”

Press release: “The State of New Hampshire and the United States Attorney General reached an agreement today that would grant a bailout for the ten towns and townships in the State that are subject to the preclearance requirements of the Voting Rights Act.  The agreement was submitted to a three-judge court in Washington, DC, and asks the court to wait thirty days to enter it, so that the towns can publicize the proposed settlement.  Campaign Legal Center Executive Director J. Gerald Hebert serves as legal counsel to the State of New Hampshire in his capacity as a solo practitioner.  New Hampshire becomes the first state to bailout since Congress changed the bailout requirements under the Voting Rights Act in 1982. To read the joint motion to enter consent judgment and decree, click here. To read the proposed consent judgment and decree, click here.”

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Light Blogging through the Holidays

Blogging will be intermittent over the next two weeks. Happy holidays and a happy new year to all my ELB readers!

Here’s to a happy, healthy and safe 2013.

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Harvard Law Review Publishes My “Fixing Washington” Piece, Lessig’s Reply

From the new issue of the Harvard Law Review:

Fixing Washington

Book Review by Richard L. Hasen ::

REPUBLIC, LOST: HOW MONEY CORRUPTS POLITICS — AND A PLAN TO STOP IT. By Lawrence Lessig. New York, N.Y., and Boston, Mass.: Twelve Press. 2011. Pp. xiii, 383. $26.99.

CAPITOL PUNISHMENT: THE HARD TRUTH ABOUT WASHINGTON CORRUPTION FROM AMERICA’S MOST NOTORIOUS LOBBYIST. By Jack Abramoff. Washington, D.C.: WND Books. 2011. Pp. iii, 303. $25.95.

It is a tired cliché that Washington is “broken” and needs fixing. A 2011 Gallup poll found that sixty-four percent of voters had low or very low trust in members of Congress, the lowest percentage ever recorded by Gallup for a profession and below trust ratings for lobbyists, telemarketers, and car salespeople. The recent economic downturn has not only coincided with record-low approval ratings for Congress and with general lack of trust in government but also produced two protest movements: the Tea Party on the right and the Occupy movement on the left. Despite the fact that these movements come from the fringes of the Republican and Democratic parties, they share some common critiques of federal lawmaking: they condemn the role of lobbyists in Washington and the “crony capitalists” who hire them. From President Obama to Senator Rand Paul and former Governor Sarah Palin, there is a widespread sentiment that money in Washington skews political outcomes and that lobbyists are the fixers who cut the deals that help insiders benefit themselves at the expense of the public interest.

In their new and very different books, Harvard Professor Lawrence Lessig from the left and disgraced lobbyist Jack Abramoff from the right come to similar conclusions about what is wrong with Washington. Lessig’s book is a populist call to action for the people to “take back Washington” through campaign finance reform. Abramoff’s book is an autobiography that is part apology and part justification for a promising career that veered badly off track.

Despite the different starting points, the books end in much the same place. Lessig and Abramoff both want to take lobbyists out of the fundraising business, breaking the connection between money and lobbyists’ legitimate information-providing function. They seek to close the revolving door between Congress and lobbying shops because of the inherent conflict that arises when officeholders or staffers start thinking about post-government lobbying jobs. They part company on what else is needed, however: Lessig wants publicly financed campaign finance vouchers to lessen further the power of special interests, while Abramoff wants to shrink the size of government to give lobbyists a smaller target.

Together, Lessig and Abramoff offer a mostly convincing critique of how lobbying skews public policy and can harm the United States. The books demonstrate that lobbying can thwart the public interest, especially when players with much at stake use lobbyists to block or alter legislation on issues that lack salience with the general public. Although it is tempting to focus on Abramoff’s admittedly illegal behavior, both books illustrate that much of the problem with the relationship among money, politics, and lobbying stems from what is legal, not illegal. Indeed, although both Abramoff and Lessig present the problem as one of “corruption,” the real concern should be less with exchanges of dollars for political favors and more with the decline in national economic welfare that occurs thanks to lobbyist-facilitated rent-seeking. Lessig also appears concerned with political inequality, although he distances himself from egalitarian arguments for reform. Defining the problem as one other than quid pro quo corruption, however, threatens the constitutionality of reforms in a post–Citizens United world.

