Daily Docket — Monday, Feb. 6 |
Here are some updates from today. |
In an unprecedented move on Friday evening, the Republican-led North Carolina Supreme Court, which flipped from 4-3 Democratic to 5-2 Republican in the 2022 midterm elections, agreed to rehear two cases already decided by the previous, Democratic-led court. One of the cases blocked a restrictive photo ID law and one tossed out North Carolina’s congressional and legislative maps for being partisan gerrymanders. Before the state’s high court made this surprising decision, in a recent podcast episode Marc and Paige broke down the requests to rehear the cases — listen to the episode now.
|
The U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) filed a statement of interest in a federal lawsuit in Pennsylvania challenging the state’s rules against counting undated and wrongly dated mail-in ballots. The DOJ sided with the plaintiffs, arguing that “[e]rrors or omissions regarding a date do not pertain to a voter’s qualifications” and ballots should not be rejected on that basis.
|
Here’s what to expect coming up. |
Tomorrow, the U.S. House of Representatives will vote to overturn two proposed bills passed by the Washington, D.C. city council. But why does Congress get a say over the district’s legislation? We’ll bring you that answer and more on our website, so stay tuned.
|
ICYMI, listen to our latest episode of Defending Democracy. In the podcast episode that dropped last Friday, Marc and Paige broke down how mass voter challenges work and their insidious impact on voters. |
This is a Daily Docket email where we provide the day’s voting rights news and courtroom updates that you need to know. |