Nonetheless, while the critiques of the Washington status quo are well made, both books offer incomplete reform agendas and unconvincing paths to enacting reform. Much of what is wrong with Washington has nothing to do with money in politics. Instead, partisan gridlock and the divergence of legislative action from the apparent public interest emerge from the highly partisan and ideological nature of Congress and the presidency; polarized views on the nature of the public interest; the breakdown of civility and an era of “gotcha” politics; and structural impediments to enacting legislation, such as the Senate filibuster and changes in the House committee structure.

The current state of toxic politics and institutions inadequate to constrain such politics arose not from an outsized influence of money on politics but from a variety of sources, including the party realignment in the South following the civil rights movement and the resurgence of partisan media (and now social media). Even if the authors’ complete reform agendas were enacted and the amount of rent-seeking legislation procured by lobbying significantly curbed, it is far from clear that Washington would be “fixed.” Lessig, for example, claims that money has prevented both the left and the right from getting their agendas passed. It is hard to see that money has been the primary stumbling block to enacting competing agendas simultaneously. When it comes to high-salience, big legislative questions such as immigration reform, the primary barriers to reform are partisanship, deadlock, and vetogates, not the role of money. In the rare circumstance when major legislative reform does pass, as in the case of health care reform, the passage of legislation further fuels partisan recriminations.

Nor is it clear that the kinds of fundamental campaign finance reforms that Lessig advocates stand any realistic chance of being enacted under current political conditions. Lessig acknowledges the hard road ahead, but even so he seems overly optimistic. For example, he suggests there is a ten percent chance that a call for a constitutional convention to amend the Constitution to allow new campaign finance and lobbying reform could succeed. But the same partisan, sclerotic politics that would make reform of money in politics only a partial solution to a broken Washington would also make the chances of calling a constitutional convention to enact a reform agenda much slimmer than one in ten. Fixing Washington’s money problems may have to await widespread scandal, and fixing its broader problems likely will have to await a societal shift that alleviates the partisanship currently gripping national politics.

126 Harv. L. Rev. 550 (2012) | DOWNLOAD PDF | WESTLAW

RESPONSE TO THIS ARTICLE

A Reply to Professor Hasen
By Lawrence Lessig

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“Mass. lawmaker, member of election committee, pleads guilty to voter fraud”

Boston Globe: “A Democratic state representative from Everett, who served on the Legislature’s election law committee, pleaded guilty to federal charges today that he cast fraudulent absentee ballots to help get himself elected.”

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A Cry for Help at the FEC?

A knowledgeable reader points me to this item on today’s FEC meeting agenda asking for public comment on certain aspects of the FEC’s enforcement process. (The request for public comment was approved 4-2.)  The reader writes: “I see it as a cry for help from the General Counsel’s Office, which is asking for public comment on two basic issues: (1) can the FEC consider public information other than what’s specifically in a complaint and (2) can the FEC initiate enforcement actions based on publicly available information even if no one files a complaint? Both are long-standing practices that the Republican commissioners, especially Don McGahn, have been trying to stamp out.”

Do others see it this way too?  I’m not close enough to the process to know.

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“House Rs Resurrect Congressional-Based Electoral College Plan”

Politics PA reports.

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Remembering Obama the Election Reformer

FairVote reminisces.

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Then and Now

A reader writes:

How times change:

FLASHBACK:
In 2011, then-State Senator Mike Bennett was a major supporter of HB1355, Florida’s controversial election law which (among other things) cut back on early voting. Bennett famously said during the debates over HB1355 that he wanted to make voting harder, not easier.

NOW:
Only a year later, Bennett has left the legislature to become Manatee County’s elected Supervisor of Election. Now, he wants to expand early voting back to 14 days, and increase the legally permissible locations at which the county may offer early voting.

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“Politico’s Dave Levinthal joins Center for Public Integrity”

Great news for CPI, which has been doing great work on campaign disclosure issues.

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“The Myth of State Autonomy: Federalism, Political Parties, and the National Colonization of State Politics”

Jim Gardner has posted this draft on SSRN.  Here is the abstract:

American federalism contemplates that states will retain a significant degree of autonomy so that state power can serve as a meaningful counterweight to national power. It is often said that states exercise this function through extraconstitutional processes centered on the political party system. That is, states influence the content of national law and protect themselves from undesirable exercises of national power by using the mechanisms of internal party processes. If this process is to work properly, however, states must retain considerable political autonomy, for the possibility of state objection to exercises of national power is merely theoretical if state political processes are not sufficiently independent of their national counterparts to enable the state to adopt and assert ends or interests different from those asserted by the national government.

The evidence, however, suggests strongly that the growth of national political parties during and since the early nineteenth century created a two-way street. Parties not only offered states a way to influence national politics, but also created a reverse pathway by which national politics could influence, and in many cases overawe, any independent state-level politics. As a result, the same extraconstitutional pathways that provided states a means to protect themselves from national domination simultaneously eroded the political autonomy necessary for states to maintain the kind of independent wills contemplated by the federal arrangement. This does not mean that states lack entirely the capacity to stand up to the federal government, but it does mean that their ability to do so is limited, not necessarily for lack of power but for lack of autonomous control over their political agendas and positions. This in turn suggests a much chastened conception of what it might mean for a subnational government to have the ability to “check” national power.

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Pew Data Dispatch about Provisional Ballots in Maricopa County, AZ

Here.

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Controversial George Will Column on Nonvoting

George Will:

The poet Carl Sandburg supposedly was asked by a young playwright to attend a rehearsal. Sandburg did but fell asleep. The playwright exclaimed, “How could you sleep when you knew I wanted your opinion?” Sandburg replied, “Sleep isan opinion.”

So is nonvoting. Remember this as the Obama administration mounts a drive to federalize voter registration, a step toward making voting mandatory.

Andrew Cohen:

There are so many things wrong with George Will’s latest column on voting that it’s hard to know where to begin. Actually, that’s not right. It’s easy to know where to begin. The very title of the piece, “Mountain out of a molehill,” is offensive to every American whose right to vote was jeopardized this past election cycle by Republican voter-suppression efforts.

Will’s piece is 14 paragraphs long and the only one that survives close scrutiny is the first, because it consists mostly of a quote from Carl Sandburg. The other 13 paragraphs render wholly unrecognizable both the voting-rights battles of 2012 and the national debate over how those battles ought to be resolved. Let’s take it one graph at a time.

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“FEC & DOJ Complaints Filed Against ‘Straw Companies’ that Funneled $12 million to FreedomWorks Super PAC”

See this press release.

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“A voter’s-eye view of Election Day 2012; Despite well-publicized problems, overall voters satisfied with process”

Charles Stewart leads off this week’s Electionline Weekly.

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“Fundraising starts up soon after election, filings show”

WaPo reports.

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Interesting Perspectives on Politics Issue

Paul Gronke writes: “The most recent issue of Perspectives on Politics is a theme issue about the role of elections and other democratic institutions in non-democratic nations (authoritarian and autocratic regimes). The issue has very rich content, including original research articles, “controversy” pieces, and a large number of book reviews broadly on the topic of elections, from an American, comparative, and normative perspective. The website link is gated but the table of contents is open access, and anyone at an academic institution should be able to access the content.”

APSA Journals

December Issue of Perspectives on Politics
From the Editor
Authoritarianism, Elections, Democracy?- Jeffrey C. IsaacResearch Articles
Beyond Patronage: Violent Struggle, Ruling Party Cohesion, and Authoritarian Durability – Steven R. Levitsky & Lucan A. Way
Improbable but Potentially Pivotal Oppositions: Privatization, Capitalists, and Political Contestation in the Post-Soviet Autocracies – Barbara Junisbai
The Arab Spring: Why the Surprising Similarities with the Revolutionary Wave of 1848? – Kurt Weyland
When Multi-Method Research Subverts Methological Pluralism- or, Why We Still Need Single-Method Research – Amel Ahmed & Rudra Sil

Review Essay
From Representative Democracy to Participatory Competitive Authoritarianism: Hugo Chavez and Venezuelan Politics – Scott Mainwaring
Whither Russia? Autocracy Is Here for Now, but Is It Here to Stay? – Kathryn Stoner

Review Symposium
Neoliberalism, Race, and the American Welfare State – Russell L. Hanson, Lawrence M. Mead, Rose Ernst, Peter J. Boettke, Mary Fainsod Katzenstein

Critical Dialogue
Violence, Nonviolence, and the Palestinian National Movement
Sharon Erickson Nepstad, Wendy Pearlman, Matthew N. Beckmann, Matthew N. Green

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The NRA and Lobbying/Campaign Finance Reform

Former Bush ethics czar Richard Painter pens an interesting NYT oped:

Republican politicians must free themselves from the N.R.A. protection racket and others like it. For starters, the party establishment should refuse to endorse anyone who runs in a primary with N.R.A. money against a sitting Republican. If the establishment refuses to support Republicans using other Republicans for target practice, the N.R.A. will take its shooting game somewhere else.

Reasonable gun control legislation will then be able to pass Congress and the state legislatures. Next, Republicans should embrace legislation like the proposed American Anti-Corruption Act, which would rid both parties of their dependence on big money from groups like the N.R.A. The Republican Party will once again be proud to be part of the solution rather than part of the problem. And voters will go back to feeling that their children are safe, their democracy works, and they will once again consider voting Republican.

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“Death threats made against the Colorado Secretary of State”

Disgusting.

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“THE BATTLE OVER ELECTION REFORM IN THE SWING STATE OF FLORIDA”

Susan MacManus has written this article for the New England Journal of Political Science.

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“Ethics restrictions so strict they undermine democracy”

Kathleen Clark blogs on Congress’ passage of the Hatch Act Modernization Act,

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“As Charlie Crist testifies before Congress on Florida’s voting problems, Gov. Rick Scott voices support for changes”

The Tampa Bay Times reports.

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“Former Governor Urges Congress to Consider New National Voting Standards”

BLT reports.

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“Outside Money Takes the Inside Track”

Public Citizen: “In First Full Post-Citizens United Cycle, Unrestricted Groups Moved Closer to Eclipsing Candidates and National Parties in Election Spending in 2012 “

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“Charlie Crist trashes Rick Scott in Sen. hearing for vote suppression, turning FL into a ‘late-night TV joke”

The Miami Herald reports.

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“Florida Sen. Nelson: GOP disenfranchised voters”

AP reports.

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“Party Identity in a Gun Cabinet”

FiveThirtyEight: “An American child grows up in a married household in the suburbs. What are the chances that his family keeps a gun in their home? The probability is considerably higher than residents of New York and other big cities might expect: about 40 percent of married households reported having a gun in their home, according to the exit poll conducted during the 2008 presidential election. But the odds vary significantly based on the political identity of the child’s parents. If they identify as Democratic voters, the chances are only about one in four, or 25 percent, that they have a gun in their home. But the chances are more than twice that, almost 60 percent, if they are Republicans.”

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“The Puzzle of Black Republicans”

Adolph Reed has written this provocative oped for the NY Times.

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“Election Protection 2012: A Preliminary Look at the Problems Plaguing the American Voter”

The Lawyers’ Committee has issued this report.

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“Voting Problems To Be Examined By Congress”

AP reports.

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“Improving Provisional Ballot Procedures in Philadelphia”

The Philadelphia City Commissioner issued this report.

UPDATE:  A knowledgeable reader writes: “The Philly story – it’s not ‘the’, it’s ‘a’ commissioner who issued the report.  In fact, she is the deposed Chairwoman (deposed by a bipartisan coalition) who was deposed the day after the election because of the problems with the pollbooks and her refusal to print and distribute additional provisional ballots to address the problem.”

 

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“Korean Ammo Manufacturer and Polluter Gives Harkin Institute 500,000 Dollar Coins

Jeff Patch reports for the Iowa Republican.

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AALS Election Law “Hot Topic” Panel

Coming January 4 to New Orleans to the American Association of Law Schools’ annual meeting….

Hot Topic Workshop on Democracy and the Public Trust: Equality, Integrity, and Suppression in the 2012 Election
Moderators: Steven Bender, Seattle University School of Law
Audrey G. McFarlane, University of Baltimore School of Law
Speakers: Gilda Daniels, University of Baltimore School of Law
Richard L. Hasen, University of California, Irvine School of Law
Sylvia Lazos, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, William S. Boyd School of Law
Janai S. Nelson, St. John’s University School of Law
Spencer Overton, The George Washington University Law School
Terry Smith, DePaul University College of Law
Zephyr Teachout, Fordham University School of Law
The goal is to focus on how the voice of the powerful and the vulnerable were affected by laws regarding election registration and voter ID, election participation and felony disenfranchisement and how the new form of political voice through financial contributions from political action committees have affected the election landscape. Therefore, in addition to discussing some of the common themes that tie together the various voter ID laws that several states have adopted as well as the judicial responses to those laws, we are hoping to consider the broader implications for democracy and steps that can be taken to resolve the controversies surrounding the Election of 2012. We will in effect be exploring in hindsight whether there was anything different about the Election of 2012 from a historical perspective and what did the Election of 2012 teach us about our democracy? As well, we will consider how the various new laws impacted vulnerable populations such as Latina/o and Black voters.

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“Democrats’ Diversity Drought”

Interesting Aaron Blake Fix column.

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You Can Now Order the Third Edition of Remedies: Examples and Explanations at Amazon

Here is the link.

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“A Guide to Election Year Activities of Section 501(c)(3) Organizations”

Steven Sholk’s updated publication is now available for free download.

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The Voting Wars Now on the Nook

The election is over and Hanukkah has passed, but if you are looking for a Christmas present for a political junkie, The Voting Wars is finally available for The Nook.  (It has been available since August in hard copy and a Kindle version.)

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“Cuomo Puts Campaign Finance on 2013 Agenda”

NYT: “Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo said on Tuesday that he would seek legislation to significantly expand New York’s regulation of political spending by corporations, individuals and tax-exempt groups during his third year in office.”

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Ryan Reilly to HuffPo

TPM’s Ryan Reilly, one of the very best people on the voting wars beat, is moving to the Huffington Post.  What a coup for HuffPo!

Ryan’s work is indispensable in this area.

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“Inouye gave preference for successor before he died”

CNN reports.

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“Crist to testify against voter ID laws”

Politico: “Testifying with Crist will be Nina Perales of the Mexican American Legal Defense and Education Fund as well as Gilda Cobb Hunter, a Democratic member of the South Carolina legislature who has opposed voter ID laws.”

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“‘Black America’s Law Firm’ Looks To Big Cases With New Leadership”

NPR’s Carrie Johnson: “The NAACP Legal Defense Fund has been called the law firm for black America. Once run by Thurgood Marshall, the group played a major role in desegregating public schools and fighting restrictions at the ballot box. Now, the Legal Defense Fund is preparing for a new leader — just as the Supreme Court considers cases that could pare back on those gains.”

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“Electoral College Vote Affirms Obama Re-election”

AP reports.

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“Arizona Electors Question Obama Birth Certificate”

Political Wire reports.

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“Speedy Appeal on Voter ID Law”

Lyle Denniston at SCOTUSBlog: “The time may be short for the Supreme Court to act on the state of Texas’s power to impose a new voter photo ID law, but the state nevertheless plans to pursue a prompt appeal in hopes of a quick final decision, perhaps during the Justices’ current Term.  The state got permission on Monday to pursue an immediate appeal from a three-judge U.S. District Court in Washington.  That court had ruled against the voter ID law in August.”

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“WSU Names Jocelyn Benson Interim Dean of Law School”

Congratulations Jocelyn!

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